Zulfa al-Sa'di was born in
Jerusalem to a family of
Sufis. She was a student of
Nicolas Sayegh (1863–1942) from whom she must have learned how to use photographs that chronicled historical events or publicised political figures to develop her paintings. In particular, al-Sa'di was interested in an allegorical use that emphasized symbolic meanings about national Palestinian identity. In 1933, at age 23, she participated in The Arab Exhibition in Mandate Jerusalem. There, she exhibited portraits of eminent men in the Arab world of her time, including
Sharif Husayn,
King Faysal I of Iraq, and Egyptian poet
Ahmad Shawqi. In 1938, she married Saif al-Din al-Dajani and lived and worked in
Jerusalem until the
1948 Nakba, when she was forced to move to Damascus, Syria, where she taught art to Palestinian refugee children in schools affiliated with the
United Nations Relief and Works Agency. ==Artistic production==