Steve Paul Jobs was born in San Francisco on this day, February 24, 1955, to unmarried parents who were then students at the university, and his parents, Abdel Fattah Al-Jandali and Joan Sheppel, offered him for adoption, after the Scheibel family refused her marriage to a non-Catholic, so two Californians adopted him. Paul and Clara Jobs, two from a Polish Armenian family.

We talk about the birth of Steve Jobs

Little was written about Abdel Fattah Jandali in the American media, because he always lived in the shadows and almost no one was told that he was the true father of a man who had a great impact on the development of technology, and his son Steve Jobs himself was in turn contributing to concealing the identity of his real father and concealing the personality of his sister Mona Simpson, Classified as one of the most famous novelists, it was Steve Jobs did not mention Abdel Fattah only with the use of the adjective biological father.

Abd al-Fattah al-Jandali comes from the Jeb al-Jandali area in Homs, Syria, where he was born in 1931, so he left it at the age of 18 to Beirut in 1949 to study political science at the American University where his father was wealthy and owned property, and was active in the Arab national movement as an Arab activist, and he headed the Al-Orwa al-Wuthqa Association The nationalist intellectual literary trend that included well-known names such as George Habash, Constantine Zureik, and Shafiq Al-Hout. But he was not the only politician in the family. His cousin, Farhan, was a deputy and minister of education in the Nazim al-Qudsi government. Abdel Fattah left Beirut for the United States in 1950 to study political science at a University in Nevada, and there he established a relationship with Joan Scheibel, which resulted in Steve. A week after the baby was born, Jandali was put up for adoption, and Paul and Clara Jobs, from California, adopted him and named him Stephen Paul. Abdel Fattah talked about how his wife’s father refused to marry his daughter to a Syrian man, forcing them to abandon Steve to Jobs’s family and said: Joan went without even telling me or anyone to the city of San Francisco to give birth there in order not to bring shame to her family and saw that this is the best for all parties.

Abdulfattah_Jandali

After months of being adopted by his new family, Jandali and Shebel got married after ten months of giving up the newborn, and while Steve was growing up within the confines of the new family, Jandali and Shaibel gave birth to their daughter Mona, whom they took care of, unlike her brother, and then they divorced in 1962 and Jandali lost contact with his daughter Mona . Shebel remarries and her daughter, Mona Simpson, bears the name of her stepfather.

In the 1985s, Steve found his mother by birth, Joan Scheibel, who became her name after marriage, Joan Simpson, and told him about his biological sister Mona. He met his sister for the first time in 1986 and the two became close friends. The brothers kept their knowledge a secret until 60, when Mona introduced it to her first book party. Then they decided to search for their father. Simpson found her father, Jandali, as the manager of a café. His son’s identity was unknown to him. Jandali told his daughter that before that he used to run a restaurant in Silicon Valley, "the strange thing is that Steve Jobs used to eat there." In a recorded interview with Jobs with his biographer Walter Isaacson, broadcast on the program XNUMX Minutes, he said: “On the day I was looking for my real mother, I was intuitively searching for my father as well, and I learned a little about him and what I learned did not live up to me. I asked Mona to never tell him that she met me ... and never tell him anything about me. Jobs maintained intermittent contact with his mother, Joan, who lives in a Los Angeles retirement home. Steve Jobs stated in his book about his biological parents: “They were sperm bankers. This is not rudeness, but it is as it was, storing my sperm, nothing more. ”

On the other hand, Jandali once told The Sun newspaper that his Syrian Arab pride prevents him from personally initiating contact with Steve, adding that I am not ready, even if one of us is on his deathbed, and Steve himself should do so because my Syrian pride does not want him to think one day that I am greedy for his wealth. . I do not want her and I have my own money. What I do not have is my son, and this makes me sad. Although he had previously expressed regret for giving up his son and offering him for adoption, and in August 2011 to The Sun newspaper, he expressed his desire to meet Steve, but said that he lives in the hope that his son will contact him before it is too late and added: If he has a cup of coffee, even once with him. It will make me very happy. But he did not meet his son until his death.


Thank you, our friend Bin Dawood Videos of Jobs’s achievements

Source:

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