Samné participated in scholarly and political societies, where he debated the unique role of French colonialism and expansion in the acculturation of the world. He pushed for the French expansion into the Orient. During World War I, he served as advisor to the French government for Syrian affairs, lobbying for the cessation of Greater Syria from the Ottoman Empire.[4] Samné was a supporter of French colonialism. He believed that a universal approach to treating diseases does not suit colonialized peoples,[5] and touted the role of "French women" in spreading "woman to woman" hygiene and public health education to colonized Muslim Tuareg and Bedouin tribes.[6][7] In August 1908, he founded with his Lebanese friend Chekri Ganem the Société des amis de l'Orient. The organization's goals were to promote French interests in the Levant, and to circulate news about the Near East, through the society's bulletin, the Correspondance d'Orient.[8][9] He was a founding member of the Central Syrian Committee, which lobbied for the independence and the unity of Syria.[2]
Bibliography
In history and politics
La vie politique orientale en 1909 (1910)
Le Liban autonome (de 1861 à nos jours) (1919)
La question sioniste (1919)
Le Chérifat de La Mecque et l'unité syrienne (1919)
L'effort syrien pendant la Guerre (1919)
La Khalifat et le Panislamisme (1919)
La Syrie (1920)
Raymond Poincaré; politique et personnel de la IIIe république (1933)
^Samné, Georges (1904). De l'Assistance considérée comme un moyen de colonisation: L'assistance au Maroc- rapport présenté au congrès coloniale française, tenu à Paris (in French). p. 29.