Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Lebanon: Mosaic of the region

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Lebanon: Mosaic of the region

    Gulf News
    July 30 2004

    Lebanon: Mosaic of the region
    Saad Al Ajmi

    Special to Gulf News

    Lebanon is the "melting pot" of regional politics. The recipe for the
    politics of the region is either taken from Lebanon or is contributed
    to by Lebanon. In Lebanon you find all regional political players
    present: the Syrians, the Iranians, the Americans, the French, the
    Palestinians, the Kurds, the Gulfies, and even the Israelis in some
    form or another.

    Lebanon is a beautifully bizarre mélange - Muslims, Christians, and
    even Jews are present. The latter, though, are very few. Even the
    various sects of the major religions are present - Sunni, Shiite and
    Druze Muslims, and Catholic, Orthodox and the predominant Maronite
    Christians. Numerous ethnic groups are present - Arabs, Kurds,
    Iranians, and even Armenians. Burj Hammoud, a neighbourhood of Beirut
    is dubbed "little Armenia".

    As for politics, it is more diverse than anything else, with active
    groups of pan-Arabists, Communists, Baathists, and socialists. Within
    the Shiite community, two are more dominant than others - the Amal
    and the Hezbollah. Within the Christians, the Phalange Party is the
    largest.

    All political parties in Lebanon are said to have outside
    connections. Thus Hezbollah is said to be financed by Iran, Amal is
    supported by Syria and the Phalange have European and American
    sympathy and so on. You go to the south of Beirut and banners of
    "martyrs" of Hezbollah are everywhere.

    Pictures are indicative of your location in Lebanon. In Amal areas,
    pictures of the founder of the Shiite movement, Mousa Al Sadr,
    confront you. Al Sadr disappeared in Libya after a visit in 1978.

    Pictures of the late Ayatollah Khomeini - leader of the Islamic
    Revolution in Iran - and pictures of the current Iranian spiritual
    leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenie and Iranian president Mohammad Khatami
    are all over the southern suburbs of Beirut.

    Pictures of late Syrian President Hafez Al Assad and his son, Bashar,
    the current president, can be seen, but not as much as a few years
    back. In the mountains of Lebanon, just a few minutes drive from the
    capital, pictures of late Druze leader and founder of the Progressive
    Socialist Party, Kamal Jumblatt compete with the ad banners of
    concerts and festivals of the summer. Jumblatt was assassinated in
    1977. No one says who assassinated him.

    Israeli occupation

    In East Beirut, the pictures of the Bashir Gemayel spring up with a
    slogan: "Bashir lives in us". Bashir was assassinated hours after he
    was "chosen" president in September 1982, when the country was
    occupied by Israel. The Israelis invaded Lebanon in June 1982. Ariel
    Sharon was the Defence Minister who led the invasion, dubbed by the
    Israelis as "Operation Peace for the Galilee".

    After three months of the siege of Beirut and constant bombardment,
    then American president Ronald Reagan described it as a holocaust. In
    a telephone conversation with then Israeli Prime Minister Menachem
    Begin he pleaded for stopping the attack. Sharon succeeded in driving
    the Palestine Liberation Organisation, PLO, out of Lebanon.

    The massacres at the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps were committed
    just hours after the assassination of Bashir. Elie Hobeika, widely
    thought to have been the leader of the Phalange who committed the
    atrocity at Sabra and Shatila, was also assassinated two years ago in
    Lebanon in a car bomb attack.

    As in the case of Jumblatt, no one says who assassinated Bashir
    before he was sworn in as president. Nor does anyone say who
    assassinated Hobeika. Most recently, huge billboards featuring
    pictures of the Saudi prince Al Waleed bin Talal have sprung up, with
    inscriptions that read: "Lebanon awaits Al Waleed impatiently".

    A multi-billionaire, Al Waleed is the nephew of King Fahd bin
    Abdulaziz of Saudi Arabia and is said to be aiming at becoming
    Lebanon's next Prime Minister. His mother is Lebanese and he enjoys
    dual citizenship.

    Incidentally, the current Lebanese Prime Minister, Rafiq Hariri, is a
    dual citizen of Saudi Arabia. It is no secret that for anyone to hold
    an official post in Lebanon, however small, Syrian consent is
    required.

    Thousands of tourists pour into Lebanon each year from all over the
    world. Last year's count was half a million tourists from the Gulf
    and thousands more from other parts of the world.

    Many Arabs are returning to Lebanon, once known as "Switzerland of
    the East" and so are many Lebanese, who live all over the world.
    Arabs, who are carefully scrutinised in Western airports after 9/11,
    find Lebanon a more hospitable respite.

    Millions of Lebanese are thought to be living in Latin America alone.
    The Lebanese exodus has also had many success stories. The Lebanese
    are adaptable, easy-going and hardworking people. No Arab emigrants
    have achieved as much success as they have. In the US, they have
    become senators.

    Twice presidential hopeful Ralph Nader, and a former American
    vice-president are of Lebanese descent. Not only in politics, but
    even in show business and fashion Lebanese emigrants have made great
    strides: the singer Shakira, actress Salma Hayek and fashion tycoon
    Eli Saab to name just a few.

    Business oriented

    The Lebanese have strong, business-oriented minds. In diamond trading
    and industry in South Africa, Holland and Belgium, they are second
    only to the Jews. Perhaps, sometimes the Jews are second to them.

    Lebanon has everything a tourist seeks: mosques, churches, beaches,
    discos, bars, a variety of food, and most importantly, beautiful
    scenery and Mediterranean weather. Scars of the vicious and hapless
    civil war that destroyed the country for 15 years from 1975-1990 are
    still visible, though.

    In Lebanon, one may be in Beirut where the weather is perfectly humid
    and warm for the beach.

    A few minutes drive up Mount Lebanon and one finds cool weather and
    mountain air. One may even ski in any of the ski resorts in Faraya
    and Sofer. All tourist services are presented with efficiency,
    professionalism and a cordial attitude. Lebanon is truly a very
    hospitable country.

    If you want to see the riches of the Middle East, the diversity of
    its cultures, the hospitality of its people, you must go to Lebanon.

    Dr. Saad Al Ajmi is a former Minister of Information in Kuwait, an
    academic and analyst. He can be contacted at [email protected]
Working...
X