249 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
249 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
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Report on Lebanon
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Written by: The Prophet
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Edited by: The Metallian
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CALL: Metalland West Systems 10Megs/AE/Catfur/BBS/Elite/Hack/Phreak/New
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Mods/ open 24hrs/ 7dys/Call Now! ---- [503] 538 - 0761
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Lebanon, a nation that once proudly called itself the Switzerland of the
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Middle East, is today a country in name only. Its government controls little
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more than half of the nation's capital, Beirut. Its once-vibrant economy is a
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shambles. And its society is fragmented - so fragmented, some believe, that it
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may be impossible to re-create a unified state responsive to the needs of all
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its varied peoples.
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Lebanon lies on the eastern shore of the Mediterranea n Sea, in that part of
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southwestern Asia known as the Middle East. Because of its location - at the
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crossroads of Asia, Europe, and Africa - Lebanon has been the center of
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commerce and trade for thousands of years. It has also been on the route of
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numerous conquering armies.
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With an area of 4,015 square miles, Lebanon is one of the smallest countries
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in the Middle East. It is smaller than every state in the United States except
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Delaware, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. Lebanon is sandwiched between Syria
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in the north and east and Israel in the south. The maximum distance from the
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nation's northern border to the southern one is only 130 miles. And the
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maximum distance from the Mediterranean Sea to the Lebanon-Syria border is 50
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miles. In the south, along the border with Israel, Lebanon's eastern border
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is only 20 miles from the sea.
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Although a tiny land, Lebanon boasts a great diversity in its landscape which
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makes it one of the most picturesque countries in the world. The coast line is
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br oken by many bays and inlets of varying size. At some points, the mountains
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wade silently right into the sea - then climb suddenly tier on tier away from
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the Mediterranean to the sky. Because of the limitation of flat agricultural
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land, all but the steepest hillsides have been patiently and neatly terraced
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and planted with garlands of twisted grapevines. The mountains lend a great
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variety of hues - pale pink, rosy red, forest green or deep purple - to the
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landscape. Depending on the time of day, they never appear the same twice, and
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from time to time whipped white clouds hide all except their snow-capped peaks.
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Even on the darkest night, the lights of the villages perched on the mountains
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shine in small clusters as a reminder of their presence. On c loser view, the
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mountains become a jumble of giant gorges, many of them over a thousand feet
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deep, with rocky cliffs, steep ravines and awesome valleys. These unassailable
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bastions have offered a secure hideaway, throughout history, for hermits and
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persecuted groups seeking refuge.
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Lebanon has four distinct geographical regions: a narrow - but fertile -
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coastal plain; two roughly parallel mountain ranges that run the full length of
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the country - the Lebanon, which rises in the west to an alpine hei ght of
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11,000 feet while the eastern range, the anti-Lebanon, is crowned magestically
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by the snow-capped Mount Hermon at 9,232 feet. The two chains of mountains
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shelter between them a well-cultivated plateau extending seventy miles in
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length and fifteen miles in width. This tableland is called the Bekaa. This
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is a fertile strip of land 110 miles long and six to ten miles wide. Zahle,
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the third largest city in the country, is in the valley. The country's two
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most important rivers, the Litani and the Orontes, rise in the northern Bekaa
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near Baalbek, a city that dates to Roman times. The Litani flows southwest
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through the Bekaa Valley and then empties into the Mediterranean Sea north of
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Tyre. Its waters are used for irrigation, so it becomes a mere tr ickle by the
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time it gets to the sea. The Orontes rises not far from the Litani, but it
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flows northward between the two mountain ranges, wending its way into Syria.
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Beyond the Bekaa and the anti-Lebanon mountains, the Syrian desert only
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stretches east f or about 800 miles to the valley of the Tigris and Euphrates
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rivers. This geography has been a determining factor for millenia in keeping
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Lebanon turned toward the West.
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The landscape cannot be described without mentioning the most celebrated tree
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o f Lebanon, the cedar. Called by the Lebanese "Cedar of the Lord," this famed
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tree retains somewhat of a sacred aura this day. It has become the symbol of
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Lebanon and appears in the center of the flag, on the coins, and often on
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postage stamps. Since an cient times the cedar constituted a valuable export
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which provided King Solomon with timber for the construction of his Temple, the
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Phoenicians with wood for their seafaring galleys , the Egyptians with lumber
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for their palaces. Unhappily only a few grov es of these stately trees have
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survived the ax of the builder, the seeker of fuel, or the hunger of goats.
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Cedars generally grow on the highest mountain tops so it is not surprising to
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find an ancient grove of 450 trees nestled under the highest peak. Th is
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grove, the only remaining large one, may be seen as small dark specks on the
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bare face of the mountain side from a distance of many miles. A few of the
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existing trees may be 1,000 years old, and it is estimated that twenty of them
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have grown for more than 400 years. The largest measure about twelve feet in
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circumference, eighty feet in height and their branches spread an unbelievable
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100 feet.
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The olive, another tree closely associated with Lebanon, is extensively
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cultivated, and old gnarled oli ve groves cover many of the lower hills and
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valleys. For centuries olives have been a staple in the diet while their oil
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has taken the place of butter among the peasants who still firmly believe in
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the medicinal benefits of warm olive oil applied to stra ins, sprains and
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earaches. The diversity of soil and the elevation produce a great variety of
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other trees including oaks, pines, junipers, firs, cyprus, sycamore, fig,
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banana, acacia and date palm. Orange, lemon, apple and other fruit trees have
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been ra ised commercially in recent years. Besides supplying the local market
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with a great variety of delicious fresh fruit, the harvest is exported to
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neighboring countries and provides Lebanon with a main source of income.
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The narrow plain along the Medit erranean coast is the most densely populated
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part of Lebanon. Here and there the Lebanon Mountains push down to the sea,
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and thus there is no coastal plain. In other spots the plain is so narrow that
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there is barely enough room for a road. However, in a number of places the
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coastal plain is wide enough to accommodate population centers, and it is here,
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between the foothills of the mountains and the Mediterranean Sea, that two of
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Lebanon's most important cities - Beirut and Tripoli- are located. Be irut -
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Lebanon's capital, largest city, and major port - is located at about the
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midpoint of the country's coastline. Today, much of Beirut lies in ruins. It
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has been a battlefield on which the contending forces of have warred to see who
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could cause the greatest destruction. But before 1975, when the civil war
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erupted, Beirut was the nation's cultural and commercial heart and on of the
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most beautiful and prosperous cities in the Middle East. Lebanon's second
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largest city, Tripoli, is also on the c oast, some 40 miles north of Beirut.
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Because most of the people in this city are Sunni Moslems, it had, until 1983,
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escaped the destruction brought to Beirut by the Moslem- Christian fighting.
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But in late 1983, warring factions of the Palestine Liberati on Organization
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fought their battles in and around Tripoli. Hundreds of Lebanese were killed,
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buildings were destroyed, and oil-storage tanks were set ablaze. A large part
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of Tripoli's population fled the battle area, but returned in December 1983
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after the PLO forces loyal to Yasir Arafat were evacuated.
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Other important cities on the coastal plain are Juniye, Sidon, and Tyre.
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Sidon and Tyre are south of Beirut and have been occupied by Israeli troops
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since the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982.
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In 1984, the population was estimated at 3,480,000 Lebanese (these are
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estimated because no poll has been officially taken since 1932). Almost all of
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these people, whether they are Christian or Moslem, are Arabs, and Lebanon is
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an Arab country. Mo st of the people can speak French or English or both, but
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Arabic is the national language. However, the national unity that usually
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comes from a common language and heritage has eluded the Lebanese people. In
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many ways, the country is less a nation than a collection of fuedal- like
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baronies based on religious lines. Each religious community has its own
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leaders and its own fighting force, or militia. It is reminiscent of China
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during the early years of the twentieth century, when that nation had a weak
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central goverment and was ruled by various warlords scattered throughout the
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country, each seeking political and economic dominance.
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The Moslems, who now constitute more than half the population, are divided
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into three major sects: the Shiites, the S unnis, and the Druse. The
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Christians include the Maronites, Greek Orthodox, Greek Catholics, Orthodox and
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Catholic Armenians, and Protestants. But neither the Christians nor the
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Moslems are truly unified; throughout their history Moslem and Christian se cts
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have fought for political and economic gain.
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The Moslems, who in 1932 were in the minority, now make up 56 percent of the
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population in Lebanon. The Shiites, the poorest of the Moslem sects, number
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about 1 million. They are concentrated in West Beirut and in the city's
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southern suburbs, as well as in southern Lebanon in and around Baalbek in the
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Bekaa Valley.
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The Sunnis number about 600,000 and are concentrated in West Beirut, Tripoli,
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Sidon, and Akkar, in the northernmost part of the count ry. Rashid Karami, a
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former Lebanese prime minister, is the leader of the Sunnis in Tripoli and the
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most influential Sunni in the country. The militia, Morbitun, a force of 5,000
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well-trained fighters, is stationed in West Beirut, Tripoli, and other Su nni
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areas.
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The Druse, a secretive Moslem sect, number about 350,000, but their influence
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is greater than these numbers would indicate. The Druse live primarily in the
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Shuf mountains and in other areas to the south and east of Beirut. They now
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have close ties to Syria, where there is a large Druse community. The Syrians
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have supplied the Druse with a large assortment of weapons, including artillery
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and tanks. The Druse militia numbers about 4,000 men and has joined forces
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with the Shiite militia i n and around West Beirut to battle the
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Christian-dominated Lebanese army and the Christian militias.
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Another major Moslem force in the country - and a constant threat to it - are
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the 500,000 Palestinian refugees and the remnants of the PLO. Their le ader,
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Yassir Arafat, and thousands of his troops were forced out of Beirut by the
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Israelis in 1982 and out of Tripoli by Syrian-backed PLO dissidents in 1983.
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The dissident PLO forces no longer recognize Arafat as their leader because of
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his lack of mili tancy in the fight with Israel. The Syrians, in addition to
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controlling these dissident members of the PLO, also control the 3,500-man
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Palistine Liberation Army.
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The Christians, who in 1932 made up a majority of the Lebanese population,
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are now only about 44 percent of the population. The largest Christian sect -
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and thus far the dominant one in the nation's political and economic life - are
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the Maronites. They number about 580,000 and make up 38 percent of the
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Christian population and 17 percent of the national population.
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The Phalange party, headed by Pierre Gemayel, is the most important Maronite
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political group. The Phalangist militia is the largest of the Christian
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militias. It controls East Beirut, the area along the coast just north of the
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capital, and some areas in southern and central Lebanon. This militia has been
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heavily armed by the Israelis.
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Each of these peoples has played an important role in Lebanese history.
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Moslems and Christians have lived in harmony for long period s of time, but
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they have frequently engaged in bitter warfare, much as we are seeing today.
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For nearly a decade this hapless nation has suffered continuous civil war
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among its various religious and ethnic groups. It has been invaded twice by
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Israel, which now controls all of southern Lebanon, and it has been occupied by
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Syria, which controls most of eastern and northern Lebanon. Nearly 500,000
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Palestinians - refugees from the Arab-Israeli wars - live in Lebanon, where
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they have formed a "state with in a state." And a succession of peacekeeping
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forces - Arab, United Nations, and Western - have not only failed to establish
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peace, but have exacerbated the already horrific situation.
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Why haven't the Lebanese people been able to put aside their sec tarian
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differences to work toward a stable government that represents all of the
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people? The complete answer to this question lies deep within the unique
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history of Lebanon. In 1943, the year that France, which ruled Lebanon as a
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League of Nations manda te, reluctantly gave the nation its independance. As
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independence approached, the nation's two most populous and powerful sects, the
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Maronites and the Sunnis, formulated what is known as the National Pact - an
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unwritten agreement that spelled out the cou ntry's political makeup as well as
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its general orientation in foreign affairs.
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The National Pact allocated political power to Lebanon's religious sects on
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the basis of population. The census in 1932 showed that the Christians had the
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majority with j ust over 50 percent of the population. As a result, it was
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agreed that the President of Lebanon would always be a Maronite Christian and
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the prime minister would always be a Sunni Moslem. Other important positions
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were given to other sects. The Preside nt of the Chamber of Deputies, for
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example, would always be a Shiite Moslem and the defense minister would be a
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Druse. In addition, the Christians were to have six seats in Parliment for
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every five seats held by Moslems. This system guaranteed the Maron ite
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Christians control of Lebanon.
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This system worked well enough for fifteen years. From 1943 until 1958 the
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nation's economy boomed and Beirut was transformed into the showcase city of
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the Mediterranean. The government seemed stable enough, but th ere were
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problems boiling beneath the surface and in the mid-1950s the system began to
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come apart. For one thing, the Moslems, especially the poorer Shiites, had a
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substantially higher birthrate than the Christians; many people believed that
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the Shiites had surpassed the Maronites in population. But the Christians
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would not allow a new census to be taken, for this would have meant a
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reallocation of the nation's political power, with the Moslem sects gaining at
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the expense of the Christians. With their hopes for political gains dampened,
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the Shiites became disenchanted.
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Why is this once prosperous nation on the verge of total collapse? There are
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a number of reasons, but the primary one is that the Lebanese people belong to
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at least fifteen differe nt religious sects and their loyalty to these sects is
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greater than their loyalty to a united Lebanon. Had the people's sense of
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nationhood been stronger, they would not have suffered the destruction of the
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past decade.
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+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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! (C)opyright 1986 by: Metal Communications inc. All Rights Reserved. This !
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! text is free, public domain, and may be distributed at your discretion. !
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