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The Place of These Three Founders
in The Maronite, Syriac and Antiochian Monastic Life
Monastic
and community life was an integral part of the Maronite Church from
its inception. This way of life flourished and prevailed in the
suburbs of Antioch, the political and spiritual "metropolis"
of Christians in the East at the time. The monks of Saint Maron
were instrumental in the spread of monasticism in the area.
Aphrahat (+275) and
Saint Ephrem (+373) relate that monastic life was the cornerstone
of Christian life as the Maronite Church entrenched itself in Lebanon
at the beginning of the seventh century. Aphrahat and Ephrem men
are believed to be the first to describe the monastic and community
practices, which preceded organized monastic life. Shortly afterwards,
Bishop Theodore of Cyrrhus (393-460) wrote a detailed history of
the monastic trends which were then flourishing around Antioch.
Some of those monastics
in search of Christian perfection preferred to isolate themselves
in hard-to-reach cave dwellings. Others lived without privacy in
the open air atop pillars, while still others settled in monasteries.
Those who chose complete isolation did so under the supervision
of teachers who were living examples of Christian perfection and
virtue. This description of the daily lives of these hermits explains
why they had no need for a codified community rule, nor did they
need to come under the authority of a local or general superior.
The Maronite monks
in Lebanon followed this type of monastic mode, which continued,
with periodic interruption, until the beginning of the twentieth
century (see Sfeir 1985). The last of the monks to live in this
way were those in Ehmej, who in 1838 finally joined the ranks of
the Lebanese Maronite Order and gave the Order a "Waqf"
(religious trust) called Rouwaysat Annaya, a piece of property held
in mortmain, which became the site of the monastery of Saint Maron
Annaya.
The
Causes For The Decline in Monastic Community Life
What
were the external causes that forced those seeking the monastic
life to abandon it despite its firm foundation and illustrious reputation
throughout Asia Minor? Perhaps the answer lies with the theological
and dogmatic quarrels that spread during the fifth century, as well
as the pressure exerted by the non-Christian Arab invaders, which
transformed Northern Syria into an area of constant struggle between
these Arabs and the Byzantines. Theological texts and missionary
reports and manuscripts support this view. Based on studies of the
internal structure of the Maronite Church, it seems that the monks
abandoned their organizational procedures and leadership role in
exchange for the creation of a strong patriarchal system. This institution
took over at the end of the seventh century and is still in charge
of Maronite affairs. Thus, perhaps the attachment of the "monks"
to a strong patriarchal authority eliminated the need for any formal
law or monastic rules. It is important to note that when the three
founders came from Aleppo to Lebanon, there already existed numerous
monasteries, especially in the regions of Jbail and Jibbet Besharri
and the Keserwan district. Since the Middle Ages, the Maronite Patriarchs
and Bishops resided in the monasteries of Jbail and North Lebanon
and were joined later by students from the Maronite College, which
was located in Rome. The fact that the monasteries of Mount Lebanon
were already flourishing undoubtedly influenced the founders' in
their decision to join these monasteries and not any others.
Bishop Joseph Semaan
Al-Semaany, like his predecessor, alluded to the presence of the
monasteries in Mount Lebanon, in a famous letter that he wrote on
March 1, 1735. In it he presented the first regulation for the monasteries,
"The Black Rule." It was printed in Rome that same year.
Al-Semaany listed more than 22 existing monasteries in the Jbail
and Jibbet Besharri regions, about 18 in Keserwan, and others in
the Shouf area. This invalidates the theory that the founders of
the order came to an uninhabited country. Al-Semaany stressed the
continuity of monastic life in the Orthodox and Eastern Catholic
Churches, including the Maronite one. In addition to what Patriarch
Duwaihi wrote, Al-Semaany is a major source when we now write about
the history of monastic life. However, Al-Semaany erred when he
labeled the Lebanese Order "Antonine" [i.e. the Lebanese
Order of Saint Anthony of Egypt], declaring that the "Almighty
transferred a vine from Egypt, and through his intercession, the
Order extended from Egypt to Greater Syria".
Monastic life in Lebanon
is indigenous or native to Lebanon. Its roots go back to the traditions
of Aphrahat and Ephrem. These were described by Aphrahat in his
"Demonstrations" and by Ephrem in his writings, particularly
"Anasheed Al-Ferdawse" - Hymns of Paradise, "Anasheed
Al-Eeman" - Hymns of Faith, "Maqoulat Ded Al-Harateeqa"
- Articles against Heretics, "Manzoum at Nsaybeen" - Composition
of Nsaybeen, and "Anasheed Al-Batouleeye" - Hymns to the
Virgin. The Syriac version of Saint Ephrem's biography states that
he had spent eight years of his life among the Egyptian monks but
this claim is no more than the fruit of a vivid imagination depicting
Egypt as the paradise of monks and a source of all inspiration for
monastic schools. In fact, "The Lausiac History", written
within fifty years of Ephrem's death, makes no mention of any journey
to Egypt by Ephrem. Furthermore, none of today's experts in Syriac
studies believe that monasticism came to Syria from Egypt. Aphrahat
and Ephrem both experienced the Antiochian hermetic life, and both
brought to light the existence of the organization of the "sons
and daughters of the Covenant," which was the nucleus of Syriac
monasticism. These devotees formed "Congregations" within
the Church and consecrated their lives to chastity, virginity and
self-renunciation in witness to Christ. During his last years of
exile in Edessa, it is possible that Ephrem encountered a particular
type of organized monastic life. His writings during this period
make reference to life in the monastery.
At the beginning of
the fifth century, the monk Raboula drew up a collection of twenty-two
articles of religious rule. This was the earliest work of its kind
to reach us. Raboula received the monastic habit in the Monastery
of Marcian (Marqyanous) near Qinsreen before being appointed Bishop
of Edessa. Others followed him in enriching monastic regulations.
These regulations were expanded and eventually translated into Arabic.
All this clearly indicates that the Maronite form of monasticism
is essentially of Antiochian Syriac origin. Perhaps some of the
writings of the Fathers of the Desert penetrated the Syriac practice
through authenticated or other means. These writings were attributed
to Saint Anthony (251-356), although the Father of Monasticism (Saint
Anthony of Egypt) left no formal written rules. When Saint Anthony
became famous through the writings of Athanasius, as well as through
oral traditions, it was assumed that he had founded the monasteries
in Lebanon, including the Monastery of Saint Anthony at Qozhaya.
The neglect of the
Antiochian Syriac monastic traditions on one hand - contrasted with
Saint Anthony's fame on the other hand - contributed to the perception
that Saint Anthony established all the various religious orders,
including the Lebanese order. The founding of the Confraternity
of Saint Anthony (Sharekaat Mar Antonios) and the widespread habit
of wearing a so-called Keetab Mar Antonio (Sacred Text of Saint
Anthony enclosed in a small hand-sewn pouch [popularly known as
talisman] to ward off danger) reinforced this belief. As a result,
the Monastery of Saint Anthony at Qozhaya became so important for
material as well as spiritual and religious reasons that our religious
order was called "the Order of Qozhaya." At the time,
it was commonly said that the religious order would be in no danger
even if only Qozhaya survived while all the other monasteries were
destroyed. On the other hand, it was claimed that should Qozhaya
be destroyed, no other monastery would be able to rebuild it.
The
Organizational Period (1695 - 1792)
The
Antiochian Syriac monastic life is rich in tradition. It facilitated
the pursuit of two goals: either the individual anchoritic life
or the organized community life. But when the three founders of
the order decided to follow the monastic life in Lebanon, the system
of organized monasteries was nonexistent. In his memoirs, Qaraalli
described his experience at the Monastery of Our Lady of Tamish
(Artemis). There existed a community of nine monks on one side and
a group of nuns on the other side, without any superior, constitution
or vows. They lived simply according to tradition. Qaraalli stated,
"They lived a life of innocence and simplicity which was suitable
for the righteous but very dangerous for those who were less virtuous."
Dandini, a pontifical envoy had made a similar observation a century
earlier.
Based on these remarks,
the contemporary scholars have often concluded that the founders
decided to introduce a reform; but there is a significant difference
between reform and renewal. Reform can cause complete split or can
result in the creation of a different structure, whereas the renewal
is generally an internal change of an entity, which is typical of
the long-established religious orders of the Church. In fact, the
founders were not explicit about the true goal of their endeavor.
On November 10, 1695,
Patriarch Stephen Duwaihi bestowed on the founders the hooded monastic
habit at Our Lady of Qannoubine. This date marked the beginning
of the religious order and the date to hold the General Chapter
meetings. Saint Moura Monastery became the seat for the Generalship
Office. Gabriel (Jibrayel) Farhat joined the three founders at Saint
Moura Monastery that same year. The founders began organizing their
way of life and started receiving new vocations. They elected Gabriel
Hawwa as Superior General (1695-1699). Abdallah Qaraalli drew up
22 articles of regulations which he later condensed into 15. They
also began to establish the foundations for the General and Special
Chapters as well as the Order of Directors. It was decided that
the General Chapter would be held once every three years and that
the election of representatives would take place at the same time.
The representatives, in turn, would designate the Superiors. The
year 1698 appears to have been one rich in accomplishments.
However, discord soon
seeped in, and in 1699 a disagreement erupted about the purpose
of the order. Hawwa wanted the order to be essentially a missionary
one, with a Superior General elected for life. On the other hand,
Qaraalli held a majority of the members and wanted an order of monks
who lived in community and carried on apostolic work as circumstances
allowed. Qaraalli's views finally prevailed and he was elected Superior
General by six consecutive General Chapters from 1699 until 1716,
the year he was appointed Bishop of the Diocese of Beirut. As for
Hawwa, Patriarch Duwaihi urged him to withdraw to Saint Moura Monastery
and start his own religious order. Having failed in his attempt,
he left for Rome three years later, seeking to purchase a printing
press. He took up permanent residence in Rome and did not return
to the East until the Apostolic See sent him there on a mission.
He was appointed Bishop of Cyprus in 1723.
In 1699, Gabriel Farhat
became disenchanted and withdrew from the order. He settled in Zgharta
where he taught children and preached. He returned to the order
in 1705 and succeeded Qaraalli as Superior General. He directed
the order for seven consecutive years with considerable wisdom,
enriching it with his own spiritual and literary writings and translations
from numerous sources. He was appointed Bishop of the Diocese of
Aleppo in 1725.
Neither Qaraalli nor
Farhat sought ecclesiastical honors and both were saddened tremendously
when they had to leave the order to which they were so deeply attached.
They continued to support the order from their new positions.
Qaraalli and Farhat
confided the monastic covenant to a worthy second generation that
the founders had thoroughly prepared to face difficulty with firmness
and resolve. Among these were two who were known for their tenacity:
Michael (Mikhayel) Iskandar Al-Ehdeny and Thomas (Touma) Al-Labboudy
Al-Halaby. The first pioneers and their immediate successors worked
hand in hand to find a coherent juridical formula capable of governing
all aspects of monastic life. In drawing up their constitution,
the founders relied on the experience, patience, sense of realism,
and the spiritual and psychological insight gained over the years.
They also drew upon the Syriac and Eastern traditions and the constitutions
of the Carmelite Friars and the Jesuit Fathers. Patriarch Duwaihi
(1670-1704), in 1700, and Patriarch Jacob (Yacoob) Awwad (1705-1733),
in 1725, placed their seal of approval on the result of these efforts.
The latter introduced in the rule of the order three new chapters,
which dealt with humility, patience, and brotherly love.
Finally, the authors
of these regulations found it necessary to obtain authorization
from Rome. The difficulties plaguing the Maronite Church had touched
the order itself during the Patriarchate of Jacob Awwad. This situation
convinced the authors of the need of a guarantee for their common
enterprise from the Apostolic See. Upon the suggestion of Al-Semaany,
Superior General/Father Michael (Mikhayel) Iskandar (1723-1735,
1741-1742) made the journey to Rome in 1727. In collaboration with
Father Youssef Al-Dibsy Al-Biskantawy and with the approval of his
Council of Assistants, Father Iskandar drew up the final draft of
these rules. Pope Clement XII (1730-1740) confirmed them by Papal
Bull on March 31, 1732. In 1735, they were printed simultaneously
in Arabic with Syriac characters (Garshuni) and in Latin by the
Propagation of Faith Press in Rome at the expense of the order.
The title given to them was "The Constitution and Monastic
Statutes Pertaining to the Congregation of the Lebanese Order",
nicknamed "The Black Rule." This remained in force until
1938 when "The Red Rule" replaced it.
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Many monks in numerous
other monasteries joined the new order and unconditionally entrusted
all their possessions to it. The ledgers of the monasteries give
us detailed figures about the responsibilities the order assumed
as a result. The order restored old monasteries, added new floors,
paid debts and taxes and provided pastoral service for the people
in the surrounding areas.
The vibrant dynamism
of this new movement was soon to bear fruit. Nine new monasteries
joined in addition to those that had already joined, beginning with
Mart (Saint) Moura on August 1, 1695 and St. Elisha the Prophet
in Besharri on April 1, 1696. In February of 1706, the order gained
a foothold in the Shouf area with the monastery of Saint John at
Rashmaya and in Keserwan with the monastery of Our Lady of Louayzi
in 1706. The order acquired the monastery of Saint Anthony at Seer
near Rashmaya in 1707 and Saint Anthony's Monastery at Qozhaya on
July 5, 1708. By that time, the order felt self-confident and began
building a new monastery of the Virgin (Al-Azra) at the Al-Drayebin
Al-Qobayat in 1710, although this was subsequently abandoned. The
order acquired the monasteries of Saints Peter and Paul at Krayem
Al-Teen, near Beit Shabab, in 1712, Our Lady of Tamish Deeck Al-Mahdy
in 1727, Saint Elias of Shwaya in 1728, the religious house in Tripoli
in 1734, the monastery of Our Lady of Mashmoushy in 1736, and Our
Lady of Hawqa in 1737. In 1736, the order founded the Convent of
Saint Elias Al-Rass, the first canonically erected house of the
Lebanese Maronite nuns. It was built in the spirit of the regulation,
which had eliminated combined monasteries for both sexes. This resulted
in disagreements whose consequences endured until 1828, when Patriarch
Joseph Hobaish (1823-1845), a man of firm principles, put an end
to it all.
The order expanded
its mission in 1737 to serve the Maronites of Cyprus and Akka. This
action provoked a conflict with the Latin-rite missionaries who
claimed that they alone had the right to minister to the Maronites
in these two regions as well as in Beirut and Tripoli.
The order, aware of
the needs of the faithful and wanting to honor its commitments,
rented several pieces of real estate for that purpose. The most
important of them was Bakleek in Ain Baqra, as well as others in
Seb'el. In 1713, it paid the taxes on these properties. It acquired
the Mill of Abi Ali in Tripoli in 1715.
However, growth was
soon followed by problems. Some of those who had donated their possessions
to the order rescinded their offer and reclaimed their gifts. They
later returned them. For the first time, the order accumulated a
debt and began distributing part of that debt (18,327.30 piastres)
among the monasteries, while the Generalship Office assumed the
responsibility to pay the rest.
It appears that these
debts did not include the six thousand piastres the order donated
toward the expenses of the Lebanese Synod. Father Thomas Al-Labboudy,
Superior General (1735-1741), estimated in 1739 that the interest
had reached six thousand piastres. This financial situation worried
Qaraalli and caused difficulties with far-reaching consequences.
The number of monks in the order had reached 210 during the first
forty years of its founding.
It was during this
period that a decision was reached on the style for a standard religious
habit. The preference was one piece without an opening and buttons
in front to distinguish it from the cassock worn by secular clergy.
It was woven from wool, which was plentiful locally and much cheaper
than imported cotton. The monastic hood was made of the same material
and the shirt was made of cotton. Al-Labboudy attempted to send
some of the monks to learn weaving from the Franciscans. Al-Semaany
promised help in this endeavor.
The rule of "Protocol"
became embodied in the regulation. It was reinforced by precedence
and consecrated by tradition. The position of the Superior General
became most senior of all. Like a Bishop, he had the right to wear
and carry pontifical insignia. After him, the order of seniority
is Assistants in the first, second, third and fourth level, followed
by the Superior of the Monastery of St. John at Rashmaya. He is
followed by the Superior of Saint Anthony at Qozhaya and then by
the other Superiors according to the date of their vows and their
age. The proper religious salutation was also agreed upon.
The founders were
particularly concerned about the spiritual issues, which they considered
the keystone for the continuity of the order. They composed several
books defining its spirituality and directing the spiritual formation
of its members. Their works had great influence on the spiritual
and intellectual life, not only of the Maronites, but also of the
other people of the Middle East. These masterpieces became a plentiful
source from which future generations of the entire region could
quench their spiritual thirst.
The spiritual, historical,
and intellectual richness of this great heritage has not yet been
studied sufficiently. Traditional historians have given scant attention
to this subject. As for those us who are fully aware of the importance
of this question and of its role as an integral part of the glorious
history of our order, we will limit ourselves to a simple mention
as evidence of the legacy, while also promising a detailed study
in the future. Because we realize the importance of the spiritual
and character formation of the monks, we feel it is a subject that
needs to be treated separately.
The spirituality of
the order is transfigured through the various ascetic practices
and intellectual exercises and through the writings of the founders
and the reading of the believers.
Qaraalli finished
his interpretation of these Rules in 1721. His work was entitled
"The Monastic Lamp for the Explanation of the Lebanese Rule."
This document was widely used in all the monasteries of Lebanon
and the Middle East, where several copies still exist. There is,
in particular, a copy in the author's handwriting at Saint Anthony's
Monastery in Rome and it is dated 1721; there is also Manuscript
No. 440 at the See of the Maronite Bishop of Aleppo and it dates
back to 1727. Father George Mourani, a Lebanese Aleppine priest,
printed the book at the Samya Press in 1956. After the Gospels,
this book with its various sources and wealth of contents became
the daily spiritual nourishment for the monks. In 1727, the sections
written by Qaraalli, namely the poems and Ephrameeyat became well
known in the churches and monasteries. They touched a responsive
spiritual chord in the heart of the people. However, they soon caused
an argument, as the Maronite hierarchy considered them too modern
and alien to the Maronite belief and religious customs.
When Qaraalli became
Bishop of the See of Beirut, a very sensitive post, during a period
in which the overwhelming majority of Maronites still inhabited
the mountain villages, he composed a book containing 32 chapters
entitled "Summary of the Law" and another similar one
entitled "Lebanese Jurisprudence." He did all this at
the request of the Maronite Church authorities, who, ever since
the Middle Ages, had been trying to legitimize its legislation.
This work of Bishop Qaraalli constituted the most complete collection
written until then. It included some of the essentials of all constitutions
going back to the Romans, including those of Theodorius and Justinian
as well as the Arabs.
Qaraalli's collection,
in conjunction with the decisions of General Chapters and the Councils
of Assistants as well as the numerous property deeds and contract
relating to mortmain and co-ownership and so on, all show that the
order acquired a unique level of socioeconomic heritage beyond any
other institution. Any scholar can find the manuscript of these
two books in the Archives at Bkerke. The oldest dates to 1734. Peter
Ghaleb published extracts from the "Summary" in numbers
5 and 6 in the "Patriarchal Magazine" of 1930 and 1931,
while Paul Massad published the entire text in 1959. As to the "Lebanese
Jurisprudence," it exists only in manuscript form. Father John
Alwan analyzed these two books in his thesis, which he presented
at the Lateran University in 1985.
With regard to Gabriel
Farhat, who rivaled Qaraalli and surpassed him in several disciplines,
he wrote several works that took front stage. The earliest are the
following:
- Al-Mousallassat Al-Doreyet (The Scintillating Triads), written
at the Monastery of Saint Elisha the Prophet in Besharri in 1706.
- Al-Khotab Al-Beayat (The Ecclesiastical Sermons) in 1707.
- Deewan Farhat (The Collection of Farhat), a masterpiece of science
and literature. There were several editions.
- Al-Kamal Al-Maseehy, (Christian Perfection). Farhat wrote it
when he was Superior General.
- Al-'Erab 'An Lughat Al-'Arab, a grammatical analysis of the
Arabic language in 1723. There is one copy of this book at the
library of the Church of the Resurrection in Jerusalem and two
copies at the "Bibliotheque Nationale" in Paris numbered
par. ar. 4279, 4280. Roshayed Al-Dehdah had it printed and called
it "Ahkam Bab Al-'Erab 'An Lughat Al-'Arab: Rules of Analysis
of the Arabic Language."
- Synksar Al-Qeddeseen (Martyrology of Saints), completed in 1724.
- The Attainment of Eloquence in the Study of Literature. In this
work, Farhat analyzes the different or new aspects of rhetoric
and style. There is one copy, in the author's handwriting, at
the library of the Maronite Diocese of Aleppo and another at the
British Library under the reference ar. chr. 34 (1699). Inaam
Fawwal obtained the first part about style and Dar Al-Mashreq
published it in 1990 in the series entitled "Texts and Studies".
- Bahs Al-Mataleb Fi 'Ilm Al-'Arabeya. In this book, the author
discusses Arabic grammar. This became a valuable source of reference
for any student of Arabic morphology and syntax. It also became
the essential manual in Lebanese schools for a long time. There
are several editions and the latest is very recent.
Farhat's writings
produced dual benefits: a mastery of linguistic and literary forms
and the transmission of religious culture. Farhat took his examples
from the Holy Bible and the teachings of the Church Fathers. The
founders defined clearly the spirituality of the order by forming
the Confraternity of Saint Anthony in 1725 and published his book
in 1727. We have already mentioned the influence this saint had
on the piety of the Maronites. They also arranged the periods of
fasting and the cycle of religious feasts.
The founders also
spiced up our Oriental spirituality with certain elements of Western
practice that they brought with them from Aleppo. In 1727, they
joined the Congregation of the Rosary and later the Confraternity
of the Scapular of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. They declared the Feast
of Corpus Christi as a holy day of obligation in the order. They
also began to celebrate the Passion of Christ every Friday night
during Lent, beginning in 1743. These were the teachings of the
First Golden Age, as the first period of the order came to be known.
Period
of Difficulties (1742 - 1770)
Shortly
after the death of two of the founders, Farhat in 1732 and Qaraalli
in 1742, Father Thomas Al-Labboudy, the former Superior General,
was called to Rome to answer allegations brought against him. In
1742, the order experienced a very serious conflict. It lasted for
over a quarter of a century and resulted in the order splitting
up into the Lebanese Maronite Order (Baladite or Baladiya) and the
Maronite Order of Aleppo (Halabiya) in 1768.
Historians have devoted
extensive studies to this tumultuous period and have published numerous
documents with various opinions about this split. Father Louis Bleibel
devoted the second part of his history to this subject, and Abbot
Peter Fahd dedicated the fourth part of his collection to the same
topic. We believe that this upheaval rocked not only the order but
also the Maronite Church and Mount Lebanon itself. It is history
and should be relegated to the past.
As a result of this
conflict, the Maronite Order simultaneously had two equal authorities
as of December 1744. There were several attempts at reconciliation
and reunification, but to no avail. All these efforts ended in failure
in 1748 and the division became final in 1753. Patriarch Joseph
Estephan (1766-1793) accepted it in 1768, and Pope Clement XIV (1769-1774)
confirmed it by Papal Bull on July 19, 1770.
At this time, the
number of the Lebanese Monks had reached 190, and only one had come
from Aleppo. There were 61 Aleppine Monks and five of them were
Lebanese. It should be noted that most of the monasteries that were
in the order during the conflict, such as St. Michael at Bnabeel
1756, St. George at Al-Neameh 1757, and St. Moses the Ethiopian
(Al-Habashy) at Douwar 1757, passed into the hands of the Baladite
(Lebanese) Order. In 1766, Emir (Prince) Joseph Shehab took the
advice of his two trusted advisers, Sheiks Saad Khoury and Simon
Bitar, and transferred the administration of the monasteries and
their properties in the Jbail and Batroun regions to the Lebanese
Baladite Order. The order assumed full responsibility with great
zeal. There was considerable development of the monastic and Christian
presence in the whole region. Furthermore, the taxes generated from
these properties were a welcome addition to the treasury of the
Shehab Emirate.
The
Period of Development and Prosperity (1770 - 1832)
The
Lebanese Maronites lost little time recovering from the sad consequences
of the split. They entered into a new period, lasting about 62 years
that covered the last third of the eighteenth century and the first
third of the nineteenth century. During this time, nearly 20 General
Chapters were convened. Also during this period, highly qualified
monks were appointed to positions of great responsibility. The order
regained the dynamism of its beginnings and once again played a
pioneering role in the organization of the Maronite Church. It took
part in the regional synods that confirmed the decisions of the
Lebanese Synod of 1736 and put an end to the difficulties caused
by the case brought against the nun Hindiyeh.
In July 1780, the
order hosted the Synod of Mayfouq at Mayfouq monastery and assumed
all the expenses. The order became a trusted source of counsel for
the Maronite Church. Thus, in 1783 Cardinal Antonelli consulted
Superior General, Father Mark (Marcos) Haddad Al-Kifaai, about the
reliability of Patriarch Joseph Estephan and in 1784, Patriarch
Estephan himself asked the order to help administer the Maronite
Church.
In September of 1786,
the Order took part in the Synod of Wata Al-Jawz. It sent a high
delegation to the Synod of Bkerke held on December 13, 1790. This
delegation included Superior General Emmanuel Gemayel (1790-1793,
1796-1799, 1802-1805, 1808-1810), his assistant Father Mark Al-Kifaai,
Father Ni'matallah Najjar, and Father Emmanuel Al-Rashnawy, who
represented the Bishop of Aleppo. During this Synod, they decided
that the Superior General was to become part of the Maronite hierarchy,
immediately below bishop in prominence. The Lebanese Order allotted
the Maronite Patriarchate a regular sum of money called "pension
or wages", to be used as needed. This amount increased as years
went by.
By participating effectively
in the regional synods, the Lebanese Order hoped to coordinate with
the Maronite Patriarch and the Bishops the mission of pastoral services
and education in schools. Generally, the order was able to overcome
the obstacles it encountered, particularly in churches in the Jbail
region and at Saint Taqla in Mrouj.
The order also acquired
exclusive rights for the distribution of the so-called "Saint
Anthony books" [i.e. "writings": once handwritten
but now printed, the prayer is folded into a triangle and then enclosed
in a prayer pouch along with a relic, crucifix or religious medal,
which is worn around the neck] and granting indulgences. However,
the order did not succeed in having one of its monks consecrated
as bishop. This would have enabled its priest to be ordained by
its own bishop at its own altars.
During this period,
more printing was done, mostly religious material to be used by
the monks at daily prayers. Again, the order acquired a printing
press and initially installed it in the Monastery of Saint Moses
the Ethiopian (Mar Moussa Al-Habashy) at Douwar. It was later moved
in the early nineteenth century to the Monastery of Saint Anthony
(Mar Antonios) at Qozhaya. The order spent a considerable amount
of money on equipment and general upkeep, but the typesetting and
printing methods remained very primitive until the second half of
the nineteenth century. The supply of books could not meet the demand
and spiritual books were still copied by hand. The press of the
Propagation of Faith in Rome continued as the supplier when a large
number of copies was required. "Al-Shheemeh" (Breviary),
a collection of daily prayers of the Brothers living in Rome, was
published in 1781.
The Breviary and the
guide for celebrating the Liturgy or the Mass were published at
Saint Moses the Ethiopian in 1789. The printing of the Anaphora
of the Liturgy took place for the first time in 1816 at the Monastery
of Saint Anthony at Qozhaya. Joseph Dibs, Bishop of Beirut, reprinted
it at the end of the nineteenth century. The Breviary was also reprinted,
this time in Rome, when Father Antonios Al-Shammouty was sent there
in 1828 and 1830. Mr. Mathew (Matta) Shehwan supervised the editing
and Mr. Ghantous Kouba paid the cost. No significant writing is
worthy of comparison to the literary works of the early days of
the order.
The order also achieved
notable economical progress during this period, which became known
as the Second Golden Age. It consolidated its presence in the already
established centers and ventured out in new regions. Listed below
is a summary of its achievements in Mount Lebanon.
In 1771, the order
rented land on Mount Toura from the Barra family, Kfarhouma nobles.
The order subsequently acquired ownership of the entire parcel and
attached it to the Monastery of Our Lady of Mashmoushy. The same
year, the order began construction of the Church of Saint Joseph
in Baskinta. The order also extended itself into new territories,
especially in the Zahle region where the Abillamaa Emirs (Princes),
feudal lords of the region, donated a piece of land to the Order
to build a religious house (Ontoush) and to construct a church which
would serve the peasants and sharecroppers who worked for these
lords.
In 1772, the Order
entered into a joint venture with the Hammady family at a farm in
Kfarshally near Mayfouq. It founded the Monastery of Mar Abda at
Maad and the following year built a school in 1773. It bought half
of the land at Saint Shina Kfarzayna from Sheik Daher in 1781. It
rented half the land at Mjaydel-Koura from Sheik Ghandour Al-Khoury
and attached it to the Convent of Saint Elias Al-Rass in 1781. In
the same year, the order acquired land in Bsarma from Emir Ali-Shehab
by paying the taxes on the land.
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- In 1806, the Order received property in Baan to build a school.
- In 1811, Emir Bashir Shehab donated land to Superior General,
Father Ignatios at Maallaqat Zahle for the construction of a religious
house (Ontoush) and a church to serve the peasants. However, the
Emir imposed several strict conditions, such as forbidding the
order from hiring his sharecroppers or their animals to cultivate
the land. The settlement of the order in these regions strengthened
the Christian presence in the Beqaa Valley and the surrounding
areas. At the same time, it also established a strong link between
these regions and Mount Lebanon.
- The order established Saint Maron Monastery at Annaya as of
1814 and attached to it lands purchased in Kfarbeaal.
- It increased its presence in the hills around Jbail; and in
1815, it received the mortmain of Saints Sarkis and Bacchus at
Qartaba, where it built a school for the local residents.
- The purchase of an orchard in Ajaltoun in 1818 led to problems
for the order.
- Thanks to Emir Bashir II, the order was able to buy land in
the Laqlouq region in 1827, and attached it to Our Lady of Mayfouq's
Monastery. Superior General Father Ignatios Bleibel personally
handled these projects, which contributed to a flourishing Christianity
in these regions.
- In 1831, the order founded a school at Rass Al-Matn, but had
to abandon it when the Abillamaa Emirs left the area.
The Ottoman governors
(Walis) continuously harassed the Shehab Emirs throughout this period.
They confiscated crops, exhorted money, killed the inhabitants and
seized properties in Mount Lebanon. Driven by their greed, they
exploited the region according to their whims, without any pity
for the population or concern for the good of the country. The despotism
and cruelty of Ahmad Basha surpassed anything in history.
Governors and feudal
lords used the most far-fetched pretexts to extort taxes from the
order. Oppressed by this fiscal burden, the order frequently asked
the authorities to review the official "cadastre" in order
to put an end to this tyranny and injustice. The "cadastre"
was the land survey that showed the correct boundaries and estimated
its productive capacity. Taxes were based on the result of this
survey. Here are some examples of what this could imply: in 1787,
Emir Joseph (Youssef) Shehab appointed a committee to survey the
lands belonging to St. Anthony Monastery at Qozhaya and in 1791,
Emir Shehab II imposed a tax equal to 30 measures.
Following the intervention
of Superior General, Father Emmanuel Gemayel, the Emir reduced his
demand, thus lowering it to 8,400 piastres. The Council of Assistants
suggested that this burden be shared among the different monasteries.
In 1802, the sons
of Emir Joseph Shehab ordered a survey of the lands of Saints Cyprian
and Justine's Monasteries at Kfifan and Saint Elias Al-Rass. Emir
Bashir II imposed an exorbitant tax on all the order's properties
in the Jbail and Batroun regions in 1812, but modified his demands
at the request of the Superior General, Father Ignatios Bleibel.
He ordered a new land survey for the monastery at Zaweeye, at the
request of Superior General Bleibel, in order to alleviate the injustices
committed against the Order.
The order often paid
not only the taxes exacted on its properties, but also those imposed
on its sharecroppers and the poor. It considered this action to
be a national duty that would help ensure the stability and legitimacy
of the Shehab Emirate and, at the same time, protect the autonomy
of Mount Lebanon where the order had flourished. The Superior General,
Father Ignatios Bleibel, who was elected seven times - approximately
22 years - as head of the order deserves much of the credit for
showing such great understanding of the situation. There was a solid
friendship between him and Emir Bashir Shehab II. However, Emir
Amin, Emir Bashir's son, turned against the Superior General who
refused to lend him the price of a farm at Majdel Aqoura. The Emir
encouraged a rebellion among a group of disgruntled monks who had
complained about the long and extended mandate of the Superior General.
When the General Chapter met at the monastery of Our Lady of Tamish
in 1832, the majority of the monks were ready to renew Father Bleibel's
mandate for another term. However, the minority staged a sit-in
at the monastery of Saint Joseph Al-Bourj. The Maronite Patriarch
was called to mediate between the two parties and as a result, Father
Bleibel gave up his position as Superior General in order to avoid
the danger of a split in the order. As a compromise, Father Benedict
Halayhal was elected Superior General (1832-1835) and so this period
ended with repercussions felt for years to come.
A
Period of Transformation (1832 - 1913)
This
period of change and upheaval lasted approximately eighty-one years,
during which eighteen Superior Generals led the order. Some of them
served for more than one term, either by election or by appointment.
There were some who did not finish even one term, because of illness
or death.
At the beginning of
this period, in 1834, there were 573 monks, of whom 211 were priests,
313 brothers, and 49 novices at the monasteries of Saints Cyprian
and Justine at Kfifan and Saint Maron at Beer Sneen. In 1908, the
number rose to 900 monks, of whom 700 were priests and 200 were
brothers. In 1884, when Father Martin Saba Al-Ghostawy was Superior
General (1875-1889), the Holy See issued an order forbidding the
Novitiate to accept more candidates for monastic life.
On a political level,
the European conflict erupted in our region and undermined the foundation
of the Shehab Emirate, leading to chaos and disaster. After the
Egyptians withdrew from Mount Lebanon in 1840, the great powers
fueled the fires of the sectarian clashes, which erupted between
the Druzes and the Maronites in 1841, 1845, and 1860. These countries
installed weak regimes in Mount Lebanon, namely the direct military
government of the Ottoman Turks, the two "Qaimmaqameeyat,"
as well as the Shakeeb Afandy regime. The "Moutasarefeeyat"
replaced that in 1861. This form of government received tacit approval
from the Lebanese people.
The order suffered
greatly during these crises. Thirty-six of its monks were killed.
It also sustained huge material losses estimated as being millions
of piastres. Most of its monasteries in the Matn and Shouf were
either destroyed or ransacked. The monks soothed their spiritual
and material wounds by reclaiming the treasures of their monastic
life. With tenacity, patience, and hope, they rebuilt all that had
been destroyed.
In the sphere of economics,
the industrial revolution hit the region in 1830, and with it came
interdependency on the international trade exchange. As a result,
European merchandise flooded the local market and shook the very
foundations of the rural economy. The commercial treaties, concluded
between the great powers and the Ottoman Empire in 1838 and 1861,
determined the terms of exchange. They controlled prices and imposed
excessive duties on transportation and customs. The trade exchange
increased through the years and created the need for cash liquidity.
This encouraged people to save money in order to meet the demands
of the new standard of living and to pay taxes.
The monks adhered
to these new conditions very reluctantly. Like so many other Lebanese,
they worked to improve the cultivation of mulberry trees and to
raise silkworms. The production of silk increased to meet the commercial
demands of the time. Using these means, the monks were able to secure
the cash to ensure the daily basics of life and to pay their debts
and taxes. They tried their utmost to protect this sector of the
economy, which was often exposed to problems ranging from disease
afflicting the silkworms to fluctuating political and economical
factors. At the end of the nineteenth century, they were forced
to purchase silkworm eggs directly from France. Silk production
remained their most important economical resource to the extent
that the area of arable land was calculated by the sum of money
devoted to planting mulberry trees. Shortly before World War I,
the Ottoman authorities imposed a blockade on the mountains and
this stifled the silkworm farmer and his industry. Apple and other
fruit orchards took over most of the mountainous terrain. The silk
spinning operations continued to function at a lower rate until
the 1960s. Efforts to restore the glorious past failed and the doors
of that industry finally closed.
During the second
half of the nineteenth century, a new social class appeared. It
represented commissioners and brokers who took over the silkworm
trade. They profited from the decline of traditional aristocracy
and from the readiness of the farmers to turn to them to ensure
the sale of their product. The members of this new social class
acquired enormous wealth and considerable importance in Lebanese
society. Even the monks made use of their services to secure a market
for their products.
Also during the second
half of the nineteenth century, the order released some of its members
for apostolic work. They began teaching in schools and serving in
parishes. This compelled the order to depend on others to tend the
land. These workers were either sharecroppers or seasonal laborers.
However, with the growth of the economic crisis and the steady rise
in the cost of living, the sharecroppers devoted their time to their
own businesses and the labor force diminished. All these factors
contributed to higher wages. For example, a worker earned half a
piastre a day in the first half of the nineteenth century and two
piastres a day by the end of this century. This sudden rise in inflation
resulted in an economic stagnation that cost the order dearly. The
largest monasteries, such as Saint Anthony at Qozhaya and the monastery
of Our Lady of Mashmoushy, ran large deficits, while others were
crushed under the burden of debt.
The economic crisis
forced the order to rely increasingly on the sharecropping system.
The method of "co-ownership" worked well at first. The
monks considered their support of their sharecroppers to be an integral
part of their humanitarian mission. They did not differentiate between
the sharecroppers and themselves. The order entrusted its possession
to the sharecroppers. It offered them seeds and tools as well as
half of the crop. It paid their taxes, assured them protection and
educated their children.
As the economic crisis
grew worse, the traditional close social relationship that had existed
began to unravel. This precipitated economic and social problems
that peaked in 1861, when the inhabitants of Btiddeen Al-Laqsh sued
the Monastery of Our Lady of Mashmoushy. The order won the case
thanks to its lawyer, Father Ignatios Shekry. He advised the Superior
General, Father Lawrence Yammeen Al-Shababy, to record the legal
judgment in the archives at the Generalship Office at Our Lady of
Tamish and in the registers of Our Lady of Mayfouq, Saint Anthony
at Qozhaya, the Maronite Patriarchate and all the other religious
orders, because these institutions might profit from such a judgment
in the future. The foresight of this priest-lawyer was invaluable
when the same problem occurred again at the end of the nineteenth
century and on the eve of World War I (1914-1918). In the spirit
of charity toward neighbors and the love of peace and good understanding,
the order ceded its rights. The sharecroppers of Al-'Arbat also
sued the Monastery at Qozhaya, but the order fought this case and,
thanks to Father Joseph Raffoul won, albeit at a high cost to the
order.
The long-lasting economical
recession caused a large-scale emigration of the work force, including
the monasteries' sharecroppers. The monasteries were left to care
for the families who were left behind and they accomplished this
task admirably.
During this depression,
the possessions of the order became a source of contention, to the
point where several irresponsible individuals called for their confiscation
and redistribution, heedless of history and the order's past accomplishments
and good deeds. The state itself violated the principles of private
property when it built a quarantine center and an isolation hospital
as well as a gas company on the order's land in Karantina. The state
also demolished a religious house in the heart of Beirut on the
claim of widening the road. This was done with no compensation to
the order, which accepted all this in the public interest. The same
thing is now happening to the order's properties in Al-Naameh and
Damour.
Starting in 1830,
Protestant, Catholic and Orthodox foreign missionaries increased
their educational activities in Lebanon. All social classes, ever
since the "Moutasarefeeyat", have demanded a better educational
system. Wishing to maintain its vanguard role in society, the order
stayed in direct contact with its roots: the Lebanese population.
From the time it was founded, the order had cared for the spiritual,
educational and material welfare of the Lebanese people.
The order embarked
on an expanded educational program by opening schools throughout
the country, the most important being Beit Lahya founded in 1836,
Rass Al-Matn in 1831, Al-Sheaneeye in 1839, Hamlaya in 1849, Ain
Zebdee in 1853, the two at Azra and Kfarheeyal in 1854, the renovated
school of Saint Joseph Al-Mtayen in 1866, Wadi Jezzine in 1873,
Eghby in 1890, the seminary at Beirut in 1891, those of Rashmaya,
Al-Shaqadeef and Baabdat in 1896, Batha in 1904, and Tourzaya in
1932.
Some of these schools
did not survive for the reasons described. Nevertheless, their number
indicated clearly the missionary path the order had embraced. The
order limited its commitment to primary school education and it
tried its best to eliminate illiteracy. Foreign missions, on the
other hand, provided higher education. Lebanon consequently witnessed
a dynamic cultural movement unique in the Arab world. A new class
of intellectuals emerged and entered the work force. These individuals
devoted themselves to such professions as teaching, medicine, journalism
and law. Public administration absorbed a large number of these
highly competent professionals.
This cultural development
caused some negative repercussions in the country. There was a great
shift in the work force toward higher education and away from agriculture.
At the time, there were no plans to develop a thriving industrial
sector. Neither the local authorities nor the Ottoman Empire perceived
any danger. As for the existence of books during this period, scholars
have found no traces of any valuable works. Translation was at a
standstill and printing was limited to liturgical and theological
works and translated histories. In 1856, the order bought a printing
press and installed it in Our Lady of Tamish Monastery, where some
printing continued.
The internal situation
of the order deteriorated as a result of the disorder in the region.
Superiors of monasteries and monks remained in their home territory
and neglected to travel to attend the periodical meetings for consultation
and coordination. This chaotic situation brought gradual direct
intervention by Rome and the appointment of the Superior General.
Father Saba Kraydy Al-Aqoury was the first to be appointed in 1845.
Father Lawrence Yammeen Al-Shababy was appointed twice to the post,
in 1850 and again in 1856 following the so-called "Synod of
Shwadeeh." Al-Shababy extended his authority over most of the
monasteries in the Jbail and Jibbet regions. The monasteries in
the Matn and the Shouf regions came under the jurisdiction of Father
Arsenios Al-Neehawy, who was elected Superior General. Shortly before
his death, Father Al-Neehawy was reconciled with Father Al-Shababy
in 1859, and the order was once again reunited under one Superior,
Father Al-Shababy. He remained the elected Superior General until
1862.
In order to insure
the continued unity of the order, Rome resorted to apostolic visitations.
Bishop Joseph Geagea, head of the Diocese of Cyprus, was the first
apostolic delegate from 1857 to 1874. Father Ephrem Geagea Al-Bsherrany
became Superior General of the order for twelve years (1862-1874).
The Apostolic Vicar,
Ludovicci Piavi, who was Italian, took over the visitation (1875-1889).
A man known for his short temper, he was unable to solve disputes
except by using harsh methods. He had a Latin version replace the
Arabic text of the Lebanese Synod of 1736, which had safeguarded
the autonomy of the Maronite Church and the authority of the Patriarch.
He even tried to subject the newly elected Maronite Patriarch and
bishops to an investiture by an Ottoman decree. He ignored the regulation
of the Lebanese Order and tried hard to gain favor with Rustom Basha,
the Turkish governor. His actions provoked great opposition led
by Youssef Bey-Karam of Ehden. This resistance angered the Apostolic
Vicar who, together with the local government authorities, tried
to suppress it.
Governor Rustom Basha
aggravated the situation when he visited Ehden. While there, he
summoned the monks of Saint Anthony's Monastery at Qozhaya, harassed
and humiliated them, and ordered some of them to be put in the Beit
El-Deen prison. While they were passing near Batroun, some of their
brother monks from the monasteries of Jbail and Batroun tried to
free them but were prevented by a platoon of the Gendarmerie. When
these monks reached the prison at Beit El-Deen, they were put to
hard labor. This harsh treatment resulted in the death of several
of them. Nothing like this had ever happened before under the Ottoman
Empire.
The Council of Assistants
within the order took precautions by transferring some of the monks
as well as part of the properties to the nearby religious centers.
The ensuing Apostolic visits prevented the order from achieving
any positive results through the General Chapters. The last ten
years of the nineteenth century were marked by calls for reform.
All eyes were on Father Benedict Salamy Al-Mtayny, a graduate of
the Jesuit University of St. Joseph at Beirut. Superior General,
Father Salamy (1891-1895) tried his best to restore normality but
failed, mainly because of the above-mentioned difficulties.
In 1883, Jesuit Father
Martinov drew up the first reform plan. It was revised by the "Propagation
of Faith" and then presented to the monks. It included a letter
from the Superior General, Father Martin El-Shemaly (1895-1899)
and it dealt with the same subjects. Patriarch Al-Hwayek (1899-1932)
issued the same recommendations.
Apostolic Vicar Duval
subsequently took over the apostolic visitations. Rome ensured the
inclusion of Patriarch Al-Hwayek on the committee. This visitation
lasted from 1898 to 1907 and was marked by interference in the affairs
of the order by the bishops who were close to the Patriarch. The
Superior General, Father Joseph Raffoul (1904-1910), vigorously
defended the order. His great courage and skill were reminiscent
of the enthusiasm and zeal of the Founders and the first generation
of monks, particularly Al-Labboudy. Both Raffoul and Al-Labboudy
shared the same fighting spirit and intellect; and, to a great degree,
the spirituality of Qaraalli and Farhat. This visitation ceased
when Raffoul drew up his own secret report and sent it to the Propagation
of Faith and the Holy See.
Another visitation
began and covered all three pontifical Maronite Orders. Three Latin-rite
monks were in charge. Two of them later withdrew and Father Galland
became the sole member. This visitation encountered a strong underground
press campaign led by the Order's historian, Father Louis Bleibel,
and supported by Father Raffoul. Patriarch Al-Hwayek gave his blessing
to this campaign because he considered these visitations to be intrusions
upon his authority. The newspaper "Al-Manazer," which
belonged to Naoum Al-Baabdaty, published the details of this campaign.
The newspaper "Al-Bashir" also backed the campaign. The
visitation stopped during World War I and resumed in 1922. Father
Galland personally analyzed these shortcomings and in a long report
in 1911, he recommended the proper solutions to these various problems.
Series of short reports about each individual order were written
but were never made public.
At this time, Father
Louis Bleibel began writing a history of the order. Superior General
Raffoul presented a most valuable study of the law and regulation
of the order based on his long experience in their application.
He attached to this study an economic survey in which he evaluated
the resources of the order between 1904 and 1907. He valued them
at "2,763,790 piastres," minus the expenses necessary
to maintain the various properties. As a result, each member of
the eight hundred monks, nuns and novices in the order would be
allocated three piastres and five baras. This meager amount was
to cover all their individual expenses and any unforeseeable but
necessary building work. The individual monks used this amount to
share in the expenses of guests, servants or for natural disasters.
Father Raffoul's remarks are similar to those made by Father Al-Labboudy
150 years earlier. Father Raffoul was the first person to establish
a correlation between the number of monks and the volume of their
production. He excluded students, novices and the aging from the
productive labor force.
This calculation gives
us an idea about agriculture in Lebanon in the early twentieth century
and about an institution that made it its principal resource. Superior
General, Father Genadios Sarkis (1910-1913), continued his effort
to control these economic matters, imitating the initiatives of
his predecessor Father Joseph Raffoul. He organized the Department
of General Economics that managed the business affairs of the Order.
Superior General Sarkis addressed a letter to all superiors of monasteries,
brought to their attention the debt of the order and gave them instructions
for maintaining accurate records and ledgers. He sought to designate
the Monastery of Saint Elias at Kahlouneeye as a convent for those
who wished to live a completely cloistered life. He also began making
the distinction between the simple and permanent vows as prescribed
by previous councils. However, World War I (1914-1918) prevented
full realization of these projects.
The second half of
the nineteenth century ended on an optimistic note. The order embarked
on a successful building program. Monasteries were built next to
the numerous schools enumerated above. New religious centers branched
out of the old monasteries, specified in the following list:
- In 1840, the Monastery of Saint Jacob (Mar Yacoob) Al-Hosn,
near Douma. The property was detached from one of Saint Anthony
at Houb, to serve the Maronites of the region.
- In 1845, the Monastery of Saint Rock (Mar Roukoz) at Mrah El-Mir.
The property was detached from the General House of the Order
at Nahr Al-Saleeb and Ajaltoun.
- In 1847, the Monastery of Saint Anthony at Jdaideh and the Monastery
of Saint George at Aashash. These properties were detached from
Saint Anthony's Monastery at Qozhaya.
- In 1847, the Monastery of Saint John Maron at Qobbayaa. The
property was detached from the monastery of Saint Elias at Kahlouneeye.
- In 1847, the Monastery of Saint Artemius (Mar Shallita) at Al-Qottara.
Superior General, Father Lawrence Yammeen Al-Shababy took charge
of its construction in 1851.
- In 1851, the Monastery of Saint George at Deir Beit Janneen.
This property was in ruins when the order received it from Bishop
Paul Kassab.
- In 1854, the Monastery of Saints Peter and Paul at Azra.
- In 1855, the religious house (Ontoush) of Saint Anthony at Jaffa.
- In 1858, the religious house of Our Lady at Baalbeck.
- In 1863, the Monastery of the Holy Savior at Bhanneen.
- In 1863, the order accepted the Convent of Saint Simon the Stylite
(Mar Simaan Al-'Amoudy) at Al-Qarn, Ayto, from Bishop Paul Moussa.
It was used to care for the nuns.In 1876, the Monastery of Our
Lady of Deliverance at Bsarma. The property was detached from
the Monastery of St. Anthony at Qozhaya.
- In 1879, the Monastery of Our Lady of Victory at Ghosta. This
property became the site of a school for those entering the order.
This monastery embodies the magnificence of monastic architecture
of the time.
- In 1894, the Convent of Saint Maron at Qnaytra, built for the
Lebanese Maronite nuns.
- In 1907, the Monastery of Saint Anthony at Nabateeye. The property
was detached from the Monastery of Our Lady of Mashmoushy.
From this expansion,
we can sense the dual directions the order had undertaken. It was
increasing its missionary sphere and at the same time, it was embarking
on a reform program. Superior General, Father Saba Kraydy Al-Aqoury
had sent the first group of monks to study at the Jesuit College
at Ghazir, hoping that they could return later to manage the order's
schools. Superior General, Father Benedict Salamy maintained this
agreement when the Jesuit fathers moved to Beirut, where they founded
their university which included the Colleges of Philosophy and Theology.
In 1891, the Superior General bought a residence hall in Abd Al-Wahhab
Al-Ingelizy Street for the monks who were studying at the nearby
Saint Joseph University. The Superior had paid 1,000 French gold
pounds to the owner, the Maronite Elias Mhawis from Beit Mery. Thus,
the order returned to Beirut and is still there to this date. The
graduates of Saint Joseph University took charge of the educational
development in the order until 1950, when a long-cherished dream
became a reality and the University of the Holy Spirit was founded
at Kasslik. It assumed the work of educating the monks.
During this same century,
Saint Sharbel, the Hermit of Annaya, became a beacon of holiness.
He died in 1898 and immediately afterwards, the news of his miracles
spread around the world. He was canonized in 1977 as a saint of
the universal Church. Saint Sharbel and his numerous brother monks,
regardless of whether they were living in religious communities
or secluded in hermitages, exemplified an authentic spiritual heritage
that is still very much alive. This spirit is the essence of monastic
life and a guarantee of the continuity of the Lebanese Maronite
Order despite internal crises and external upheavals.
This spirituality
flows from the attachment to Our Lord, Jesus Christ, observance
of the teachings of the Holy Gospel, strict adherence to the rules,
and prayers, fasting and self-sacrifice. The character of the Lebanese
monk is refined through daily striving after sanctity. Character
is shown in his conduct and this makes the order a school of Christian
perfection, a school that teaches the way to Heaven. Saint Sharbel,
Blessed Al-Hardini, Blessed Rafqa and others have been witnesses
to this Christian ideal. They affected their society through their
simplicity and their convictions. They affirmed unchanging values
and virtues. The faithful strive to imitate them, while making their
intercessions and visiting their tombs. This spiritual dimension
still acts upon society, as leavening in dough, to attract vocations
to the religious life.
A
Period of Openness and Expansion Throughout The World (1918 - 1995)
Lebanese
society as well as the entire world witnessed some basic changes
which imposed important educational, social and national obligations
on the order. The state was not yet ready to assume responsibility
for all the changes taking place. The order felt obligated to shoulder
these responsibilities and pay for them.
The outbreak of World
Wars I and II overturned political and economical systems as well
as the demography. People intermingled more and immigration rose
sharply. New inventions and discoveries revolutionized the level
and quality of work. The worldwide network of ground, sea and air
communications had made giant strides. Family life and its very
concept had been altered radically. Modern appliances in the homes
such as the refrigerator, washing machine, telephone, radio and
television, facsimile and recently the computer improved the standard
of living. The order followed its progress in the country. It contributed
to this progress insofar as its principles and means allowed. The
order had become accustomed to accepting burdensome responsibilities,
especially in critical times. When World War I broke out, tens of
thousands of Lebanese perished, many more suffered from famine and
many others endured blockades, injustice and the loss of basic liberties.
The order joined forces with the Maronite Patriarchate to ease the
suffering and misfortune of the people. Superior General, Father
Ignatios Dagher (1913-1929), mortgaged all the order's possessions
to the French government for two million gold francs. He spent this
amount to relieve those in dire need and poverty.
There was a similar
drama during the World War II (1939-1945). Once again, the order
played the Good Samaritan and opened the doors of its monasteries,
especially the Monastery of Saint George at Al-Naameh, to refugees
and those in desperate need. The civil authorities awarded Superior
General, Father Basil Ghanem (1938-1944), the Gold Medal in appreciation
of these sacrifices made by the order.
Superior General Father
John Al-Andary (1944-1950) followed the example of his predecessors
when in 1948, he opened the monasteries to Palestinian refugees.
Superior General Father Moses Azar (1950-1956) took special care
of the victims of the 1956 earthquake in Lebanon. From its own treasury,
the order reimbursed the people whose homes were devastated by the
earthquake.
The Lebanese war broke
out in 1975 and was followed by the uprooting of thousands of Christians
from their homes, villages and lands. Superior General Father Sharbel
Qassis (1974-1980) mobilized all the resources of the Order to help
the displaced. He was instrumental in the formation of the Lebanese
Front, the cornerstone of the Christian Resistance, and thus brought
the Lebanese cause into the mainstream of contemporary history.
Superior General Father
Paul Naaman (1980-1986) continued and strengthened this patriotic
stance. He conducted discussions at the highest level with the political
forces, seeking a solution to the problems of Lebanon. He devoted
his attention to the displaced and the forgotten. In 1984, during
his term as Superior General, the order housed the displaced in
three buildings it had constructed on the grounds of Our Lady of
Deliverance, overlooking Jbail.
Superior General Father
Basil Al-Hashem (1986-1992) helped and encouraged the "School
of Blessed Rafqa", which offered free primary and secondary
education to 600 students until 1993. The order always encouraged
charitable works. The monks made every effort to help the displaced
from the Damour and other areas, and it provided them with the necessary
pastoral services. Some members of the order opened special eating
places where the poor and the needy could receive free meals. Other
members tried to remedy the evil consequences of the war by forming
an organization to care for those who had become drug addicts. These
initiatives eased some of the war's sufferings. Not only did the
order perform acts of charity during times of trial, but it also
tried to relieve the sufferings of the people under now normal difficult
conditions.
In 1949, the order
established the Hospital of Our Lady of Deliverance in Jbail. In
1973, it moved to its present location on a hill overlooking the
city. It strove to equip it with the most modern laboratories and
a medical staff chosen from the very best specialists. Today, this
hospital is considered one of the best in the country.
Since the whole region
between Jbail and Tripoli lacked any medical facilities, the order
built Saint Sharbel Hospital in Batroun in 1964 and turned it over
to the Lebanese Government in 1972. In 1964, the Orphanage and Hospice
of Our Lady of Lebanon at Harissa were built. These centers cared
for the elderly and sheltered hundreds of children in an atmosphere
ideal for receiving a good education.
The order became experienced
in all fields and provided the rapidly changing Lebanese society
with several services, especially in education and apostolic work.
The order has undertaken educational work ever since its inception.
The Lebanese Synod of 1736 encouraged education and made it free
and obligatory for both boys and girls. These measures were considered
revolutionary for that day and age.
The order implemented
these decisions and opened its schools to students of all different
social classes and religions. There was an increasing need for secondary
and higher education in the beginning of the twentieth century.
The Conference of Versailles, held in 1919, discussed the future
of Lebanon and Syria and devoted special attention to the question
of education. The Lebanese called upon the Superior Generals to
provide education for the youth. The order answered these appeals
by establishing schools in most areas of Lebanon, especially in
the rural areas in the hope of preventing unbridled migration to
the cities. These educational institutions provided all levels of
instruction. Although the number of these schools remained the same
as during the nineteenth century, members of the order became more
personally involved in the teaching and management as the numbers
of pupils increased. These schools grew more independent and became
physically and financially separated from the monasteries. Modern
teaching techniques were introduced and new equipment enhanced the
scientific research laboratories.
These schools rivaled
the educational facilities of Europe as well as those of the East.
They transformed their surroundings and gained a respected status
because of the good quality of the teachers, the high motivation
of their students, and the confidence and satisfaction expressed
by the people. These institutions worked closely with the later-established
Ministry of Education and created good ties with foreign embassies.
They also organized annual scientific, sporting, cultural and recreational
events throughout Lebanon and abroad.
The growth and prominence
of these institutions compelled the order to create the new position
of Director General of Schools within the framework of the Generalship
Office in 1944. The first to occupy this position was Father Joseph
Taraby, who later became Superior General (1962-1968).
Listed below are the
most important educational facilities operated by the order:
- The school of Our Lady of Mayfouq founded 1922.
- The school of Our Lady of Mashmoushy founded 1922.
- The school of Saint Maron, Beer Sneen founded 1936.
- Saint George School, Aashash founded 1945.
- The Lebanese College, Beit Shabab founded 1945.
- Saint Anthony's School, Chekka founded 1947.
- Saint Sharbel's School, Jiyyeh founded 1949.
- Saint Anthony's School, Hammana, founded 1951.
- Saint Joseph's School, Al-Mtayn founded 1951.
- The School of Our Lady of Tamish, Deeck Al-Mahdy founded 1951.
- Central College, Jounieh founded 1966.
- Saint Elias School, Kahlouneeye founded 1967.
These schools were
highly successful in teaching and forming character. Their graduates
have been given the most important positions in the public and private
sectors. Success did not come without a price. These schools could
not continue to be financially self-sufficient. Inflation increased,
teachers and other employees demanded higher wages to keep up with
the cost of living, and poor parents could not pay full tuition
and fees. On the other hand, the government did not provide any
subsidies, even though its schools could not absorb the growing
number of school-age youngsters.
The order was generous
toward its schools. It allocated them large sums of money and released
many of its members to work in them. The order could support these
schools because of the products of its monasteries, but sometimes
it had to sell off properties. When the economic situation worsened
during the 1970s, the order had to turn over some of its schools
to the government for a minimal rent. The recent war (1975-1990)
resulted in the destruction of a number of the order's institutions,
such as Saint George's School at Aashash, Saint Joseph's School
at Al-Mtayn, Saint Elias School at Kahlouneeye, Saint Maron's at
Beer-Sneen, and Saint Sharbel's at Jiyyeh, this latter school being
the only one so far to have reopened its doors in 1991. The order
has yet to receive any compensation for its losses.
The order also felt
that the handicapped, who were victimized by the war, deserved a
decent existence with the help and devotion of others. Therefore,
in 1976 it transformed its school in Beit Shabab into a hospital
for the handicapped. All the other schools continue their role in
the education of Lebanese society.
The primary goal of
the order had been to lead a life of anchorites and hermits. However,
it incorporated apostolic work in its mission and vocation. The
founders had done this and the succeeding generations of monks continue
to do the same. Bishop Al-Semaany encouraged this cause, and the
Lebanese Synod laid the framework. The monks ventured into difficult
territories, such as Akkar, the mountains of Lattakia in Syria,
the Beqaa, Akka, Cyprus and Egypt. The order's apostolic work encountered
many obstacles, some legal and others that were human, due to the
presence of Western missionaries, the attitude of the Maronite hierarchy
and the mingling of the monks with the population. However, their
praiseworthy conduct, intelligence and energy enabled them to overcome
these hurdles. The nineteenth century witnessed a widening geographical
area for their work. There was hardly a village where a monk did
not preach during Lent, thereby strengthening the faith of the inhabitants,
promoting Christian living and encouraging prayer. Thus, the monks
gained the trust of the people, heard their confessions, shared
in their trouble and anxieties, solved their problems, joined them
in their joy and in their sorrow, accompanied them in their prayers
and devotions, and provided them with spiritual support and guidance.
It is impossible to
produce a complete list of all the monks who were engaged in this
spiritual activity or to give a quantitative estimate of the results
of their effort. Records at the order's Generalship Office document
numerous requests - even from the Maronite heartland and stronghold
in the Kesserwan region - made by the faithful asking for the monks'
spiritual services.
The mission of the
order has not been limited to the geographical borders of Lebanon.
It has spread wherever there was a need and to every country where
the Lebanese had migrated. The work of the order in the Diaspora
resulted in a great national and spiritual endeavor. The following
is a chronological and geographical table of the order's missions
founded outside Lebanon:
- The Monastery of Saint Elias, Metoushi, Cyprus, 1737.
- The Dakar Mission, Senegal, 1949.
- The Mendoza Mission, Argentina, 1952.
- The Sao Paulo Mission, Brazil, 1954.
- The Abidjan Mission, Ivory Coast, 1954.
- The Bamako Mission, Mali, 1959.
- The Mexico City Mission, Mexico, 1960.
- The Tucuman Mission, Argentina, 1972.
- The Sydney Mission, Australia, 1972.
- The London Mission, United Kingdom, 1983.
- The Montreal Mission, Canada, 1984.
- Saint Sharbel House, Surenes, France, 1987.
- The Caracas Mission, Venezuela, 1988.
In view of the scale
of missionary work, the Sacred Congregation of the Oriental Churches,
under the leadership of Cardinal Tisserand, proclaimed the Lebanese
Maronite Order to be a missionary order in 1955.
The radical change
that took place in Lebanese society during the twentieth century
did not prevent the order from tending to its purely internal affairs.
Ever since Father Ignatios Dagher was Superior General, the order
has diligently pursued the beatification and canonization of its
Saints. It considers the sanctity of its members as a living proof
of a deep, rich spiritual heritage. Sanctity is the ultimate goal
of those who embrace the order and sanctity is its one certain guarantee
of a fruitful and flourishing future. Saint Sharbel was canonized
in 1977 and is now widely known. The causes of Blessed Rafqa and
Blessed Nimatallah Kassab Al-Hardini are still under study, and
there are others whose virtues have not yet been discovered.
The order has always
striven to renew its Constitution. A commission was formed during
the term of Superior General Father Martin Taraby (1929-1938) to
study these rules.
Superior General Father
John Al-Andary reactivated this commission. The Congregation of
the Oriental Churches verified the authority of the Constitution
and confirmed it in 1960, during the term of Superior General Father
Ignatios Abi-Sulaiman (1956-1962). It was subjected to a ten-year
trial period. Its study was resumed during the mandate of Superior
General Father Peter Azzi (1968-1974) and the commission finished
its work in 1974. Under subsequent Superiors, great efforts were
made to amend it. On February 4, 1993, at the beginning of the term
of Superior General Father John Tabet, an Extraordinary Special
General Chapter began to add the final touches to the text of the
Constitution and the Monastic Statutes. Confirmation of its final
form by the General Chapter is expected soon.
Joint studies and
regular internal meetings have created an atmosphere of dialogue
and democracy within the order and prove that it is an institution
endowed with the qualities necessary to guarantee its future.
During this period,
the order paid special attention to the young people. It cared for
every stage of their formation and entrusted their training to qualified
educators and exemplary monks. They were placed in centers in which
all the conditions of religious community life were observed and
witnessed. In 1939, the category of postulants was introduced for
12-year-olds who wished to enter religious life. Except for the
novices, the candidates were housed at the seminary at Kasslik.
The order thus reaped the harvest of what it had sown and nurtured.
Those sons, whom it had educated and provided spiritual formation,
would carry on the work and manage the resources of the order.
Holy Spirit University
at Kasslik was founded in 1950 and remains the crown jewel of the
order. It symbolizes many years of labor in various fields of education
and inaugurated a new era of openness toward man, the world and
contemporary problems. The order began sending some of its monks
to universities in Europe and America to complete their specialization.
Upon their return, these graduates worked as professors, researchers
and administrators in the institutions of the order, especially
at Holy Spirit University.
Kasslik University
has eight faculties, including the prestigious Pontifical Faculty
of Theology, and three institutes. It continues to flourish because
of the internationally recognized accomplishments of its students
and graduates. The university has also distinguished itself by spearheading
a liturgical and musical renaissance in conformity with the decision
of Vatican Council II and in line with the needs of the Maronite
Church. The collection of liturgical books, produced by the university's
publishing house, in addition to past and present production, demonstrates
the influence of this renaissance on the faithful. The present phase
has been distinguished by several important translations and new
compositions, which are too numerous to list here. Most of these
works of literature are printed on the order's printing press. Other
publications that spread the order's message far and wide are The
Port (Al-Mina), The Grain of Wheat (Al-Sanabel), Monastic Papers
(Awraq Rahbaneeyat), Words of the East (Kalimat Al-Sharq), Biblia,
etc.
The order has launched
the series entitled "The Way of Love" (Tareeq Al-Mahabet)
to teach Christianity using modern methods. It also produces and
presents religious programs for radio and television.
Conclusion
No
religious mission can survive without the inspiration of the Cross
of Christ. The sacrifice of oneself and one's worldly possessions
is the most striking testimony to the holiness of this mission.
The Lebanese people and the order have given martyrs as sacrifices
during the recent sad events in Lebanon (1975-1990). Three sons
of the order were martyred at the Monastery of Saint George at Aashash
on September 8, 1975. They are Father Anthony Thamineh, Father Peter
Sassine, and Brother John Maqsoud. Father Joseph Farah and Father
George Harb were massacred on January 8, 1976 at the Monastery of
Saint George at Deir Janneen, and Father Francis Daher Abou-Antoun
was killed on January 29, 1982 at St. John Maron's Monastery at
Qebbaya'. Eight monasteries, in the Shouf and Matn regions, were
looted and destroyed, while the monks suffered the terrors of siege,
persecution and expulsion.
The order has returned
to these regions and is trying to rebuild the destroyed monasteries
and religious centers and, at the same time, to reestablish amicable
relations with the various Lebanese religious communities. The grace
of God is abundant compensation for the extensive losses. The order
looks forward to a new millennium full of solid faith, deep love,
and firm hope.
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