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The Maronites
and Lebanon
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The Maronites
and Lebanon
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Maronite
history is colored with the romance that attaches itself to a struggle
of a determined people. Most nations in their history often have
to make a choice between confrontation or cooperation and time has
shown us that minorities usually pay for their continued existence
through deformation of character or out right collaboration. The
Maronites through perpetual resistance and the preservation of a
precarious independence have escaped this fate. Not only have they
survived, but also they have survived uncowed. The remarkable nature
of their history lies hand in hand with that of Lebanon, for centuries
being their retreat and fortress. Lebanon and the Maronites are
inseparably attached. The Maronites have survived the storms of
invasion, occupation, repression and suppression for over 1600 years,
preserving their religion, traditions and state. Through the ages
they refused to bow to their occupiers, at the height of the Umayyad
dynasty the Maronites even exacted tribute as a price for their
good behavior, in due course their Christian neighbors all succumbed
to Islam but not Lebanon, holding a Maronite majority well into
the 20th century, even their Syriac (Christian Aramaic) language
was widely spoken well into the late 18th century and still survives
today in their liturgy and in some of their villages. The mountain
Maronites remain much as the earliest travelers found them, not
having lost the virtues for which they have been admired. The ingenuity
and perseverance with which they have tamed the hillsides is remarkable,
striving for soil, capturing it from rocks laboriously, foot by
foot. Their terraced vines, piled vertically one above the other,
climb to the snows. Their minute orchards are often wedged in the
faults and crannies of precipices. Such industry has its reward,
the very rocks have grown fertile. Their long political struggle
and the effort to squeeze a livelihood from the rocks and precipices
have made them independent, courageous and provident.
The
Birth of the Maronites
Early
Christianity in the region focused in and around the city of Antioch.
The conversion of Antioch was carried out by the disciples of Jesus
and the faith of its inhabitants was further strengthened by the
work of the apostles Paul and Barnabas. The church of Antioch itself
was founded by Saint Peter who was bishop there before moving on
to Rome, and it was in this church where the disciples of Jesus
were first called Christians. Along with Alexandria in Egypt and
Constantinople, Antioch was one of the most important spiritual
centers of the east. It outranked the others in biblical scholarship.
Two factors, however, led to the gradual decay of the church of
Antioch: its political position as a buffer state between the Byzantine
Empire and its antagonistic powers; and its ecclesiastical division
by schisms and heresies.
One of the most serious
divisions of the early church was a result of a conflict over the
nature of the divinity and humanity of Christ himself. It was maintained
by the Monophysites that in the person of Christ there was but one
nature which was primarily divine but had human attributes. A second
school of thought held that in Christ there was both a divine nature
and a human nature and that these were perfectly united.
A certain priest probably
wishing not be distracted divisions of the early church retreated
to the wilderness of the mountains not far from Antioch where he
could completely dedicate himself to God. This hermit's name was
Maroun in Syriac and Maron
in Greek. Saint Maroun found however, that his true vocation lay
in the preaching of the word of God and he began to attract people
from far and near who were drawn by his godliness and wisdom and
who desired to live under his spiritual guidance. As his disciples
increased in number, they began to be called Maronites after their
teacher. The earliest known source of 'Maron the monk' who 'planted
the garden of ascetic life' in the region was by the powerful patriarch
of Constantinople, John Chrysostom who solicited St. Maroun's prayer
and news was in an epistle in the year 404. Our principal historical
source on the life of Maroun is Theodoret, Bishop of Cyrrhus, who
wrote, some thirty years later the Religious History of Syriac Asceticism.
Theodoret tells us that the mountain Maron chose for his retreat
had been sacred to pagans and that he converted a pagan temple that
he found there into a church, which he dedicated to 'the true God'.
In his description of the beginning of Maroun's life, Theodoret
states that Maroun had 'already increased the number of saints in
heaven' and that St. Maroun 'cured not only infirmities of the body,
but applied suitable treatment to soul as well, healing this man's
greed and that man's anger, to this man supplying teaching in self-control
and to that providing lessons in justice, correcting this man's
intemperance and shaking up another man's sloth'. If it were not
for these references, the only indication of the saint's existence
would be the oral tradition of the Maronite community itself.
Lebanon,
the New Home
Maron
is said to have died in the year 410 but some date his death later,
in 423. It would seem that after his death, possibly to avoid persecution
from the Monophysites, the disciples of St. Maroun relocated south,
following the Orontes upstream towards Lebanon taking St. Maroun's
body with them. A Maronite monastery called Beth- Maroun was then
built near Saint Maroun's tomb and Theodoret described the profound
devotion that the monks of the monastery Beth-Maroun had to their
departed spiritual father Maroun. The monastery became the nucleus
of a community where men and women, under the guidance of the monks,
could find material and spiritual happiness. The monastery was probably
situated at Qal'at al-Madiq, in Northern Phoenicia, on the banks
of the Orontes not far from Mount Lebanon, the monastery belonged
juridically to the venerable patriarch church of Antioch. As the
hardships of the early Christian church continued more and more
the faithful set all their hopes on the Maronite community where,
in spite of persecutions and devastating wars, the spiritual leaders
guided and protected their faithful with moderation and wisdom.
This is the reason why, even today, the liturgy and the organization
of the Maronite community has strong monastic characteristics. It
is also the reason why for centuries the spiritual leaders of the
Maronites have kept watch over the political and social rights of
their flocks.
Some years earlier,
Saint Maroun's first disciple Abraham of Cyrrhus (350-422), who
is called the Apostle of Lebanon, realized that, despite having
some of the oldest Christian communities, paganism was thriving
in Lebanon. In around 402 AD Abraham set out with some companions
to convert the Lebanese pagans to Christianity by introducing them
to the way of St Maroun. According to Theodoret, Abraham 'repaired
to Lebanon, where, he had heard, a large village was engulfed in
the darkness of impiety'. He lived in that village and served as
its priest for three years. Theodoret then tells us that 'after
spending three years with them and guiding them well towards the
things of God, he got another of his companions appointed in his
place'. AbouZayd in his Study of the Life of Singleness in the Syrian
Orient, From Ignatius of Antioch to Chalcedon 451 AD states that
Abraham 'founded an eremitic community on Mount Lebanon. It was
probably located in Aqura near the river Adonis', and that from
Theodoret's accounts it would appear that 'Abraham founded an ascetic
community with his companions in the Lebanese village'. Legend has
it that the Adonis River, named after the Phoenician god, was renamed
the Abraham River after that village and the region was converted
to Christianity by Abraham and his companions.
The relocation of
the Maronites to Beth-Maroun, so close to Mount Lebanon, enabled
Maronite monks to regularly follow the example of Abraham and do
their work not only in Mount Lebanon, but in the Lebanese coastal
cities and the Beqaa valley as well.
As conflict over the
nature of the divinity and humanity of Christ raged, in 451 at the
Council of Chalcedon, it was decreed that Christ was both God and
man, having two natures, one divine and one human in unity. The
Maronites were loyal supporters of the decrees of the Council in
the region, and as a result, the opponents of Chalcedon showed themselves
bitter enemies of the Maronites and began to brutally persecute
them. As a result of the dangers they faced, the following years
began to witness a migration of Maronites into Lebanon and an increase
in the rate of conversion of its population to Maronite Christianity.
Attacks on Maronites
continued into the sixth century. In a letter addressed to Pope
Hormisdas in 517, monks of St. Maroun informed him that they are
being constantly attacked. They single out Antiochian Patriarchs
Severus and Peter, who, they say, anathematize the Council of Chalcedon
and Pope Leo, whose formula the Council had adopted. The Emperor
Anastasius had sent an army against the Maronites closing monasteries
and expelling the monks. Some had been beaten, others were thrown
into prison and some killed. The Maronites also appealed to the
Emperor in Constantinople, but to no avail. In one incident, while
on the way to the monastery of St. Simon Stylite, Maronites were
ambushed and 350 monks were put to the sword, even some of them
had been taken refuge at the altar. The monastery was burned. This
incident forced those Maronites that were living outside of Lebanon
to take refuge there in larger and successive waves.
Throughout the sixth
century of the Christian era, the disciples of St. Maroun continued
to convert the inhabitants of Lebanon and its surrounding areas
turning the population into Maronite Christians. For over a hundred
and fifty years the Maronites had worked the land, terraced the
mountains and built their villages.
The
Arab Invasion
Between
635 and 637, Damascus, Baalbak, Acre, Tyre, Sidon, Byblos, and many
other cities fell to Arab invaders. Many Maronites living in the
low lands joined their brothers in the Mount Lebanon. The mountain
offered no attraction to the desert Arabs who considered agriculture
below their dignity and who knew little of industry and nothing
of maritime trade. The Maronites high in the mountain resisted and
as the caliphs did not realize the strategic importance of Lebanon
and left it to itself. Constantinople recruited mountaineers from
the Taurus to infiltrate Lebanon and join the Maronites in harassing
the Arabs. The resistance movement became known as Marada or Mardiates,
meaning rebels. The Maronites became a problem for the Umayyad Dynasty
(661-750), who facing a civil war with the followers of Ali, decided
to pay a tribute to the Maronites so as to ensure good behavior.
This arrangement lasted for over 40 years.
The Maronites, over
the years, found themselves increasingly cut off, and any regular
with Antioch and contact with the patriarchate of Constantinople
became impossible, the Maronites therefore had to appoint in 687
their own Patriarch, Saint John-Maron who had been bishop of Batroun
since 676. The Emperor of Byzantium, however, acted as if his royal
authority extended over the Church. He appointed Patriarchs and
interfered in ecclesiastical matters. The Christians for their part
got into the habit of turning to him to solve their problems. When
the Maronites chose a Patriarch for themselves, the authorities
at Byzantium withheld their consent and the Emperor was very displeased.
The Maronites were forced to hold off the Arabs with one hand and
the Emperor of Constantinople with the other hand.
In 694, while invading
the region, the imperial army of Justinian II also attacked the
Maronites. The monastery on the Orontes was destroyed and 500 monks
executed. The Maronites now had to face the Imperial Army. The patriarch
led his people in combat, and after a number of engagements, the
Maronites won a decisive victory at Amioun, in Mount Lebanon. The
Imperialist generals, Moreek and Mooreikan, were slain.
There and then, the
Maronite nation, conceived many years before, may be said to have
been born.
'Maronite', says Edward
Gibbon, the eighteenth century English historian, 'was transferred
from a hermit to a monastery, and from a monastery to a nation.
This humble nation survived the empire of Constantinople, which
persecuted it'.
The Maronites had
to move high into the mountains to ensure their survival and independence.
The Patriarch established himself at Kfarhay, in the mountains above
Batroun, where he made the Episcopal palace his seat. A number of
other Patriarchs also resided at Kfarhay, among whom are Cyr, and
Gabriel. Many of their followers flocked about them, trudging to
Kfarhay, carrying their children and staggering under the burden
of what simple belongings they had been able to bring as they were
driven from their houses, their lands, and their property in surrounding
areas. They now came to forge a living from a rocky, densely forested
land, lacking in every amenity. The Anaphora of St John-Maron, in
daily use, is a brilliant testimony to the faith of the Maronites
in the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Their belief could
not be shaken, nor could the assaults of their enemies disperse
them.
With
the Arab invasion the Maronites put behind them the years of plenty
and prepared for the years of hunger. They transformed rock into
fertile soil in which they grew wheat and other grains, planted
olive trees, grapevines and mulberry trees, and added to their traditional
prayers a beautiful one:
'By
the intercession of your Mother, O Lord, turn your wrath from the
land and its inhabitants. Put an end to trouble and sedition, banish
from it war, plunder, hunger and plague. Have pity on us in our
misfortunes. Console those of us who are sick. Help us in our weakness.
Deliver us from oppression and exile. Grant eternal rest to our
dead. Allow us to live in peace in this world that we may glorify
you.'
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In their prayers the
Maronites spoke of their hardships, hunger, disorders, and injustice,
for these were things they were familiar with.
The Abbasids Dynasty
(750-1258), which brought humiliation to the Umayyads did not spare
Lebanon and treated it very much as an occupied territory. The Maronites
staged revolt after revolt, and though successful in the beginning,
in 759 in an attack on Baalbek, the Maronites met disaster. Severe
repression followed and the Maronites found it very difficult to
survive.
Finally, after 251
years spent by the Patriarchs in the region of Batroun, continued
pressure forced them to find a new refuge, this time in the mountains
above Jbeil, facing new difficulties on new soil. Patriarch John
II, was obliged to 'take refuge in the heart of Mount Lebanon in
938' as Patriarch DOUAIHY wrote of him. Finally, he settled in the
vicinity of Akoura.
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The Patriarchal See
in Kfarhay from 687-938
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The sojourn of the
Maronite Patriarchs in the district of Jbeil lasted for 502 years,
that is to say, from 938 to 1440 A.D and these were years of constant
turmoil as the plains and mountains of Lebanon became a battlefield
for the Crusaders and the army of Islam.
Thirty-four Patriarchs
resided in the region of Jbeil, through the troubled times, they
were:
John-Maron II, Gregory, Stephen, Mark, Eusebius, John, Joshua, David,
Gregory, Theofelix, Joshua, Dumith, Isaac, John, Simon, Joseph EL
GERGESSI (1110-1120), Peter (1121-1130), Gregory of Halate (1130-1141),
Jacob of Ramate (1141-1151), John (1151 -1154), Peter (1154-1173),
Peter of Lehfed (1173-1199), Jeremiah of Amshit (1199-1230), Daniel
of Shamat (1230-1239), John of Jaje (1239-1245), Simon (1245-1277),
Daniel of Hadshit (1278-1282), Jeremiah of Dmalsa (1282-1297), Simon
(1297-1339), John (1339-1357), Gabriel of Hjula (1357-1367), John
(1367- 1404), John of Jaje (1404-1445).
The monks lived in
inaccessible and trackless mountain fastness and considered themselves
happy if they were able to live in peace among their faithful people,
treasuring the Christian teaching that had been handed down to them.
They did not even have any fixed Patriarchal seat. They went from
Yanuh down to Mayfouq, then to Lehfed, to Habil, back to Yanuh,
to Kfifan, to Kfarhay, to Kafre, to Yanuh again, and to Hardine,
and to Mayfouq again. If they accepted to live an austere life and
to be like Abraham ever on the move, it was because it was their
will to follow in the footsteps of St Maron, their master.
Their dwellings were
extremely humble, and deprived of all show of riches and pomp, but
magnificent in their simplicity and detachment from the world. However,
'the devoted inhabitants of Yanuh, being pious and good Apostles,
insisted on building a residence for the Patriarch, in green stone,
very attractive and solidly constructed'.
The Patriarchal seat at Mayfouq, which still exists, is a true work
of art. If the greater part of the construction is devoted to the
church, as was the case of the other residences vestiges of which
are scattered about, this was because the Patriarchs were above
all men of prayer and so wanted their places of residence to be
in the first place retreats for prayer.
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In 1017 a non-Christian
sect, the Druze, entered the Lebanese stage. The sect owes its name
to Al-Darazi ('the tailor'), a Turk from Bukhara, who served as
a tailor in the family of Al-Hakim, the sixth Fatimid caliph-imam
in Cairo. Al-Hakim was one of the most enigmatic figures of history
committing irreconcilable acts of extreme violence and brutality
as well as benevolence. He greatly oppressed both Jews and Christians,
he even went so far as to forbid them from riding horses and forcing
them to wear black robes and black turbans so that they would be
easily recognized.
Al-Hakim demolished
the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem, this added to the
tension between Islam and Christendom and ultimately lead to the
Crusades.
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Monastery
of Our Lady of Mayfouq
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The Crusades
In
1097 The Crusaders set off from Europe to deliver the Holy Land
from the hands of Islam. By 1099 the Crusaders had reached Lebanon,
after a three-month siege of Arqah, the fortified birthplace of
the Roman emperor Alexander Severus, by Raymond of Saint Gilles
the Count of Toulouse, the Crusaders headed south through Tripoli,
Batroun, Byblos (Jbeil), Beirut, Sidon, and Tyre towards their goal,
Jerusalem.
For three centuries
the Maronites were cut off from the rest of the world, blockaded
within their mountains; and when the Crusaders swarmed into the
East, their discovery of the Maronites came as a surprise. The Holy
See itself was astonished to learn of their continued existence
when their disappearance had been taken for granted. Subsequently
there were strong ties formed between the Maronites and the Crusaders,
particularly after the arrival in the East of St Louis, King of
France.
William, archbishop
of Tyre and chancellor of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, states in his
Chronicle that when the Crusaders arrived at Tripoli, the Maronites
descended from the mountains 'to come and testify to the Crusaders
tender sentiments of fraternity' and that the Crusaders 'addressed
themselves to the fiddles of Lebanon, as to wise and sober minded
men, and having exact knowledge of the roads and localities, to
ascertain what would be the safest and most practicable road to
Jerusalem'. The Maronites thus joined the Crusaders and accompanied
them to Jerusalem.
The Maronites were
also described by Jacques de Vitry in his 'Historia Hierosolymitana'
of the twelfth century 'men armed with bows and arrows, and skilful
in battle, inhabit the mountains in considerable numbers, in the
province of Phoenicia, not far from the town of Byblos. They are
called Maronites, from the name of a certain man, their master,
Maroun'.
It was during these
confused times that some described the Maronites as Monothelite
heretics, who believe that in the person of Christ there existed
two natures but one will. They claim that the Maronites converted
on mass upon the arrival of the Crusaders, the Maronites say that
a proclamation of faith may have been mistaken for a conversion.
There appears to be no evidence of any heresy and the Maronites
adamantly deny that they were ever heretics and state that they
have forever been faithful to the decrees of the Vatican.
Pope Innocent III
saw with his own eyes what men of prayer the Maronite Patriarchs
were on the day when Patriarch Jeremiah of Amshit came to see him
during the proceedings of the Latran Council of 1215, in which the
latter participated. 'The Pope ordered that the Patriarch be depicted
in a painting to be made for St Peter's. When over the centuries
the painting had lost much of its radiance, Pope Innocent XIII ordered
that it be retouched. This painting represents the Patriarch raising
the host that had frozen in his hands while he was celebrating Mass,
with the Pope attending'.
These Patriarchs did
not leave behind them great works, such as fine Churches or castles
or universities. Nevertheless, they succeeded like the Apostles
in watching over their flocks as mothers and fathers do over their
children, and to pass on to them the teachings of Our Lord. They
formed a people full of the faith, blessing when insulted and enduring
when persecuted. When at last they had completed their labors in
one place, they carried the torch and went elsewhere.
During the thirteenth
century, Lebanon knew some decades of relative peace. The Maronites
were even able to undertake the construction of a number of Churches,
an activity which Patriarch DOUAIHY recorded as follows: 'At that
time, Christianity spread throughout the East and was openly proclaimed.
Bronze bells were rung to summon the faithful to prayer and to the
sacred services. Those who received the outpourings of God's grace
founded convents and built Churches, for the people yearned to serve
the Almighty and to perform good deeds. Father Basil of Becharré
had three daughters: Mariam, Thecla, and Salomeh. Mariam constructed
the shrine of St Saba in Becharré in Mount Lebanon; Salomeh,
that of St Daniel in Hadath; and Thecla, that of St George in Bkerkasha
as well as two churches in Koura...'
By 1291 the Crusaders
were all but defeated, but the relationship that they had made with
the Maronites was to endure. These Christians of Lebanon were most
responsive to western influence and in the Latin states they were
accorded the rights and privileges pertaining to Latin bourgeoisie
including the right to own land. Some Maronites followed the Crusaders
to Cyprus where their descendants make up a healthy Maronite community.
It is estimated that
during the Crusades 50,000 Maronites fell in battle under the standard
of the Cross.
Under
the Mamlouk Sword
Of
all the lands of the East, Lebanon was to suffer the most in the
last years of the Crusades and over many years to follow. Not only
did it have to face four Mongol waves between 1260 and 1303 that
left most of the low lying towns and cities in ruins but also Mamlouk
reprisals were brutal. General anti-Christian feeling was channeled
against the Maronites. They suffered every humiliation, their Churches
were set on fire, their villages plundered, and their vineyards
destroyed. The Mamlouk army went deep into the Maronite heartland
and demolished Becharré, Ehden, Hadath, and Jubbah all high
up in the mountain in the shadow of the cedars.
In 1302 and 1306 to
1308 the Mamlouk campaigns were mainly directed against Keserwan,
as reprisals were not only taken against Maronites but also against
schismatic Muslims. Keserwan, which according to tradition is named
after an early Maronite prince, had at the time a mixed population
of Maronites, Shiites, and some Druze. In the battle of Sawfar in
1307 a Mamlouk army of 50,000 came close to annihilating a Keserwan
contingent of 10,000 and went on to devastate the Shouf district.
Men, women and children were slaughtered, and trees were cut down.
After the Mamlouk campaign the Shiites left Keserwan and moved to
south Lebanon.
"On Monday, the
second day of Muharram, Akush Pasha, governor of Damascus, marched
at the head of a military force into the mountains of Keserwan.
The soldiers invested these mountains and, having dismounted scaled
the slopes from all sides. The governor invaded the hills, and his
soldiers trampled underfoot a land whose inhabitants had believed
it impregnable. The enemy occupied the heights, destroyed the villages,
and wreaked havoc in the vineyards. They massacred the people and
made prisoners of them. The mountains were left deserted."
The Mamlouk scorched
earth policy in Lebanon spared nobody and succeeded in nullifying
the fighting power of the Maronites, dissident Muslims and the Druze.
The Mamlouks had realized the strategic importance of Lebanon and
decided that it could never be allowed to be so troublesome again.
Lebanon, they felt had to be fragmented, and so it was divided in
three provinces. The provinces fell under Muslim governors, each
of whom acted almost independently and maintained a court.
The Patriarchs themselves
over the years also had their share of the general misfortune, suffering
as much as any. One was tortured, another harassed, another compelled
to flee, another put on trial, and yet another burnt alive.
"In 1283 Patriarch
Daniel of Hadchit in person led his men in their defense against
the Mamlouk soldiery, after the latter had assaulted the Jubbeh
of Becharré. He succeeded in checking their advance before
Ehden for forty days, and the Mamlouks captured Ehden only after
they had seized the Patriarch by a ruse. In 1367, patriarch Gabriel
was conveyed from Hjoula, his home district where he had been taken
refuge during the persecutions, down to Tripoli, where he was burnt
alive at the stake. His tomb still stands in Bab el Ramel, at the
gates of Tripoli. In 1402, there was great hardship. Many of the
dead remained without burial, many of which died of hunger. It was
a tragedy without parallel."
The Churches that
have survived from this period are small, but they testify to the
renewal in our mountains of the mission in Our Lord Jesus Christ,
which began when he trod the soil of Lebanon. The priests administered
the sacraments and preached the word of God. Despite the dangers
they faced daily the Maronites did not loose or give up their faith
or weaken their determination to survive, no matter what was thrown
at them, they would not be assimilated. Not only did they openly
and defiantly practice their Christianity but also managed to keep
contact with Rome throughout the difficult years.
Pope Eugene IV (1431-47)
invited the Maronite Patriarch to attend the Council of Florence
in person, the Patriarch however, sent Fra Juan as his delegate,
being motivated by concern about the risks of the voyage. Fra Juan
had an audience with the Pope, at that time presiding the works
of the Council, after which he returned to Lebanon bearing the Pallium.
"When the worthy
friar reached Tripoli, there was a large crowd who came to greet
him; unfortunately however, there were also soldiers sent by the
governor to arrest him, the official in question being persuaded
that the Christians had met in Florence to prepare the launching
of another crusade against the Muslims of Syria.
On learning of the envoy's misfortune, the Patriarch sent emissaries
to reassure the governor about Fra Juan's intentions. After having
pocketed a substantial bribe, the governor set his prisoner free
after the latter had promised to return after completing his mission.
Fra Juan made his way up to Our Lady of Mayfouk, which was then
the seat of the Patriarch, and delivered him the Pallium together
with a letter from Pope Eugene IV. But he then set off for Rome
again, this time passing through Beirut and ignoring his earlier
promise to the governor of Tripoli, who naturally enough flew into
a rage and sent his soldiers to arrest both the Patriarch and other
leading personalities. Finding nobody at the patriarchal residence,
he plundered and set fire to the houses around and even killed a
number of the local inhabitants.
Those of his men who continued the search for the Patriarch destroyed
the monastery, killing some of the monks and taking the others in
chains to Tripoli. The Patriarch was obliged to leave the monastery
of Mayfouk and from then on lived under the protection of Jacob,
Mukaddam of Becharré."
As if the miseries
brought on by man were not enough, the Maronites also had to fight
nature, in the form of earthquakes, plagues, drought and famine.
In the two hundred and fifty years of Mamlouk rule, Lebanon and
its neighbors are said to have lost two-thirds of their population.
When finally they
found themselves in a situation, which knew no other solution, the
Maronites had to move the Patriarchal seat further into the mountain,
the chosen place was the valley of Kadisha, Syriac or the Sacred
Valley.
The
Sacred Valley
As
one advances into the deep-cut valley of Kadisha, one is surrounded
by mountains towering over the gorge, leaving only a patch of the
sky visible overhead, it is all crag and mountain rock, soaring
heights and plunging depths. It is a land still bearing the imprint
of its Creator, and is a source of revelation and inspiration to
action. If one looks down from the shoulder of one of the great
mountains into the three-thousand-foot depths of the gorge below,
one is overwhelmed by a sense of power, and one wants to seize some
twisted tree- trunk or jutting crag so as not falling into the vast
space between plunging cliffs. One European traveler recounted how
the Patriarch, like a second Moses risen from the pages of the Old
Testament, guided his people from his austere retreat among the
rocks. Our Lady of Qannoubine was where the Patriarch took refuge
during the period of great hardship, which lasted 383 years, it
was the seat of 24 Maronite Patriarchs from 1440 to 1823, and they
were:
John of Jaj (1440-1445),
Jacob of Hadeth (1445-1468), Joseph of Hadeth (1468-1492), Symeon
of Hadeth (1492-1524), Moussa AKARI of Barida (1524-1567), Michael
RIZZI of Bkoufa (1567- 1581), Sarkis RIZZI of Bkoufa (1581-1596),
Joseph RIZZI of Bkoufa (1596-1608), John MAKHLOUF of Ehden (1608-1633),
George OMAIRA of Ehden (1633-1644), Joseph HALIB of Akoura (1644-1648),
John Bawab of Safra (1648-1656), George Rizkallah of Bseb'el (1656-
1670), Stephen DOUAIHY of Ehden (1670-1704), Gabriel of Blaouza
(1704-1705), Jacob AWAD of Hasroun (1705-1733), Joseph DERGHAM Khazen
of Ghosta (1733-1742), Symeon AWAD of Hasroun (1743-1756), Toubia
EL KHAZEN of Bekaata Kanaan (1756-1766), Joseph STEPHAN of Ghosta
(1766-1793), Michael FADEL of Beirut (1793-1795), Philip GEMAYEL
of Bikfaya (1795-1796), Joseph TYAN of Beirut (1796-1808), John
HELOU of Ghosta (1808-1823).
All of those named
above were God-fearing men, servants of their people. The valley
stands witness to their holiness and the sincerity of their quest
for God through austerity and frugality. People said of them, 'Their
crosses are made of wood, but their hearts are made of gold.'
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The Patriarchal See
in Qannoubine from 1440-1823
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The suffering the
people faced united them under their leaders, in turn under the
authority of the Patriarch. The Mukaddam of Becharré was
the chief of this whole region and he established some semblance
of peace and order. But even the times of peace were not without
trouble as people constantly feared for their lives, a report made
by a traveler who visited Qannoubine in 1475 states:
'The Maronite nation
has lived under occupation enduring continuous oppression and tyranny.
All over Lebanon one finds ruin, tears, and terror. Under the pretext
of gathering a certain tax called the Gezia, the authorities strip
the peasants of all their belongings and beat them with sticks,
and torture them in order to extract from them all that they possess.
Many would have perished had not their aged patriarch, Peter son
of Hassan, come to their rescue. Terrified by the perils that threatened
his people, the Patriarch gave away all the revenues of the Church
to satisfy the rapacity of the tyrants. The door of the patriarchal
monastery was sealed, and the Patriarch sometimes had to hide in
caves as did Popes Urban and Sylvester.'
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In Wadi Qannoubine,
the Maronites heard the Gospel and lived by it. Theirs was a life
of sacrifice inspired by the true faith and by hope, and so their
lives were directed. They were an example of unity and love. In
Wadi Qannoubine the Maronites had no need to be urged to pray.
Wadi Qannoubine is
in itself an invitation to the forgetfulness of self, to meditation,
and to prayer, an invitation that the Maronites did not refuse.
'They spent their time as the first Christians did, learning from
the Apostles'. Some of them felt the need to live a life more fully
devoted to prayer; many men and women sought God away from the haunts
of men, and soon the caves in the valley became the retreats of
hermits devoted to the inner life of union with the Creator.
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Wadi Qannoubine (Qannoubine
Valley)
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The Maronites at that
time were always under the threat of famine through failure of the
crops. They were also under the threat of attack on their persons
whenever they went out to their fields. But they lived without hate
towards any, anxious only to fulfill their mission in this world.
They were the Apostles of Jesus Christ. They labored in patience
and in hope. They looked on their enemies as people for whom Jesus
had died, people to whom they must convey the message of the Gospel.
They made such progress in virtue that in 1515 Pope Leo could write
them a letter of encouragement in which he said: 'You have acted
without allowing the persecutions and the hardship inflicted on
you by the infidels, enemies of Our Savior, and from the heretics
and schismatic, to turn you away from the faith of Christ.'
Even though the Maronites
endured famine and privation, and were pursued by enemies, they
did not bow. They did not accept to be downtrodden. Wadi Qannoubine
was indeed their last stronghold, if it was lost, all would
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be lost. Now the Maronite
people reacted with vigor and initiative. These men and women devoted
to prayer, and particularly to the life of the hermitage, increased
in number. Schools were opened and the pupils flowed in. Religious
orders were founded.
The
Ottoman Crescent
For
two and a half centuries the power of the Mamlouks had been supreme,
but by the start of the sixteenth century the balance of power had
shifted. Ottoman Turkey had emerged. Under Salim I, the Ottomans
clashed with the Persian Safawids, destroyed their army and occupied
Mesopotamia, then they turned their attention to the Mamlouks. The
Ottoman-Mamlouk clash took place on 24 August 1516, on a plain north
of Aleppo called Marj Dabiq. The Ottomans had a well-trained and
experienced body of infantry, heavy artillery and long-range muskets.
The Mamlouks on the other hand clung to personal valor and hand
to hand combat. The Ottomans victory was decisive. The old Arab
era had ended, a new one, Ottoman, began.
As soon as the Ottoman
victory was complete, a Lebanese delegation of chiefs presented
themselves to Salim to offer homage. Among the delegates, and indeed
their spokesman, was a man by the name of Fakhr-al-din Al-Maani.
The Maanis first appeared in 1120 when they were instructed by the
Saljuq governor of Damascus to settle the central slopes of Lebanon
and harass the Crusaders on the maritime plain. The Maanis were
to adopt the Druze religion. Fakhr-al-din kissed the ground before
the victories sultan and lavished praised upon him. The Sultan greatly
impressed with Fakhr-al-din's seeming sincerity, personality, and
grand eloquence, confirmed Fakhr-al-din and his companions in their
fiefs and also confirmed the autonomous privileges they had enjoyed
under the Mamlouks.
The Ottomans did not
want any trouble from Lebanon and so the tribute imposed was very
light, the Ottomans wanted to concentrate on more urgent matters
in Persia and Egypt and felt it expedient to leave the mountaineers
alone. Thus the latest waves of conquests that engulfed the area
failed to reach the heights of Lebanon where its Maronite sons persisted
in their ancestral way of life and watched what was transpiring
in the plains below. Earlier conquerors such as the Egyptians, Assyrians,
Babylonians, and the Romans all left their mark chiseled at the
foot of Mount Lebanon at Nahr el Kalb, now their monumental structures
are empty and crumbling. There was no reason to believe that these
fresh upstarts would leave much more of a permanent impression,
even if they were to stay for four hundred years.
The Ottomans, however,
realized that Lebanon could be a source of discomfort to them and
so decided that it could not be allowed to stand united. Lebanese
history from the 16th century to 1840 largely records the efforts
of the Turks to divide the country and of the Lebanese emirs to
unite it against Ottoman rule. On the whole the Lebanese emirs were
surprisingly successful, two among them, Fakhr-al-din II and Bachir
II, were outstanding.
Fakhr-al-din
II
After
the death of his father, the twelve-year-old Fakhr-al-din II was
rushed to Keserwan by his mother where he was raised by a Maronite
family, the Al-Kazins.
When Fakhr was entrusted with a fief in the Shouf, he could finally
realize his childhood dream, for fifty years 1585-1635 he fought
for Lebanese independence and in so doing created Greater Lebanon.
By means of marriage, bribery, intrigue, treaties and war he carved
out his kingdom. On the domestic level Fakhr had three objectives:
security, prosperity, and unity. His army consisted of 40,000 disciplined
and well trained professional. New garrison stations were built
and artillery imported from Europe. A Maronite Khazim commanded
his army and another served as his chief counselor. In 1611 he sent
a Maronite bishop on a confidential mission to the Pope and the
grand duke of Tuscany. A secret treaty was signed between Lebanon
and Florence.
In 1613 the Porte
moved against Fakhr with 50,000 troops and a sixty galley fleet.
Prudence dictated flight on the part of Fakhr and so he escaped
on a French vessel to find a warm welcome at the court of the Medicis.
Cosmo II of Tuscany received his Lebanese ally in style. Fakhr wrote
to his people:
"Having set before our eyes a goal toward
which shall unswervingly move - the goal being full independence
of our country and its complete sovereignty - we are resolved that
no promise of reward or threat of punishment shall in the least
dissuade us."
In 1618 Fakhr returned
to Lebanon to much rejoicing but found that in his absence his seat
at Deir al Qamar had been assaulted by his rival Yousof Sayfa. Fakhr
swore vengeance and lost no time in implementing his oath. His men
captured Crac des Chevaliers, demolished the Sayfa palaces in Akkar
and Tripoli and removed their stones so as to rebuild Deir al Qamar.
Next came the turn of the pasha of Damascus, in the battle of Anjar,
4000 Lebanese captured the pasha and cut down 12,000 of his men.
Lebanon, Syria and Palestine were now under the rule of Fakhr-al-din
II. Nothing was left for Fakhr, in the words of a biographer of
his time, but to declare himself sultan. Fakhr-al-din II preferred
the title of 'Emir of Mount Lebanon, Sidon, and Galilee'.
As lord of Greater
Lebanon he now felt free to proceed with his economic program, which
was to bring great benefits to his people. His Christian leanings
and European dealing again angered the Porte who in 1633 launched
a land and sea offensive against Fakhr. 80,0000 troops from Syria
and Egypt and a 22-galley fleet converged on Lebanon. Facing them
was a force of 25,000 Maronite and Druze. After initial victories
Fakhr-al-din II was captured and sent to Constantinople where on
13th April 1635 he along with three of his sons were executed.
The
Maronite College of Rome
It
was during the reign of the Maanis that the Maronite College in
Rome was established. On July 5th, 1584, Pope Gregory inaugurated
the Maronite College in Rome, satisfying the aspirations of the
community and opening to its students the way to success. In his
Bull the Pope declared:
'We hope that the students of this college during
the days ahead, after being formed in piety and the true religion,
which are of the tree of Sion and of the teaching of the Roman Church,
head of all the Churches, will return home to the cedars of Lebanon
to serve their community, renewing in their country faith in God.
This is why, with full knowledge of the facts and by virtue of our
apostolic authority, we establish the Maronite College, where the
students of this community may learn good behavior, devotion, the
true doctrine, and all the virtues which every Christian must have.'
With the arrival of
the first students in Rome, the dreams of the Pope became a reality,
and the whole Maronite community began to emerge from the shadows.
More than that, the Maronite community now had means of access to
Europe and to the world beyond, and was able to play its role as
an intermediary between East and West and cement Latin-Lebanese
relations.
One of the earliest
graduates to remain in Europe was Gabriel Sionite, who taught Syriac
and Arabic in Rome, occupied the chair of Semitic languages in what
is now the College de France on Paris, served as an interpreter
to King Louis XIII, worked on the compilation of the Paris polyglot
Bible which was the first to include Syriac and Arabic in its columns.
The Career of Gabriel was exactly paralleled by Ibrahim al-Haqili
(Echellensis) who also worked with him on the Bible. Others include
Mirhej Ben Namroun, who was also a professor and an interpreter.
Another outstanding
Maronite figure was Joseph Assemani, who as director of the Vatican
Library made it a world-leading depository. His research covering
Syriac, Arabic, Hebrew, Turkish, Persian, and Ethiopic, were embodied
in his massive Bibliotheca Orientalis, which remains a mine of information
to this day. As the historiographer of the king of Naples and of
Italy, he produced a four-volume work, which won him citizenship
of that country. The Pope sent Assemani as his delegate in 1736
to the synod held at Deir al Louaizeh and the resolutions reached
sealed the union between the Maronite Church and Rome.
Perhaps the most famous
graduate was Patriarch Douaihy who was able to compile, among many
other works, the earliest major history of his church and community,
making him the father of Maronite history. Furthermore he 'visited
every diocese to choose holy and educated priests. He examined the
liturgical books, corrected the errors introduced into them by the
copyists, read and adapted the works of historians, both eastern
and western, and wrote books some of which are still unpublished.'
The Patriarchs now
found themselves in a position to encourage the education of their
people. As the famous Lebanese Synod said:
'In the name of Jesus Christ we urge you all,
the ordinaries of the dioceses, of the towns, villages and hamlets,
and of the convents, to work together to encourage this undertaking,
which will bear much fruit. The chiefs of the people must find teachers
wherever they can, and take the names of all the children able to
learn, and order the parents to bring their children to school even
against their will. If they are orphans or if they are poor, let
the church or the monastery feed them, and if it cannot, let it
contribute one half of the cost and the parents the other.'
Now western religious
communities began to settle in Lebanon. The Capuchins were the first
in 1626, followed in 1635 by the Carmelites and in 1656 by the Jesuits.
The process went steadily ahead.
These religious orders
came in order to serve the Lebanese. They opened schools in which
the youth of the country were formed, schools whose academic level
was on a par with those of Europe itself.
Schools were opened
one after the other, until there was one adjoining every Maronite
Church. Some, such as those of Ain Warka, Mar Abda, and Haouka,
flourished and gained a reputation for themselves. Once the Lebanese,
at that time mostly Maronites, had acquired a good education, they
were at the forefront of Arab intellectual progress, and played
a leading role in the cultural Renaissance of the Middle East.
First Maronite
Order was established in 1694, when 'Gabriel Hawa, Abdallah
Qara'li, and Youssef Bin Albeten, approached Patriarch Douaihy to
request his permission to establish a religious community that follows
a religious rule and constitutions under the authority of superiors
who would be under a superior general.
The members would take vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience,
under the patronage of St Anthony, the father of hermits. The Patriarch
looked favorably on their demand, thanked them, and blessed their
enterprise.'
Bashir
II
The
Chehabs succeeded the Maanis in 1697. They originally lived in the
Hawran region of southwestern Syria and settled in Wadi Al Taim
in southern Lebanon. The most prominent among them was Bashir II,
who in many ways was much like his predecessor, Fakhr al Din II,
wanting a strong and independent Lebanon. Bashir was an ultra-liberal,
his palace contained a mosque and a chapel, and he himself was a
Maronite Christian by baptism, Muslim by matrimony, and Druze by
convenience rather than by conviction.
Bashir strong reign
of over 50 years interrupted by self imposed or enforced exile was
marked by a steady move towards expanding Lebanon, developing it
and making it autonomous in defiance of the Porte. Bashir centralized
his authority and consolidated his realm, he executed his rivals
and destroyed his foes, and criminals were dealt with without mercy.
He also established firm contacts with the outside world and the
West in particular. Bashir's Lebanon became the safest region in
the Ottoman empire and its reputation spread attracting new settlers
from neighboring lands.
His ability as a statesman
was first tested in 1799, when Napoleon besieged Acre, a well-fortified
coastal city in Palestine, about forty kilometers south of Tyre.
Both Napoleon and Al Jazzar, the governor of Acre, requested assistance
from the Shihab leader; Bashir, however, remained neutral, declining
to assist either combatant. Unable to conquer Acre, Napoleon returned
to Egypt, and the death of Al Jazzar in 1804 removed Bashir's principal
opponent in the area. When Bashir II decided to break away from
the Ottoman Empire, he allied himself with Muhammad Ali, the founder
of modern Egypt, and assisted Muhammad Ali's son, Ibrahim Pasha,
in another siege of Acre. This siege lasted seven months, the city
falling on May 27, 1832. The Egyptian army, with assistance from
Bashir's troops, also attacked and conquered Damascus on June 14,
1832.
Ibrahim Pasha and
Bashir II at first ruled harshly and exacted high taxes. These practices
led to several revolts and eventually ended their power. In May
1840, despite the efforts of Bashir, the Maronites and Druzes united
their forces against the Egyptians. In addition, the principal European
powers (Britain, Austria, Prussia, and Russia), opposing the pro-Egyptian
policy of the French, signed the London Treaty with the Sublime
Porte (the Ottoman ruler) on July 15, 1840. According to the terms
of this treaty, Muhammad Ali was asked to leave Syria, when he rejected
this request, Ottoman and British naval units bombarded Beirut and
troops landed on the Lebanese coast on September 10, 1840. Faced
with this combined force, Muhammad Ali retreated, and on October
14, 1840, Bashir II surrendered to the British and went into exile
in Malta and later Constantinople where he died in 1850.
Dimane
and Bkerké
Under
Bashir II, as conditions slightly improved, the Patriarchs envisaged
the transfer of their seat to Dimane in the summer, Bkerke in winter.
The first Patriarch to consider such a move was Youssef HOBAISH,
who occupied a house overlooking the valley and belonging to a partner
in ownership of a farm west of the village. But the first to act
on the idea was Patriarch Hanna EL HAJJ, who built the Patriarchal
residence in Dimane now known as the Old Residence, in the center
of the village, while near it he erected the church of St John-Maron,
now the parish Church. The present residence was the work of Patriarch
Elias HOWAYEK, who laid the foundation stone on September 28, 1899.
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Patriarch Elias Howayek
(1899-1931)
Father of Modern Lebanon
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In 1703, cloister
of Bkerké was built by Sheikh Khattar EL KHAZEN. It had a
little Church with a presbytery alongside. In 1730, it was taken
in charge by the Antonine order. In 1750, Bishop Germanos SAKR and
Sister Hindyieh Oujaymeh took it as a house for the Congregation
of the Sacred Heart. In 1779, an apostolic decree was issued dissolving
the Congregation of the Sacred Heart and putting the house at the
disposition of the Maronite community for any useful purpose. In
1786, the Maronite Synod of Bishops declared that Bkerke should
be a dependency of the residence at Qannoubine. In 1890, Patriarch
Hanna EL HAJJ restored it, adding part of the ground floor and the
whole of the upper story.
Brother Leonard, the
Lazarist, was the architect. He also planned the residence at Dimane.
Nine Patriarchs have
used Dimane as a summer residence and Bkerke as a winter one: Youssef
HOBAISH of Sahel Alma (1823-1845), Youssef EL KHAZEN of Ajaltoun
(1845-1854), Boulos MASSAD of Ashkout (1854-1890), Hanna EL HAJJ
of Dlebta (1890-1898), Elias HOWAYEK of Hilta (1898-1931), Antoun
ARIDA of Becharré (1932-1955), Boulos MEOUSHI of Jezzine
(1955-1975), Anthony KHORAISH of Ain Ibl (1975-1986), Nasrallah
SFEIR of Reyfoun (1986).
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Autonomous Lebanon
The
early part of the 19th century was dominated by acts of aggression
by the Druze against the Christians which culminated in the deaths
of many thousands of Christians at the hands of the Druze with Turkish
assistance in the Massacres of 1840-1860 which were finally halted
in July 1860 when the great powers finally decided to act, France
taking the initiative by dispatching 7,000 troops. The Ottomans
fearing this intervention, sent their foreign minister, Fouad Pasha,
to Lebanon ahead of the French and put an end to the violence. The
French troops landed in Beirut in August 1860.
On October 5, 1860,
an international commission composed of France, Britain, Austria,
Prussia, and the Ottoman Empire met to investigate the causes of
the events of 1860 and to recommend a new administrative and judicial
system for Lebanon that would prevent the recurrence of such events.
The commission members agreed that the partition of Mount Lebanon
in 1842 between Druzes and Christians had been responsible for the
massacre. Hence, in the Statute of June 9, 1861 Lebanon was separated
from Syrian administration and reunited under a non-Lebanese Christian
mutasarrif (governor) appointed by the Ottoman sultan, with the
approval of the European powers. The mutasarrif was to be assisted
by an administrative council of twelve members from the various
religious communities in Lebanon. Maronite nationalists strongly
objected to a non-Lebanese governor and insisted on self-rule.
This Statute which
was revised on September 6, 1864 and also adhered to by Italy in
1867 recognized and guaranteed the autonomy of Lebanon, but not
the Lebanon of Fakhr-al-Din and Bashir, but one stripped of its
maritime and inter-mountain plains with their cities and reduced
to its mountainous region. Only Mount Lebanon was to be out of the
Ottoman grasp. The leading signatory, Turkey, cherished the conviction
that Lebanon, without its ports, cities, and plains was unviable
and could not survive. Turkey was wrong, despite the mutasarrif
being totally incompetent and completely subservient to Constantinople,
Lebanon, thanks to the efforts of its inhabitants, not only survived,
but also registered a record of prosperity, security, and progress
that made it the envy of the provinces of the Ottoman Empire. Lebanon's
neighbors found expression in the saying 'Happy is he who owns but
a goat's enclosure in Lebanon.'
Youssef
Bey Karam
In
1866 Maronite nationalist uprising took place against the first
governor, Dawood Pasha. The uprising was led by a gallant and dashing
young man by the name of Youssef Karam.
Youssef Bey Karam
was born in Ehden, in Mount Lebanon on the 5th May 1823. His father
was Sheikh Boutros Karam, then Lord of Ehden and surrounding district,
and his mother was Marian, daughter of Sheikh Antonios Abi Khattar
Al Ayntouri. French-schooled Youssef began his education at an early
age, and he was a keen student. At the age of 7 years, he was well
versed in Aramaic, Arabic, French and Italian. Later on, he was
tutored in the arts of unarmed combat, horsemanship, shooting and
fencing. He was a devout Maronite.
In 1840, Karam aged
17, fought beside his father and elder brother against Egyptian
armies then occupying Lebanon in the battles of Hayrouna and Bazoun.
Youssef showed remarkable skills as a fighter and leader, and his
reputation and influence in the area steadily grew. So much so that
in 1846, when his father died, Youssef succeeded him as ruler. Karam
ruled with fairness, and his reputation and influence as a soldier
and politician continued to grow and spread.
To win Lebanese support
the governor, Dawood Pasha, offered Karam a senior Government post
but Karam refused and insisted on nothing less than self-rule for
Lebanon and so Dawood issued an order exiling Karam to Turkey in
1861. In 1864 however, Karam returned to Lebanon where he was greeted
as a national hero. War was inevitable.
The first confrontation
took place near Jounieh on the 6th January 1866. Karam was attending
Mass at St. Doumit Church when regular Turkish troops attacked his
men stationed outside. A fierce fight followed, and Karam, aided
by neighboring villagers, defeated the Turkish troops. Karam immediately
wrote to Istanbul and European Governments detailing the causes
of conflict, and championed his people's right to defend themselves.
Dawood Pasha however,
determined to rid himself of Karam and deal a fatal blow to the
Lebanese nationalist movement tried to set a trap. Dawood instructed
his military Commander, Amin Pasha, to arrange a meeting with Karam
in the presence of the Maronite Archbishop at Karem Saddah. The
meeting was arranged for Sunday the 28th January 1866. Whilst the
meeting was in progress, Turkish troops were sighted advancing at
nearby Bnasha toward Karem Saddah. The meeting was abandoned, and
one of the fiercest battles was fought at Bnasha involving some
800 of Karam's men opposing a far greater number of Turkish troops.
Here, Karam won a decisive victory, which led to a string other
victories: the battle of Sebhell 1st March 1866, Ehmej 14th March
1866, Wadi El Salib 22nd March 1866, Aytou 5th May 1866, Ey El Yawz
7th June 1866, Wadi Miziari 20th August 1866, Ehden 15th December
1866, Ejbeh 10th January 1867 and Wadi El Sabeeb 17th January 1867.
So successful was
Karam that he finally decided to march on 'Beit El Din', the Governor's
residence, over-throw Turkish rule and install a Lebanese national
government. Thousands of people joined Karam in his march to 'Beit
El Din', and Dawood Pasha was forced to flee to Beirut. Victory
must have seemed imminent to Karam and his men. In Beirut however,
Dawood Pasha rallied support from the European Ambassadors. These
emissaries warned Karam that as their governments were parties to
the Lebanese constitution, which allowed Turkish rule over Lebanon,
they were bound to support Turkey and would actively oppose Karam
and refuse to recognize any government he may form. At a meeting
at Bkerke, the French Ambassador ordered Karam in the name of Napoleon
III, to leave Lebanon in return for French guarantees of safety
for his men and people and the implementation of all of Karam's
national demands. Karam was warned that to refuse would mean to
place his men and the welfare of his people in jeopardy. On Thursday
the 31st January 1867, Karam left Lebanon on board a French ship
bound for Algeria. Karam's demands were not met and so he traveled
from Algeria to European capitals describing, for the rest of his
life, the plight of the Lebanese people and their desire for a sovereign
and independent state. A strangely very similar situation was to
occur 123 years later when the French gave similar guarantees to
another Maronite leader. In 1990 General Michel Aoun also left Lebanon
into exile on board a French vessel.
On the 7th April 1889,
Karam died of natural causes in Razinia, near Napoli, Italy. His
last words were "God ... Lebanon". He had a simple burial
and his gravestone read: "This is the resting place of Youssef
Boutros Karam, Prince of Lebanon". In September 1889, his body
was taken to Ehden, Lebanon, to St. George Church. In September
1932, a statue of Karam on his horse was erected outside of the
church, as a monument to the man who devoted his life to the liberty.
His actions and philosophy, "I shall sacrifice myself, that
Lebanon may live", became an inspiration to future generations
in the pursuit of a free and independent Lebanon.
World
War I
The
outbreak of World War I in August 1914 brought Lebanon further problems,
as Turkey allied itself with Germany and Austria-Hungary. The Turkish
government abolished Lebanon's autonomous status and appointed Jamal
Pasha, then minister of the navy, as the commander in chief of the
Turkish forces, the fourth army, in Syria and Lebanon, with discretionary
powers. Jamal lost no time in dealing with Lebanon, considered the
most disloyal of all the provinces. Known for his harshness, he
militarily occupied Lebanon.
Nationalist feelings
were running high in Lebanon and in other parts of the Ottoman Empire
such as in Armenia and the Turks were not willing to tolerate anything
that may lead to the break up of their Empire. In February 1915,
frustrated by his unsuccessful attack on the British forces protecting
the Suez Canal, and an Allied initiated a blockade of the entire
eastern Mediterranean coast to prevent supplies from reaching the
Turks, Jamal Pasha vented his anger on Lebanon and its people.
In August 1915 Jamal
replaced the Armenian mutasarrif, Ohannes Pasha, with a Turk, Munif
Pasha and abolished Lebanon's autonomy. Before the end of the month
a military court was established in Aley and thousands of Maronites
were imprisoned or exiled for little reason. In 1916 Turkish authorities
publicly executed 16 Lebanese in Beirut, for alleged anti-Turkish
activities. The date, May 6, is commemorated annually as Martyrs'
Day, and the site in Beirut has come to be known as Martyrs' Square.
Jamal earned his new title of al-Saffah, the blood shedder. Using
the war as cover the Turks hoped to finally put an end to the troublesome
Lebanese who had resisted Turkish rule for so long. Conscription
was imposed and it was so decided that Lebanon was to starve. The
Turks committed mass murder by commandeering Lebanon's food supplies
and requisitioning its beasts of burden and so caused hundreds of
thousands of deaths from widespread famine.
The Druze fled to
Houran. The land of Lebanon became a paradise for disease and plagues
claimed thousands of souls. Furthermore, the Turkish Army cut down
trees for wood to fuel trains or for military purposes, and it was
the huge Cedar forests that suffered the most with over 60% being
cut down in three years.
In a letter to The
Times on 15th September 1916 quoted by George Antonius in his book
'The Arab Awakening' an American woman resident of Beirut writes
how she passed 'women and children lying by the roadside with closed
eyes and ghastly, pale faces. It was a common thing to find people
searching the garbage heaps for orange peel, old bones or other
refuse, eating them greedily when found. Everywhere women could
be seen seeking eatable weeds among the grass along the roads.'
Another American resident in 1917 states: 'the scenes were indescribable,
whole families writhing in agony on the bare floor of their miserable
huts. Every piece of their household effects had been sold to buy
bread, and in many cases the tiles of the roof had shared the same
fate. It is conservatively estimated that not less than 120,000
persons have died of actual starvation during the last two years
in Lebanon'.
To compound all of
these problems, the war also deprived the country of its tourists
and summer visitors, and remittances from relatives and friends
abroad were lost or delayed for months. The Maronite Church opened
its doors to the poor as much as it could and Patriarch Anthony
ARIDA set up a cement making factory and also the Kadisha Electricity
Company to provide jobs for hundreds of young men.
During this period,
Lebanon suffered more than any other Ottoman province, loosing over
one third of its population to slow and painful deaths. Suffering
under Turkish rule however was not limited to Lebanon; the Armenians
also felt the fury of the Turks in what is now known as the Armenian
Genocide.
Relief for Lebanon
came in September 1918 when the British general Edmund Allenby and
Faysal I, son of Sharif Husayn of Mecca, moved into Palestine with
British and Arab forces, thus opening the way for the liberation
of Lebanon and Syria.
Flying
the Cedar Flag
Thirsty
for freedom, the Lebanese people delegated in 1919, the Maronite
Patriarch Elias HOWAYEK to go to the Peace Conference at Versailles
and to demand independence on their behalf. The Patriarch went to
Versailles and explained the problems of Lebanon, negotiated effectively,
and accomplished his mission. He thus put the future of Lebanon
on a firm footing and obtained satisfaction for the national aspirations.
Soon after this famous Treaty of Versailles, the San Remo Conference
was held in Italy in April 1920, and Allies gave France a mandate
over Lebanon and Syria. France then appointed General Henri Gouraud
to implement the mandate provisions.
On September 1, 1920,
General Henri Gouraud proclaimed:
'At the foot of these majestic mountains, which
have been the strength of your country, and remain the impregnable
stronghold of its faith and freedom; on the shore of this sea of
many legends that has seen the triremes of Phoenicia, Greece and
Rome and now by a happy fate, brings you confirmation of a great
and ancient friendship and the blessings of French peace, I solemnly
salute Grand Liban, in its glory and prosperity, in the name of
the Government of the French Republic.'
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