In Beirut, jubilation and trepidation
13/08/2006
- Opinión
Beirut.- Hussein Choumer hangs around one corner in the district of
Haret Hreik in the southern suburbs of Beirut. Around him are
mountains of rubble, the remains of over 100 mostly 10-storey
residential buildings flattened by Israeli missiles now turned
monuments of destruction. Books, towels, washing machines, and
mattresses are strewn on the streets, covered with a thick film of
powdered concrete and ash. The last page in a calendar shows the day
it all started: 12 July; the hands of the clock in one shop is stuck
at 12:25. The air is redolent with the strange mix of filth and
gunpowder.
Hussein, his wife, and three children used to live here. His house is
gone. And yet, “I consider my loss as nothing,” Hussein says. “What
matters is that our brothers are fighting in southern Lebanon
fighting. And as they fight, they’re giving me back my home.” Two
hours later, a volley of Israeli bunker-buster bombs once again hit
the neighborhood.
Sixty of the thousands of families who lost their homes in these
suburbs have camped out in a school in central Beirut. Outside, a
large picture of Hezbollah’s leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah hangs at
the center of a clothesline over the narrow street. The atmosphere
inside is anything but despondent. Over a hundred children are running
around the small courtyard playing. In a little while, they burst into
a chant “We love Nasrallah!” The adults follow. These families have
just lost everything. They’re having the time of their lives.
With over 1,400 dead, more than 3,000 wounded, over a million
displaced, and entire districts and villages in ruins, Lebanon today
marked the “cessation of hostilities” with a heady mix of awe and
anxiety, lamentation and celebration.
Hussein’s and the displaced families’ steadfastness is perhaps among
the most visible manifestation of how Israel failed to achieve the
military objectives behind this war. If the point of the massive
thirty-day aerial bombardment and leveling of villages was meant to
strike fear in people, as many Lebanese believe, then the result may
have been the opposite.
In the south, site of the most intense fighting and devastation, the
sound of explosion came from firecrackers and celebratory gunfire
instead of from artillery and bombs. Beginning at 8:15 in the morning,
or barely fifteen minutes into the ceasefire, thousands of families
began streaming back to their emptied towns. If the aim of Israel was
to conduct ethnic cleansing in the south, then the effort seems to
have failed for now.
"The Hezbollah offers its victory to the Lebanese people,” says Dr Ali
Fayyad, a member of the political bureau of the Hezbollah. It has been
an offer that many in Lebanon seems to have readily accepted. At
night, at exactly the same time that US President George Bush was on
TV calling the Hezbollah “terrorists who want to deprive the Lebanese
freedom,” convoys with young people were driving around Beirut’s
streets, blaring their horns, cheering wildly, and waving Hezbollah's
and Lebanon’s flags. In street corners, young and old alike gathered
in small crowds to hand out Nasrallah’s pictures to passing motorists.
Despite persistent attempts to cast the Hezbollah as an isolated
“terrorist organization” of Shia Muslims, the majority of the Lebanese
population -- including Christians and Sunni Muslims -- have thrown
their support behind the group. In one recent local survey, 87 per
cent of the population was reported to be supporting the Hezbollah,
including four out five Christians and Druze and nine out of ten Sunni
Muslims.
But while most Lebanese acknowledge Hezbollah’s leading role in
fighting is Israel, what many Lebanese consistently refer to as the
“national resistance” is a broad coalition that includes virtually all
of Lebanon’s most important political forces, including Amal, the
other main Shia movement, the Lebanese Communist Party (LCP), other
left groups and liberal democrats -- and even the right-wing Free
Patriotic Movement of General Michel Aoun.
"We have a joke that, in the average Lebanese family with seven
children, four will children be with the Hezbollah, two will be with
the communist, and one will be with Amal -- all of them with the
resistance,” shares Khaled Hadadeh, secretary-general of the LCP.
The LCP, a leftist secular party whose memberships cuts across
confessional lines, has itself been very close to the Hezbollah and
fought alongside them in the frontlines in the south. According to
Hadadeh, at least twelve LCP members and supporters died in the
fighting.
The war was not, as was frequently reported, just between Israel and
Hezbollah. Contrary to Bush’s claim that the Hezbollah actions have
been in defiance of Lebanon’s government, the Lebanese government,
since the outbreak of war, has consistently supported the Hezbollah’s
positions and demands. Hezbollah for its part has vowed to abide by
the Lebanese government’s concessions.
Most Lebanese believe that it is this unity among the otherwise
divided Lebanese groups that ultimately inflicted defeat on Israel.
“This unity is especially significant because Lebanon has been a
country that’s been at war with itself,” points out Anwar Al-Khalil, a
member of parliament from Amal. The groups who now comprise the
“national resistance” were at opposing sides of Beirut’s dividing
lines during Lebanon’s civil war in the 1980s and 1990s.
Lebanese President Emile Lahoud, a Maronite Christian said: “We have
come out of this stronger, more united than ever before. Israel would
now think twice before coming to attack us again.” If Israel’s aim was
to foment Lebanon’s sectarian and religious divisions in the hope of
pitting the Christians and the Sunnis against the Hezbollah, then the
strategy may have backfired.
Despite the celebrations, however, the Lebanese are not even done
counting their dead. “This victory came with a heavy price,” says
Hadadeh. “Now we’re still calculating how much we have paid.”
Ayoub Hmaied from Bint Jabeil, one of the towns at the heart of the
clashes in the south, rattled off a list of villages where Israel’s
missiles led to a massacre of civilians: Bekaa, Brital, Haissa, Srifa,
Qana, Ashaiya... At 6am, just two hours before the “cessation of
hostilities” took effect, Israel bombed Israel’s southern suburbs in
what seemed like a coup de grace for this phase of the war.
"We are now in a cloudy time,” says Al-Khalil. “We cannot say we have
arrived at the end.”
For now, though, the Lebanese are still in awe at what they have
achieved. As many Lebanese like to remind their guests these days, in
1967, it took only six days for Israel to defeat all of the Arab
armies combined. Now, even after thirty-three days of massive and
unrelenting bombardment, what they call their “national resistance” is
still standing.
Considering that Israel is said to be the world’s most powerful
military and the recipient of billions of dollars in cutting-edge
military technology, points out Hezbollah’s Fayyad, that is no mean
feat.
And this, believes Nahla Chahal, a half-Iraqi, half-Lebanese activist,
is why Hezbollah is so threatening to Israel and the United States.
“They show not only that it’s possible to resist but that it’s
possible to resist and win.”
- Herbert Docena is a Research Associate with Focus on the Global
South. He is in Lebanon now as a member of the International Peace and
Solidarity Mission.
Source: Focus on Trade #123
https://www.alainet.org/en/articulo/116626?language=en
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