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| Age
of Glass |
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Cadmos
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of the Temple |
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Call
of the Nation |
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| Heroique |
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Exodus |
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Human
River |
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The
Hero |
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Ship
Loading |
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Upsurge
for Independence |
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Destruction
of a Heritage |
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Homage
to Gebran Tueni |
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Biblia |
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Destruction
of a Heritage |
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Surroundings
of a Monastery |
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The
Cedar Revolution |
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Lebanon
... extending along the very centre of the north-south coastline forming
the eastern limits of the Mediterranean Sea, with Beirut its capital,
a million inhabitants, a fine harbour and a busy airport, the gaping wounds
of a terrible war in the quite recent past, and finally its titanic efforts
for ultramodern reconstruction...
This Lebanon is formed of two parallel chains of mountains, with peaks
reaching 3000 metres, hugging a 250-kilometre coastline and cradling between
them the Bekaa valley.
This depression is some twelve kilometres wide, very fertile and highly
reputed for its vineyards, its wines, its varied crops and its rivers
of mythic fame, the Orontes in the North, the Litani flowing into the
sea through the South, and the Bardaouni flowing into the Bekaa itself.For
the early authors of the Bible coming in from the desert, Lebanon was
a paradise of forests and gardens, "of fabulous springs of water,
a land flowing with milk and honey." Olive trees, plantains,
orange-trees, vines, apple-trees, fig-trees, almond-trees, cherry-trees,
strawberry plants, and great expanses of forests of evergreen oaks, larches,
Mediterranean pines, and above all giant cedars celebrated by the poets:"To
what shall I compare your greatness? Surely, to a cedar of Lebanon with
noble branches, thickset needles and lofty trunk...It was the envy of
every tree in Eden, in the garden of God." (Ezekiel XXXI);"May
I not go across and see this prosperous land beyond the Jordan, this prosperous
country of hills, and Lebanon?" (Deuteronomy III, 25, Moses on Mount
Nebo);"Come from Lebanon, my promised bride, come from Lebanon, come
on your way."
(The Song of Songs, IV, 8) Lebanon
is the window of the East behind it, opening on to the West, and has been
such for thousands of years. The mighty cities built on its shores have
a glorious past, Tyre, Sidon, Beirut, Byblos, Tripoli, Arwad, Ugarit.
They grew up during the third, second and first millennia before Christ
and built for themselves a maritime empire along all the shores of the
Mediterranean, as far as Carthage in Tunisia, Carthagena, Tarsis and Barcelona
in Spain, and Cadiz - Qadesh, The Holy, facing the immense ocean beyond
the Pillars of Melkart (Hercules).
These Phoenicians carried with them the fruits of the civilisations of
Mesopotamia and of Egypt. They gave the Greeks their legends, including
that of Europa daughter of the king of Tyre, snatched away by Jupiter
and taken to Greece. Cadmos, Thales, Euclid and Zeno of Citium instructed
the West in wisdom and gave it the alphabet that their countrymen had
themselves developed.
During the time of the Greco-Roman Empire, Beirut was famed for its School
of Law, rivalling those of Athens and Alexandria. In the second century
A.D., Philo of Byblos wrote a life of the emperor Hadrian. If during
the Arab conquests this window to the West was closed for strategical
reasons, to avoid contact with the rival Byzantine Empire, it was forcibly
flung open again during the twelfth century by the Crusades, only to be
slammed shut again until the collapse of the Ottoman Empire in 1919.
Since then it has remained open and now the Arab countries use it to meet
a West which has now become familiar to them. As a land of hospitality
and of contacts and exchanges of every description, Lebanon has become
the privileged forum for dialogue between the two great monotheistic religions,
Islam and Christianity, which here coexist in friendly understanding and
make of Lebanon a symbol and a model for the world to follow.
Openminded, joyful, tolerant and helpful, the people of this country open
their arms to you, with Ahla! Ahla! Feel yourself welcome and at home,
already one of us!
Jean De Lalande
K.J. Mortimer
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