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The
Tree, My Soul
Man creates civilizations, is an artist,
a poet, a builder, a researcher, a scholar, in every way trying to do
the work of the Almighty ... and why not? Or at least he may imitate Him
by obtaining works of art for himself. “And the Lord formed man
of the slime of the earth, and breathed into his face the breath of life;
and man became a living soul.” (Genesis 2: 7) Here one sees the
supreme artist at work. Are we not born free, intelligent, capable and
artists like He is? But let us not forget this second soul of ours, that
is to say our environment, pathways, homes, springs of water, mountains,
plains, forests, and ... trees! I wish to consider here the tree, for
which we use all the adjectives that we use for a man. It comes up, is
small, then grows, and is tended as a loved child is tended. It is watered
and the soil around it enriched. It lives and breathes and its life may
stretch over thousands of years. The sequoia soars hundreds of feet and
lives two or even three thousand years.
Wherever it is planted, the tree accompanies humankind, contributing to
man’s rejoicing and happiness and life as a whole. Fifty years ago
when I was living in Paris at the Lebanese Hostel, a reverend German monk
and university rector was speaking of civilization one evening and said;
“There are factors, three elements outstanding among the others,
that are the foundation of any civilization, man (free, able, just and
true), the book (preserving memory and handing on these human values)
and the tree! He meant every kind of tree without distinction. The book
contains all the record of the past and all the learning hoarded over
the centuries, while the tree is the witness and the tractable transmitter
of all evolution. There are places on earth crossed by rivers and abundantly
watered, but where one sees no tree and no sign of life. Growing trees
supposes a firm will and knowledge, and it is of the virtues of the tree
that I wish to speak and most of all of those of the tree in Lebanon.
Lebanon, a country famous and illustrious because of its trees, had at
the beginning of the twentieth century a forest coverage of over 90% of
its territory, now reduced to a mere 15%. In fifty years’ time there
will be hardly any trees left in Lebanon. Everybody wishes to rush up
buildings and has no intention of planting trees. “All very well
to build, but to plant? Passe encore de bâtir, mais planter?”
said la Fontaine on one occasion. There is no more continuity of tradition,
use and custom. The use of wood in the fires of certain arts and crafts
has practically disappeared, forgotten by the baker, the pastry cook,
the potter, the blacksmith, the glass blower, the carpet weaver, and the
producer of chocolate, liqueurs and sweets. The owner of a workshop or
factory, the farmer and the raiser of livestock, have little wish that
their sons should carry on their skills and traditions; they prefer to
direct their offspring’s ambitions to becoming doctors, engineers,
officers, computer scientists or bankers, with greater opportunities for
acquiring wealth.
Alone, the tree, our daily companion, is still there unaltered. Trees
deeply rooted for centuries, whose trunk is weathered smooth like the
rock, like some ancient ruined wall telling the story of the past! There
are trees thousands of years old, living temples that speak of a mysterious
and inspiring nature, companions of every moment and of every season!
To speak of those that surround us here, there are four thousand species
of flora catalogued in Lebanon, whereas in the whole of Europe there are
only some 4,800. A tree stands for a presence a thousand years old, and
indeed one sees some that have seen thirty centuries roll by, with many
civilizations and hundreds of generations of mankind. They stand there
undaunted, defying time, cedars, olive trees, sequoias and baobab. The
history of a tree is one of sharing our joys and our sorrows, another
self of ours, generous, kind and friendly, sharing all our moods, discreetly
protecting from sun and from rain.
How often it spreads its shade over our trysts, our games, our siestas
and repose, close to its trunk! “The school under the oak tree”,
such was the school of the old parish priest. The oak tree graced the
public square, and various varieties of trees gave their names to quarters
of the city, such as a sycamore or nettle tree at Gemmayseh, an olive
tree at Zeitouneh, a fig tree at Tineh and a walnut tree at Tineh at Jawzeh.
The spirit blows like a breeze and gives light in these blessed branches.
From the Phoenician Sea or from the desert spaces, one may see the great
chain of our three mountains capped by eternal snows. From either Cornet
es-Saouda or Sannine or Hermon one may contemplate the other two summits,
which rise up majestically and form a noble trinity. Streams of water
gush up from the ground so that the inhabitants need never fear going
thirsty. One never needs to walk more than a few miles to be able to slake
one’s thirst, and then to be filled with love for the Creator of
the world.
From north to south, different species of trees are to be found in succession,
depending on the altitude: cedar, pine, fir, larch, eucalyptus, nettle
tree, hair oak and juniper. Along the water courses there are willow,
poplar and plane.
Once upon a time, ships with hulls of cedar or pine sailed off to lands
of dreams and enchantment. The Phoenicians crossed the seas to export
our trees and our wood to the four corners of the earth. As for the vine
planted by Noah, the olive and the carob tree, the almond, the lemon,
the apple and the prune, we shall speak of them later. The sky, the sun,
the light, the shade, the reverberations, everything is different here
and bears witness to a character unique.
Did not David in his psalms sing the praises of this wonderful Lebanon
and its trees? And in Judges chapter 9 is there not the story of the trees
wanting to anoint a king over them? Prayer in the woodland glade has a
sacred touch, coming out of the heart to reach up to God. Here is a presence
that carries the soul away. Our churches built of stone have columns with
carved leafy capitals, forming trees which recall the primitive rites
of worship offered to the gods in the forests. The light filtering through
them is both oriental and Lebanese and stands apart from all other light,
Nordic, desert, Arctic or Nipponese. Light, earth, air and water, the
elements, interpenetrate. The horizons have a human depth and the desert
mirage has no place, neither have the oceanic boundaries; here one feels
that beyond the horizon something waits, love with human personality.
Eventide here is not only beautiful and serene; it is sublime and deeply
moving, our whole being vibrating to the bonds that attach it to the Lord
God. The changing tints of the landscape follow each other all day long,
sunrise, mid-morning, midday, sunset, twilight, nightfall and then starlight
from gleaming points in the dark vault of heaven.
The lights are always new and virginal. There is the Virgin of the Rocks,
the Virgin of the Meadows and the Virgin of the Fortress, and there one
may meet the Virgin of the Lights, of the Fountains, and of the Springs,
whose waters quench thirst for eternity.
The cypress, whether in stands or soaring up alone, imposes itself by
its giant size on the city streets, in Ashrafiyeh or in the garden of
the school of the Brothers at Byblos. There this tree tells the greatness
of the past and the visions for the future.
The pines, the larches, and the turpentine trees, from which resin is
extracted, all are embraced in an aerial view which presents an ocean
of a thousand shades of green. Palm trees wave their heads along the coast,
dangling bunches of red or yellow dates, and can grow on heights of well
over a thousand feet.
Along the horizon trees stand guard, to tell that they surround a land
of welcome and hospitality. Between the seashore and the mountain tops
every kind of tree can find a place to grow; orange trees, banana trees,
apricot trees, olive trees, almond trees, pear trees apple trees, cherry
trees, and the vine growing everywhere.
In this mosaic of trees story and tradition wish to show a relation between
the culture of different kinds of trees and the different religious divides.
Two communities, the Maronites and the Shiites, were largely peasants
living either in the plains or in the mountains who were persecuted during
the years of foreign occupation. The first group planted mostly apple
trees and cultivated potatoes in the ground, the latter providing basic
food all the year round. The Shiites for their part planted tobacco alongside
their olive trees.
The apple trees grew best on the heights with their winter cold and so
were an affair for the Maronites. I remember that, when over sixty years
ago we visited relatives or friends in the plain of the Beqaa Valley,
we would take away as a present a crate of apples. The olive tree, widespread
in Koura and in Hasbaya and Rashaya in the Lebanese South, was cultivated
by the Greek Orthodox and the Druze, so it had an Orthodox connection.
The orange tree cultivated in the coastal plains of Tripoli and Sidon
by the Sunnites took on a Muslim association.
The vine, which was cultivated in the plain of the Beqaa around Zahleh,
where there were wine-presses, distilleries and cool cellars in abundance,
had the Greek Catholics to tend it.
There was a time when it was possible to own a tree growing on somebody
else’s land, but not any kind of tree, only a carob. A carob tree
can give anything between two hundred and a thousand pounds of shucks
full of beans, which meant between one hundred and five hundred pounds
of sweet treacle rich in metal oxides and basic nutrients. Sugar was not
generally known, while honey was the luxury of the few, so there still
exist in the archives deeds of ownership for carob trees standing on the
land of another proprietor.
If we peruse the ancient texts, such as those of Holy Scripture and of
the Gilgamesh epic, we see the importance given to the tree, as a symbol
with its commanding presence and vital unity. But when in the Holy Bible
mention is made of a tree it is to Lebanon as a whole that is alluded
to: “...see ... this goodly mountain, and Libanus,” said Moses.
(Deuteronomy 3: 25)
Consider the tree of life that God planted in the middle of his Garden
of Eden. (Genesis 2: 3 and 2: 17) He forbad the man to eat of this tree
of life, for then he might live eternally. Near the tree of life God had
also planted the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Let us see the
allusions that follow:
- Destroy all the places in which the nations that you shall possess worshipped
their gods upon high mountains and hills, and under every shady tree.
Deuteronomy 12: 2.
- Yet I planted thee a chosen vineyard, all true seed. Jeremiah 12: 21.
- He (the pious man) shall be like a tree which is planted near running
waters, which shall bring forth its fruit in due season.” Psalm
1: 3.
- The tree which thou sawest was high and strong, whose height reached
to the skies and the sight thereof of all the earth. And the branches
thereof were most beautiful and its fruit exceeding much, and in it was
food for all, under which the beasts of the field dwelt, and the birds
of the air had their abode in its branches. It is thou, O king, who art
grown great and become mighty... Daniel 4: 17-19.
- A tree hath hope. If it be cut it groweth green again, and the boughs
thereof sprout. Job 14:7
- The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed ... which is indeed the
least of all seeds: but when it is grown up it is greater than all herbs
and becometh a tree, so that the birds of the air come and dwell in the
branches thereof. Matthew 13 31, 32.
- The LORD your God is bringing you into a good land with streams that
flow from springs in the valleys and hills. You can dig for copper in
those hills, and the stones are made of iron ore. And you won't go hungry.
Wheat and barley fields are everywhere, and so are vineyards and orchards
full of fig, pomegranate, and olive trees, and there is plenty of honey.
Deuteronomy 8: 7-9
- She is a tree of life to those that lay hold on her: and he that shall
retain her is blessed. Proverbs 3: 18.
- The fruit of a just man is a tree of life: and he that gaineth souls
is wise. Proverbs 11: 30.
- A peaceable tongue is a tree of life... Proverbs 11: 4.
- ... To him that overcometh I will give to eat of the tree of life which
is in the paradise of my God. Apocalypse 2: 7.
- In the midst of the street thereof, and on both sides of the river,
was the tree of life, bearing twelve fruits, yielding its fruits every
month: and the leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations.
Apocalypse 22: 2.
- Blessed are they that wash their clothes in the blood of the Lamb: that
they might have a right to the tree of life and may enter in by the gates
into the city. Apocalypse 22.: 14.
- The glory of Libanus shall come to thee, the fir tree and the box tree
and the pine tree together, to beautify the place of my sanctuary. Isaiah
60: 13.
- So Abraham removing his tent came and dwelt by the Oak of Mambre. Genesis
13:18.
- ... And he took a great stone, and set it under the Oak that was in
the sanctuary of the Lord. Joshua 24: 2.
Lebanon was an immense and deep forest where the Pharaohs, Nabuchodonosor,
Solomon and many others came to find the precious woods to decorate their
palaces, their temples and their sanctuaries, as is carved in magnificent
cuneiform writing on a rock at Wadi Brissa: “I cut many tall and
strong cedars of great beauty and of incorruptible aromatic wood .. and
I had them carried to Babylon to decorate my palace and the temple of
our god Mardouk...”
Joseph
Matar
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rights reserved © LebanonArt
Translated from French: K.J.Mortimer
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