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Celebrations over the grave of Berytus
Window dressing Lebanon as a
country of culture and freedom is a costly and complicated illusion that is
perhaps best illustrated by these cases in point:
On the afternoon of June 30, a bulldozer moved into the archeological site where
Al Amine Mosque at Martyr’s Square is to be built. Phoenician, Roman and Islamic
ruins that had been excavated by a team of archeologists were destroyed and
disposed of at the Normandy dump and other sites. Inma (Social and Cultural
Development Association), which has been photographing the finds throughout the
year, wrote to An Nahar and the newspaper published the first photo of the
destruction on July 1, followed by another on July 2. This prompted Minister of
Culture Aridi, at the urging of Frederick Husseini, the director of the General
Directorate of Antiquities, to meet with Mufti Qabbani and Nabil Hariri of OGER,
the contracting company. On July 3, Minister Aridi notified An Nahar that the
Mufti had signed a written declaration promising to halt the destruction and
preserve what remained of the ruins.
Now this is a perfect Lebanese scenario. The Inma staff can walk proud with the
other players, claiming that once they learned about the tragedy they had it
stopped. It is in no one’s interest to say that the approximately 1,000m2
significant archeological find was totally destroyed and only 20% was saved.
Forget this “little” detail. Civic society (NGOs and journalists), the public
sector (Department of Antiquities), the private sector (OGER) and the religious
authorities (Dar al Ifta’a) have all ‘in partnership’ saved an archeological
site! Let us celebrate our cultural heritage! (Applause)
The play takes on a new twist – from archeology to Lebanon’s personal status
laws, the subject of our lead story. Civil marriage is not permitted in Lebanon
and even within the Christian sects, intermarriage requires ‘clearance’ from the
church. A Christian man cannot legally marry a Muslim woman while the opposite
is allowed, in spite of any Qoranic verses to that effect. A Sunni is bound by
different inheritance laws than a Shiia or a Christian, and the list is endless.
But free we are; a Shiia is permitted a “marriage of pleasure” (Muta’a) and a
Sunni a “marriage of convenience” (Misyar) but they cannot be married by a
“justice of the peace.” A Sunni without a son and with only daughters at risk of
being deprived of their full inheritance can convert to the Shiia sect to
protect the children’s rights and yet remain a Sunni for employment and social
and electoral purposes, such as running for a Sunni parliamentary seat. A
Maronite can convert to Islam to divorce and still be accepted by his community,
which normally shudders at the thought, but accepts it as realpolitik. As for
civil marriage, Cyprus and Turkey are nearby. Let us celebrate our freedom!
(Applause)
In an area where the gods and goddesses of love, wine, beauty, rain and wisdom
roamed the prairies and sailed the seas, established a law school, pottery shops
and myths of everlasting beauty and defiance, people are still not free to love,
marry, divorce and die as they please. Nor are they free to preserve their
heritage. It was the eminent An Nahar columnist, the late Michel Abou Jaoude,
who commented that Lebanon’s political and social stage would be an amusing and
interesting one, were it not for the bloodshed of every decade…and the
continuous deterioration of its historical treasures and social values, he could
have added. Thus goes the bloody confessional dance, sweeping away personal
freedom, integrity and antiquities. The underlying premise is the same:
hypocrisy and pretense. In the case of Lebanon’s archeological treasures, we
destroy them and pretend to be cultured; and in the case of our personal status
laws, people are suffocated with restrictions while pretending to be “free.” The
culprit, as usual, is power and greed sugar-coated by religion and wrapped in
the illusion of culture. Let us celebrate…over the grave of Berytus.
Jawad Adra Managing Partner
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Current Statistics
Lawyers fees
• LL 3 billion ($1.9 million) in partial payment was made to lawyers in
the arbitration case between the Lebanese government and the Consolidated
Contractors Company (CCC), which was contracted in the early 1990s to
rehabilitate and expand the Beirut International Airport.
Public hospitals
• LL 13.7 billion ($9 million) is the Lebanese government loan to six public
hospitals to continue operating.
Debt service
• LL 2,024 billion ($1.3 billion) is the interest paid on the debt service from
January to May, or a daily average of LL 13.4 billion ($8.9 million).
Treasury bills
• $1.6 billion in T-bills in foreign currency will mature in 2004, out of a
total $15.5 billion.
Bank profits
• $51 million in profits was generated in the first quarter of 2003 by four
banks, which hold 38% of deposits in the country.
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