A Syrian fox hole (hoel in the ground with a truck tire around it. The Mudeirej Bridge (Italian built, 44 million US$,) in the backjground. |
When the Lebanese government, half-wittedly, invited the
Syrians in, exactly 40 years ago, in order to help out with skirmishes between
christians and Palestinians, little did they know that these guys were not
planning on leaving. Like asking for a
favor from your Mafioso neighbor, and when he generously complies, assume he will
leave promptly and quietly after the deed. Not in your life time.
The Syrian Army did eventually leave, in my lifetime.
Although not totally voluntarily, in the spring of 2005, some 35,000 Syrian
troops that had been deployed all over the place , left Lebanon, leaving behind
signs of 30 years of occupation.
And these signs, I find mighty intriguing. I encounter
them regularly on my hikes through the Lebanese mountains. Trenches, fox holes,
anti-aircraft installations and tank placements are all over the place. Some
sites have buildings, guard houses, water wells and bunkers, most of them in
poor condition.
A Syrian construction to house tanks |
Like this morning, when I hiked the upper parts of Dahr
el Baidar, the highest mountain pass between the coastal area and the Beqaa
Valley. This area was significant, as they could shell Beirut from a safe
distance, while at the same time controlling the road that linked Beirut to
Damascus. (Both sides of the highway; I have also hiked the
other side)
Syrian built water well |
For years and years this entire mountain region was
basically off limits for everyone except for Syrian soldiers; you could only
drive the road, but not park or go on walks. Well, maybe you could, but I don’t
think anyone would take the risk. The Syrians were notoriously shifty; you
never knew what would set them off, and an unfortunate encounter could easily
result in a one way ticket to Mezza, which was a (now defunct) jail right under
the presidential Palace in Damascus.
A house, confiscated by the Syrian army, above Dahr el Baidar, with a view on Beirut |
Now the area makes for some great hiking as years of
Syrian deployment did not exactly entice urban developers. Not much of their bases are left now; Syria
being a rather poor country, its soldiers left nothing of value behind. But the signs of occupation are everywhere.
Who were they? According to one (rather unreliable)
internet source, it was the was the 10th Mechanized Division, that had its main
units along the strategic Beirut-Damascus highway with the 85th Armored
Brigade, deployed around the complex of positions at Dahr al-Baidar. (Source)
And as I hike through the remains, I would love to have
some type of explanations on the site, just like they do with World War I
battlefields in Northern France and Belgium.
There they have information pamphlets and visitor centers
in just about every major spot, complete with extensive libraries and museums. Of course, that took a while to establish. WWI
started some 100 years ago (1915), and although battlefield tourism took off pretty
soon after the end of that war (1918), it took another 50 years before anyone
even thought of writing visitor guides. There is even an actual science, called Battlefield
Archeology.
A shelter that leads all the way into the mountain, must have been great during Israeli bombings |
Trench soldiers, such as Robert Graves, Wilfried Owen,
Siegfried Sassoon and Henri Barbusse started publishing almost immediately after
their ordeal. Erich Maria Remarque, from the German side, published a book,
some 2 years after the war, which eventually sold over 30 million copies. The
book was eventually banned by Hitler, who deemed it poor for moral.
We, however, are some 26 years after the civil war, and
some 10 years after the Syrian occupation, yet
I know of no soldiers/militia members/writers (that I know of)
recounting their experience in Lebanon. We do not even have a history book
regarding the civil war yet, and it is a topic that is carefully avoided in the
current history curriculum in Lebanese school.
Let alone provide leaflets with background information on places that
were interesting enough for the Israelis to
regularly bomb the smithereens out of them.
Which is a pity.
4 comments:
Another insightful post. Thanks once again!
so why don't you write that book?
Y.
Try finding work by Paul Andari - both in English and Arabic
Another interesting post, although WWI started in 1914, not in 1915... ;)
Greetings from Germany!
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