Willows in rows |
My dad is in town again. For those that read me
regularly, yes, he is 102 now. And going strong.
It’s a family thing. His older brother died last year,
and a few of his siblings have made it into their nineties. He does not believe
in afternoon naps and he likes to go road tripping. The curvier the roads, the
happier he gets.
A little bench to contemplate life on |
He walks about 5 kilometers a day back home in Holland,
but here he has had to adapt; he doesn’t get beyond 3 km. He’s got a type of walker
which helps him with his stability when he walks, but he complains about the
sidewalks here in town. He wanted to walk from my house to the Corniche, but
the pavement is so irregular, that he ended up carrying his stroller most of
the way. I think all the ‘walkers’ in Beirut can relate to that. A stroll
through Beirut is more like an obstacle course. Yesterday we walked from Dar in Wardieh
(beginning of Hamra) all the way to Caracas (end of Hamra). And that was after
he had been walking for about 3 hours on his own. He tells me that when he was
young (twenties) he’d bike home for the weekend, and that was some 150 kilometers one way. I
took him to the Tanaayel Monastery in the Beqaa Valley over the weekend, because
he likes cows and farms, and the walking is smooth there.
The duck pond |
I’ve written before about the monastery, but because I
doubt any of you remember, I am going to unceremoniously cut and paste that
bit.
Taanayel, a Jesuit Monastery with farmland and a small lake, is
right along the road to Damascus, halfway between Beirut to Damascus. The land,
some 200 hectares, was given to the Jesuit fathers in 1860 by Napoleon III.
Originally it was a swamp (nice guy, this Napoleon, handing out crummy land for
free), but the monks, with their proverbial patience of a monk (That’s a saying
in Dutch; ‘monnikengeduld’), transformed the area into agricultural land. They
established a large farm, a school, a seminary and a church.
It is nice to walk there, because the way it is set up is very
European, and thus feels like home. The Jesuit monks planted poplars and
willows, and dug irrigation ditches to help dry the marsh lands. Everything is
in neat rows, and with little tree-lined lanes in between the fields and the
orchards and the vines.
These days they have some 75 milk cows and a herd of goats. They
produce milk and cheese, and cultivate wine, nuts and honey as well. The
farm also serves as a teaching facility for the Faculty of Agriculture at the
Saint Joseph University in Beirut.
Getting ready to feed the cows |
There is an interesting story about how these Jesuits ended up
with the land. Apparently, in 1857, they discovered that the Bekaa Valley is an
ideal place for growing grapes and producing wine. Business was good, but
somewhere at the end of the 19th century, a number of French priests were
killed. The Ottomans, the rulers at that time, did not any problems with
France, so they compensated for the death of the priests and offered the
Taanayel property. (source)
The farm is still in Jesuit hands, and as such, nothing has
changed much in the lay-out of the land. No trees have been cut during the war,
no ugly buildings went up, and it was not used as garbage a dump. These Jesuits
are old school, and very much into the ecological side of agriculture. A Dutch
priest, Father Brouwers, was part of the agricultural team on the farm for a
long time.
A field of Merlot grapes |
The farm has seen its fair share of sadness during the war. I
remember visiting them one December, and was told that over Christmas someone
had stolen the major bull. “It’s probably
someone’s Christmas dinner now,” said Father Brouwers, “but I doubt it’s very tasty. The beast was old. Why would you want
to steal an old bull? It’s clear the thieves do not know much about the meat
business.”
Another year they got stuck up with a small trainings camp of
young Palestinians which the PLO had set up on the domain. There was nothing
they could do about it. It wasn’t anything really serious, more like a Boy
Scout venture, but the Israelis didn’t want any of it, and dropped an airplane bomb
on the 4 some ram shackle tents which housed the boys. This saddened the priest greatly. “They
were just young boys; it wasn’t worth an airplane bomb.” An even
sadder event was when another Dutch Jesuit priest from Taanayel, Father
Kluiters, was shot twice, hanged and impaled during the war, in 1985. He’d been
in Lebanon since 1974.
On the road |
These days are more joyful however, and the farm is open to
visitors. You can rent bikes on the farm (go through the gate, park your car
near the church and walk to the milk farm (laiterie), where they rent them in
the courtyard), and bike all around the farmland. If you are around the milk
installation around 4:30, you can see them milk the cows.
3 comments:
And you can have a nice picnic at the feet of the statue of Jesus! :)
Good to see your father enjoying the fresh outdoor air.
I took my entire family to visit the farm after the last time you posted about it, perhaps it’s time for another visit now loll. DK
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