Friday, April 13, 2007

From Diary of a Dutch woman Living in Beirut

“Let them argue, but not on our account”

Today is April 13: Always an odd day, as it marked the beginning of a long civil war in Lebanon.

The event that set it off was a bus with Palestinians driving through a Christian neighborhood on April 13, 1975. The bus got assaulted, several Palestinians on board died, and the rest we all know. Exactly why the bus got assaulted is a long story, and why it didn’t end there is an even longer story.

We call it a civil war, but when it started, nobody thought of it as a war. These were ‘events’. People had disagreements, but it wasn’t a full scale war. The country was never completely at war. There were fights between streets, neighborhoods and parts of the cities. Sometimes between regions and areas, but never the entire country as such. The Lebanese, when talking in Arabic, refer to it as ‘the events’. That phrase ‘civil war’ was coined by the west. There might be war in one part of town, but in the other part of town life went on as usual.



I found this on my balcony this afternoon; a pamphlet thrown out by an army helicopter (only guys to fly helicopters). Funny how things change. It is usually the Israeli army that uses ‘air mail’ to pass on messages to the Lebanese. ‘Get out of the neighborhood because we are going to bomb it,’ is what we usually read. I've got a whole collection of them.

Today it was a different message; “Let them argue, but not on our account”, signed by the Lebanese Women for Civil Peace. I don't know who they are, but it is a cute initiative. (The translation may be a little off. )

1 comment:

Gayle said...

Most interesting, Serendip.

Can you even imagine getting messages from the sky saying "get out of the neighborhood because we are going to bomb it"? What some people in this world have to live with is fortunately almost beyond our imagination, and it s beyond our imagination because of the sacrifices made by thousands upon thousands of brave souls who sacrificed everything in order to keep this country free.