| Choufeit (Choueifat),
Lebanon Street Notes 12 May 2008
In the lower Chouf village of Choufeit
with its panoramic view of Beirut’s closed airport (which
will likely stay closed for 4 or 5 more days as a Hezbollah
pressure point on the Bush administration to achieve a
settlement that it views as fair and just), Dahiyeh, Sabra,
Shatila and Burj Barajneh Palestinian Refugee Camps;
Pentecost Sunday started in a somber mood for the few
remaining Christians and dominant Druze population of this
picturesque, rugged, hilly and ancient village.
The reason was that virtually the whole
village was in attendance at a 9 a.m. memorial service for
two supporters of the Druze Lebanese Democratic Party, 18
year old ____ and 22 year old _____ (names withheld at the
request of family pending notification of family members
living outside Lebanon) who were probably shot as they drove
too fast through a newly setup check-point on May 10th. (The
exact circumstances and who exactly was responsible are not
clear given the myriad explanations one receives depending
on who one talks to in this tight-knit village.
Perhaps only in American black
communities has this observer witnessed such a large turnout
by the local population at funerals for a neighborhood
member who was felled by violence. Parked cars snaked for
nearly one mile in all directions alongside the winding
roads. Hundreds of Druze women dressed in black with white
scarves around their necks and some men in traditional black
baggy Druze garb with knitted white caps mournfully gathered
along their former enemies, the Christian population.
Once more, a Mt. Lebanon village united
in mourning at dawn would be killing the neighbors sitting
next to them at a memorial service hours later in the
afternoon. Choufeit has never been more split than it is
this morning. “If Jumblatt ever comes to Choufeit we will
kill him,” said a town butcher from the Liberal Democratic
Party (LDP) who fought hard for five hours yesterday against
Jumblatt’s Progressive Socialist Party (PSP).
The killing of these two Druze young men
did not directly cause yesterday’s intense violence in
Choufeit but it definitely affected the tenseness and
ferocity of their revenge seeking friends, family and
community.
Chief among those blamed is Walid
Jumblatt, known as “the weather vane”, given his history of
changing his political stance depending on the current power
alignment, and who is expected to seek a deal with Hezbollah
in a bid to keep some position in the coming new government.
It was just 36 months ago that Jumblatt was praising
Hezbollah as the legitimate Lebanese Resistance and he may
return to that position as he appears ready to give up his
role in the Welch Club and try to save his leadership role
in the deeply fractured Druze community. Hezbollah will now
dry up Jumblatt’s power and shut him up. The Party will very
likely force him to reconcile with the — as of this morning
— much stronger Druze leader Talal Arslan, Hezbollah’s ally,
who is getting credit for arranging last night’s ceasefire
and presumably saving many Druze lives.
Hezbollah support in the Druze community
is growing rapidly this morning. Its current major task now
being worked on is to improve its relations with many
seething in the Sunni community. As St. Joseph’s University
gifted Professor Eugene Sensenig-Dabbous recently commented,
(I paraphrase) when trouble starts in Lebanon the religious
confessions look to their own, no matter what they were
pontificating just hours before about “one Lebanon — one
people de-confessionalized.”
As of 6 a.m. this morning, Choufeit is
deeply wounded and the main street is littered with hundreds
of 5 inch 50mm heavy machine gun casings as well Kalashnikov
and M-16 shells, RPG casings, 107mm mortar rounds, broken
glass, many patches and trails of of blood, a few burned out
cars, and a few damaged shelled apartment houses. The house
of Jumblatt’s deputy was shelled and burned around 5 p.m.
yesterday — it was still burning this morning as no one has
bothered to put it out. The power lines to Choufeit have
been cut and main cables are on some roads. It is unknown
how long the village will be without power.
“We killed 56 terrorists and they killed
four of us”, town lawyer Khalil Juridi who practices law
with his brother and sister as Jurdi, Jurdi, and Jurdi in
the Jurdi Bldg in Choufeit. (The casualty numbers are not
verified yet. This morning as I passed by Choufeit’s Kamal
Jumblatt hospital, a nurse told me she thought about 10 were
killed.)
I was surprised to see Khalil heavily
armed as I returned from Hamra around 12:30 yesterday. As he
kept warning me and others to stay inside, dozens of towns
people, virtually all of whom had been at the young men’s
funeral hours before they gathered with their weapons on the
streets. This was a motley group to be sure but steeled and
ready to die if need be to defend their village. Some left
to help friends fight in Toumat Niha, Mresti and Jabal el-Barouk.
Fighting also raged in of Kayfoun, Qamatiyeh, Bchamoun,
Aytat, Shweifat, Baysour, Ras el-Jabal. The difference in
Choufeit is that it was largely a Muslim intra-Druze fight.
This observer at first discounted what
Khalil was saying yesterday early afternoon about the
pro-Hezbollah Talal Arslan Druze group, many of whom lived
in our neighborhood and who Khalil had grown up with,
advancing up the hill on Choufeit because I was distracted
thinking about my morning is Hamra. Plus, one gets inured
here sometimes by so many rumors difficult to pin down.
In Hamra, on Pentacost Sunday morning
things were much clearer. Contrary to the BBC report,
Hezbollah has not completely withdrawn from West Beirut.
They are manning the cut and block of the main Corniche road
just diagonal from the Bay Bank in front of Bay Rocks. They
advised that they will stay there pending a fair settlement
with the ‘ruling team’.
The reality in West Beirut today is that
even if every Hezbollah member but one withdrew, Hezbollah
would still be in control of Lebanon’s capitol. He does not
even need to have a weapon. All that is necessary is for it
to be known that he is present. The Lebanese Army is
increasingly deployed but its role is determined by the Bay
Rocks barricade.
One faculty member of the American
University of Beirut (AUB) explained that if someone from
Hezbollah handed the US Embassy gatekeeper a polite note
asking the Embassy to close up shop, it would be done within
hours this Monday. This observer agrees with an increasing
number here that in critical ways, Hezbollah is now Lebanon
and the American era is teetering. Whether the damage done
by the Israeli lobby controlled Bush administration Middle
East policy is reversible, anything soon is unclear.
Comments such as the one by US National Security Council
spokesman Gordon Johndroe on Saturday blamed Hezbollah for
the fighting saying: “They continue to be a destabilizing
force there with the backing of their supporters, Iran and
Syria.” The immediate future is not encouraging until the
current US administration indicates a willingness to engage
with Hezbollah on the basis of mutual respect, free and open
dialogue, and commitment to solving the regions problems,
including a just solution to the Question of Palestine.
Two blocks up to the right of the
continuing Hezbollah position are 10 or more Christian
National Syrian Socialist Party (NSSP) groups of heavily
armed fighters. Unlike the Hezbollah guys they would not
agree to photos but did proudly take this observer’s photo
of their handiwork outside the burned out Hariri Future TV
complex first started in 1993 and which developed recently
into not just the mouthpiece of the pro-Bush Administration
March 14 group but as the broadcaster of reputedly excellent
programs popular around the Middle East.
The NSSP and the army are both posted in
close proximity of Queitem, the Hariri mansion where Saad is
in some ways under house arrest this Monday afternoon.
Yesterday, Amin Gemayel rushed back from Paris, against the
advice of some, to try to prevent Samir Geagea from staging
a putsch and replace Amin as head of the Phalange Party.
“Amin’s tough problem is that Geagea
learned more from Amin’s brother Bashir than Amin did
concerning how to deal with rivals for power. Ask the
Frangieh and Chamoun families”, a former deputy to George
Hrawi of Lebanon’s Communist Party recently commented.
Jumblatt not Geagea (this time) is a prime suspect in
Hrawi’s 2005 assassination.
Geagea is meeting with Siniora this
afternoon and earlier reported rumors are resurfacing that
Geagea may be cannoned the Welch Club future Christian
leader of Lebanon.
The Arab League delegation arriving in
Beirut is expected to achieve more than a vague general
‘feel good’ declaration before it departs. The reality is
that the League also is deeply split with dramatic increase
of support for the Lebanese Resistance.
Returning to Choufeit where I was
staying, I had become used to descending the three floors
underground in pitch blackness, sometimes using my mobile
phone for a little light.
Returning around 2pm yesterday I was very
surprised to find around 35 people outside my flat door in
the stairwell. I did not see or hear them until I stepped on
one. As I opened the door we could see each other and one
mother explained that they were all afraid to stay in the
upper floors because they have lots of windows and they are
afraid of snipers. As she spoke the children (who they later
told me they held their breaths as I came down the stairs in
the dark because they thought I must be the ‘enemy’) resumed
their crying and wailing. The flat is large with two baths
but little furniture and they all moved in. As I left this
morning around 6am some were still asleep on the floors.
Getting solid information here is
sometimes tough unless you do the digging yourself.
Some of the best I got recently was last
night from 12 Aya, a precocious Lebanese charm of a young
lady. Three times Aya came to where I was sleeping and woke
me up “to see if you were ok”.
Later she admitted that she “needed to
talk”. After explaining that her family felt abandoned by
their father who was still in Dubai and was supposed to
arrive last week, Aya offered valuable insights in response
to some questions I posed.
As only a parent of a 12 year old young
lady can possibly understand, Aya speaks clearly and to the
point. Part of the conversation went something like this:
“How are you now Aya, are you ok?”
“I am scared.”
“Well, everything is fine now, the
fighting is over”. Five seconds later there was a huge blast
nearby. Aya just stared at me.
“Honey, doesn’t be worried. Things will
be fine.”
“Yeah right.”
What are you afraid of?”
“Of dying, they want to kill us.”
“Who?”
“Our enemies.”
“Who are your enemies?”
“I don’t know. We have so many.”
I tried to change the subject and I
mentioned my 12 year old daughter in the States. I told Aya
how much I missed her and wished she could come to Lebanon
and the girls could be friends. “And you could teach her
more Arabic and show her around your beautiful country and
you could do fun stuff.”
“I have a better idea,” Aya said. “Why
don’t I just go to America and stay with her for awhile?” |