The Jerusalem Post

Lebanon’s delicate sectarian balance under threat

- • By MAYA GEBEILY and KARAMALLAH DAHER

BEIRUT (Reuters) – As the Lebanese Christian village of Rmeich marks its first Easter since the Gaza war erupted, residents say a parallel confrontat­ion between Hezbollah and Israel is dragging them into a conflict they did not choose.

Like many Christians elsewhere in southern Lebanon, residents are angry and fearful their homes could be caught in the crossfire and their families forced to flee – permanentl­y – from their ancestral villages near the Lebanon-Israel border.

Earlier this week, a Rmeich resident confronted a group of armed men trying to launch rockets at Israel from within the village. Some villagers rang church bells to sound the alarm, and the armed men moved off to fire rockets from another neighborho­od, according to mayor Milad al-Alam and Rmeich residents.

“What we’ve been saying for the last six months is: among our own homes, keep us neutral. Any strike in return would have brought huge losses,” Alam told Reuters.

Hezbollah began launching rockets from hilltops and villages in southern Lebanon at Israel on October 8 in support of Hamas, which carried out a cross-border massacre on Israel the previous day, violating an existing ceasefire, and triggering an Israeli land, air, and sea offensive on the Gaza Strip.

The villagers’ resentment reflects criticism from Christian clerics and politician­s opposed to Hezbollah, who have long accused the group of underminin­g the state through its possession of a controvers­ial arsenal that outguns the national army, and of monopolizi­ng decisions of war and peace.

“We have nothing to do with this war. Do they [Hezbollah] want to displace us?” said a 40-year-old resident of Rmeich who asked not to be identified, fearing that criticizin­g Hezbollah could bring reprisals. Iran-backed Hezbollah, which holds sway over much of the Lebanese state, denied its fighters had tried to launch rockets from Rmeich.

More than a dozen sects coexist in a precarious balancing act in tiny Lebanon, reflected in a power-sharing system that reserves government posts by religion. The presidency and central bank governor – two top posts reserved for Maronite Christians – have been vacant since October 2022 and July 2023 respective­ly due to divisions over choosing successors.

‘NO SAY’ IN SYSTEM

Hundreds of thousands of Lebanese have been displaced both internally and to foreign countries by conflict and hardship over the last century, with the 15-year civil war seeing killings and kidnapping­s according to sect. Some 90,000 people have been displaced from southern Lebanon since the conflict broke out in October.

Christian lawmaker Ghada Ayoub, who represents a constituen­cy in the south and hails from the anti-Hezbollah Lebanese Forces party, told Reuters that Christians were standing up to Hezbollah “because it is encroachin­g on their presence,” and that the war was deepening fissures in Lebanese politics.

“The question is now: are there even any shared points left that we can carry on with – that we can build a state with?” she said.

The area most impacted by the shelling is the border strip, home to about a dozen Christian villages including Rmeich. They are nestled in rolling hills of olive groves, pine trees, and tobacco fields – now too dangerous to plant or harvest due to shelling.

“The areas around us were really affected – there have been strikes 500, 600 meters away. Our harvests have been ruined,” said Joseph Salameh, a local official in the town of Klayaa, about four kilometers from Lebanon’s southern border.

Lebanon was hit

hard by a financial meltdown that began in 2019. With tourists staying away due to bombing, shops closed and schools shuttered or sheltering thousands displaced by the fighting,

villages across the predominan­tly Shi’ite south have been dealt another severe economic blow, prompting fears among locals of a Christian exodus.

“Now the war has added to it and is encouragin­g our children to leave... Christians are no longer able to take on more than others because the problems of this country have

become too many,” Salameh said.

Lebanon’s top Christian clerics have also sounded the alarm in weekly sermons. Maronite Patriarch Boutros al-Rai called early on in the Gaza war for Lebanon to stay on the sidelines and more recently said war had been “imposed” on Christians.

MOUNTING OUTCRY

Greek Orthodox Metropolit­an of Beirut Elias Audi asked earlier this month if it was fair for “one faction of Lebanese to decide on behalf of everyone, and take unilateral decisions that not all Lebanese agree on.”

With outcry mounting, Hezbollah’s main Christian ally the Free Patriotic Movement has even ramped up criticism, saying its nearly two-decade alliance with Hezbollah had been “shaken.”

“The main problem that arose recently was crossing the limits of defending Lebanon and getting involved in a conflict in which we cannot make decisions,” FPM head Gebran Bassil said.

Their alliance had provided Hezbollah with supporters from a religious community outside its traditiona­l base, but the pair have split over several issues in the last two years – including who should be Lebanon’s next president.

Michael Young at the Carnegie Middle East Center said Bassil’s comments were an attempt to gain some leverage over Hezbollah by signaling a rift – but also reflected Christian unease with the status quo.

“The mood among the Christian community is almost a psychologi­cal divorce from the system. They don’t feel that they have a say in the system and in a way it’s true – Hezbollah is in control of much of the system,” Young said.

 ?? ?? ON THE RIGHT, a man carries bags of bread to sell in the Christian village of Rmeich in Lebanon, the sign of which is seen in a zoomed out photo of the town in October.
ON THE RIGHT, a man carries bags of bread to sell in the Christian village of Rmeich in Lebanon, the sign of which is seen in a zoomed out photo of the town in October.
 ?? (Zohra Bensemra/Reuters) ??
(Zohra Bensemra/Reuters)

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