Posts Tagged ‘Syrian National Social Party’
An Anthem, a poem: Syria, peace be upon you
Posted by: adonis49 on: July 27, 2020
An Anthem, a poem: Syria, peace be upon you
The Anthem of the Syrian National Social Party
This Anthem was written in 1935 by the founder Antoun Saadeh, a year before mandated France uncovered its secret organization
Zaki Nassif musically composed this anthem
Articles of leader Antoun Saadi. Part 6
Posted by: adonis49 on: March 8, 2019
Articles of leader Antoun Saadi. Part 6
Note: This article was published before Saadi founded the Syrian National Social Party in secrecy during the French “mandated” power ofer Lebanon and Syria.
مصطفى الأيوبيposted on Fb. 13 hrs ·
تحيا سورية،
…إنّ نقص الحياة والأساس الحياتيّ في أدبنا لأمر رائع ونتيجة مؤسفة جدًا لأنّها تضرب بيننا وبين المُثُل العليا حجابًا كثيفًا، ولا تمدُّنا إلا بما ابتذل من الألفاظ وهزل من المعاني وأقفر من المبادئ.
وإذا كانت الأسباب المباشرة لهٰذا الفقر المدقع في الأدب ما ذكرت في الكلام على الشّعراء من إسراعهم إلى قرض الشّعر لما يجدونه من السّهولة في اقتباس المعاني المحدودة عن الشّعر القديم الّذي بين أيديهم،
وإقبال الشّـبّان على الكتابة الإنشائيّة البحتة وليس لهم من العدّة سوى المنطق اللّغويّ. وإذا كان كثيرون من الّذين حاولوا وضع الرّوايات والقصص لم يرموا إلى غرضٍ غير الشّهرة الشّخصيّة ولم يتناولوا من الأفكار إلا ما هو عاديّ، فما توفّقوا إلى اكتشاف شيء جديد في الشّؤون النّفسيّة، فالأسباب الكامنة وراء عقليّة الشّعراء والكتّاب هي الحياة الّتي يحيونها في محيطهم وبيئتهم وهي جزء من حياة المحيط كلّه.
فإذا درسنا الحياة الحبيّة في محيطنا، وهي أهمّ عوامل الشّعر، وجدنا أنّها لم ترتفع إلى الدّرجة الّتي تنهض بالنّفس إلى المطالب العليا الباعثة على الإقدام والشّجاعة والكرامة وتنقية النّفس من الشّوائب وعقد العزيمة على منهاج معيّن.
فإنّ تقاليدنا المتوارثة كانت تمنع الاتّصال النّفسيّ والحبّ الحقيقيّ القائم على الانتخاب الطّبيعيّ والنّفسيّ ولا تجيز إلا الحبّ الجسديّ، فكان يكفي الطّالب أن يقال له إنّ الفتاة الّتي انتخبوها له جميلة الملامح، صفة صدرها كذا وخصرها كذا وعيناها كذا إلى آخر ما هنالك من أوصاف تعمل في شهوته أو أن يراها في زيارة أو زيارتين ليتحقق من أنّ جمالها الجسديّ يوافق رغباته الجنسيّة.
أمّا الفتاة فقليلاً ما كان يؤبه لرغباتها هي وإرادتها. وعلى هٰذا الأساس قام الارتباط العائلي عندنا وهو لا يزال المعوّل عليه في معظم مجموعنا إلى هٰذه السّاعة.
ومن هٰذا النّوع من الحياة الحبيّة الجامدة استمدّ شعراؤنا وكتّابنا الرّوح الشّعريّة أو الرّوائيّة الّتي أظهروا لنا في غزلهم وتشبيبهم وفي شباك رواياتهم القليلة، فلم تكن روحًا ساذجة فطريّة تميل لصفائها وخلوصها، ولم تكن روحًا عميقة القرار غنيّة بالعوامل النّفسيّة والتّصوّرات العقليّة تشعر بجمالها وجلالها…
سعاده
الأعمال الكاملة، الجزء 1، صفحة 439-436
“أدب الكتب وأدب الحياة”
عن “المجلّة”، بيروت، المجلّد 8، العدد 2، 1933/4/1
#إضاءة_اليوم
On the anniversary of the birth of Antoun Saadi, March 1st, 1904, by Jean Dayeh
Posted by: adonis49 on: March 3, 2019
On the anniversary of the birth of Antoun Saadi, March 1st, 1904, by Jean Dayeh
Note: Jean Dayeh is practically the biograph of the Syrian National Social Party and has been researching in the world libraries and archives on forgotten pieces. This piece was posted on Fb.
In context: , Antoun Saadi was born on March 1st, 1904 in Shouweir (Mount Lebanon) and grew up in Brazil and shared with his father in the issuing of a newspaper. At the age of 24, Antoun came back to Lebanon with the determination of founding a secular national party. He taught German at the American University of Beirut and enlisted many students in the principles of his organization. Antoun mastered at least 5 languages: Arabic, German, Portuguese, Spanish and English
The administration of AUB warned the mandated power France on the activities of this organization and he was tried in 1936 and put in prison for 6 months. During his incarceration, Antoun wrote “The Birth and development of nations”.
In 1938, the Mandated power ordered Antoun to be exiled. He traveled to Germany, then to Brazil and ended up in Argentina for the duration of WWII. From Argentina, Antoun published articles and letters to the leaders of the party in Lebanon and expanded the base of his party in Latin America among the immigrants of Lebanon, Palestine, Syria and Iraq
After many negotiations with the nascent independent Lebanon, he returned to Lebanon in 1947, at the acclamation of a massive welcome at the airport. The government decided to issue a warrant for his arrest and Antoun took refuge in his birth place of Dhour Shouweir until the government relented.
The party spread like wild fire in Syria, Palestine, Jordan and Lebanon and secular people swore allegiance. During this period, Antoun Saadi lambasted the stealing of the USA and England of our oil in Iraq (our strategic weapon), the creation of State of Israel (our existential enemy) and demanded that the States provide the party with weapons to confront Israel.
On July 8, 1949, the government of Lebanon executed him in a mock trial that lasted less than 24 hours for “treason“.
الأول من اذار عيد ميلاد قيدوم الساسة المناقبيين في لبنان وعموم سوراقية
في الذكرى ال115 لميلاد أنطون سعاده،التي تطل بوجهها الجميل وسط وجوه بشعة رغم مليارات دولاراتها ،أو بالأحرى بسببها، التي جنوها بعرق أناملهم الرشيقة ،سأكتفي بالقاء ضوء خاطف على نظافة كف صاحب العيد،انطلاقا من معطيين،
أولهما أن زعيم الحزب القومي كان يعتبر المناقبية أو العقلية الأخلاقية الجديدة،هي مبدأ مبادىء عقيدته الأساسية والاصلاحية،والثاني،وهو الاهم،انه لم يكتف بالتبشير المناقبي،بل هو جسده كانسان وزعيم سياسي،وبكل نواحيه ومنها نظافة الكف.
بعد أن أضاء عبر المحاضرات التسع على تأسيس الحزب ومبادئه الاساسية والاصلاحية،محور محاضرته العاشرة والأخيرة على المناقبية ،
فأكد على ما حرفيته “كل خطة سياسية،وكل خطة حربية،مهما كانت بديعة ومهما كانت كاملة،لا يمكن تحقيقها الا بأخلاق قادرة على حمل تلك الخطة بأخلاق متينة”.
أضاف :”في كل ناحية من نواحي أعمالنا القومية والسياسية في بلادنا ،في كل فئة أو بيئة لم تتخذ عقلية أخلاقية أساسا يضطلع بالأغراض والأعمال ،نجد التشويش والفشل والخيبة”.
ومن المؤكد ان ازمة الحزب الراهنة،هي ،في الدرجة الاولى، وليدة عدم اعتماد القيادة، العقلية الأخلاقية في أساس نهجها .
ولنقلب الصفحة على تجسيد صاحب العيد لما دعا الاخرين اليه.ونظرا لجاحظية عداد كلمات المقال الفايسبوكي،أكتفي بدليلين من أصل ألفين.
1_حين اتهمه أصحاب الأنامل الرشيقة من لصوص السياسة والصحافة،بأنه يقبض الملايين من الدول الاجنبية الغنية،رد كرة اتهاماتهم الى شباك ملعبهم ،مؤكدا ان زوار محفوظات وزارات خارجية تلك الدول،سيجدون وصولات قبض باسم متهميه
،ولكنهم لن يجدوا وصلا واحدا بقرش واحد يحمل اسم انطون خليل سعاده.ولقد تأكدت من صحة معلومة صاحب العيد عبر اطلاعي على المحفوظات البريطانية والالمانية والفرنسية والأميركية.
2_وما كتبه وصرح به خلال حياته،تأكد أثر استشهاده.ألم يتبين في وصيته ان كل ثروته لم تتعد الأربعماية ليرة لبنانية فقط لا غير؟في حين ثبت بالصوت والصورة، ان متهميه الذين رددوا فعل ايمانهم بالمناقب والأخلاق ،هم جبال من الملح!
The detailed description of the Anthem of the Syrian National Social Party
Posted by: adonis49 on: October 4, 2018
The detailed description of the Anthem of the Syrian National Social Party
This Anthem was written in 1935 by the founder Antoun Saadeh, a year before mandated France uncovered its secret organization, and was musically composed by Zaki Nassif
Kamal Nader posted on FB. September 29, 2017 at 8:18 AM
النشيد القومي ” سورية لك السلام ”
هو نشيدٌ يحمل في تعابيره معاني النهضة والتاريخ والحضارة والفداء وجمال الوطن وكرامة ابنائه ومناعة جباله .
في المقطع الاول نلقي السلام والتحية على سورية وتتكرر عبارة “سورية لك السلام” مرتين نظراً الى ان بلادنا بحاجة الى السلام وانها من دعاة نشر السلام في العالم وانها تقاوم الاحتلال والحروب التي تجتاح البشرية بدافع المصالح الجشعة للدول المشحونة بالعنف المادي والطمع بالاستيلاء على ثروات الشعوب الاخرى . ثم نقول ” سورية انت الهدى ” والمقصود بذلك انها أمةٌ اعطت للانسانية مفاتيح الهداية الى العلم والمعرفة من الأبجدية الاولى وعلم الفلك والزراعة والشرائع وتنظيم الزمن الى الطب والكيمياء والرياضيات والهندسة والري والسدود وفنون العمارة والمدن . اما عبارة ” نحن الفدى ” فهي رسالة الى شعبنا بأننا مستعدون للتضحية ولفداء امتنا وبناء مستقبلها والذود عنها وعن وطننا ووضع مصلحة الامة فوق مصلحة الفرد او الجزء .
في المقطع الثاني وصفٌ لنا نحن كشعبٍ يرفض الذل والهوان ويتميز بالصلابة وروح التحدي والنهضة . يقول ” نحن قومٌ لا نلينُ للبغاة الطامعين .. ارضنا فيها مَعينُ للرجال الناهضين ” اي انها نبع للرجولة والطموح .
المقطع الثالث يصف الوطن والناس فيقول ” كلُ ما فيها جميلٌ .. كلّ من فيها كريم .. جوّها صافٍ عليلُ شعبها حيٌّ عظيم ” ، وهذا وصفٌ واقعي وليس خيالياً لوطننا الجميل الرائع ولطبيعة بلادنا الساحرة وجوّها الذي يتميز بالاعتدال والسحر والنقاء والصحة . كما يركز على ان شعبنا هو حي وعظيم يرفض الموت ولا يقبل القبر مكاناً له تحت الشمس وهذا ثابتٌ في التاريخ وفي الحاضر .
في المقطع الرابع تعبير عن الشموخ والمناعة والحصانة وسما النفوس الأبية فيقول :” يا جبالاً قد تعالت وتجلّت كالحصون .. يا نفوساً قد تسامت فوق آماد المنون .” وهذا ايضاً وصفٌ واقعي يقارن شموخ الجبال مع شموخ النفوس وسموّها ، كما يصف حدود الوطن السوري الحصينة عبر سلاسل الجبال الشاهقة في طوروس وزغروس والجبال الساحلية الممتدة من كسب والاسكندرون الى لبنان والى بطاح الكرمل في الجنوب السوري فلسطين .
وفي الأخير يحكي عن النهضة فيقول ” نهضةٌ هزّت قروناً وجَلَت عنّا الخُمول ” وبهذا يعبر عن فعل النهضة القومية وبأنها هزت الطبقات المتراكمة على تاريخنا من الذل والانحطاط والكسل وفقدان الثقة بالنفس والشعور بالخوف والعجز عن الصراع وعن تحقيق الحياة الكريمة الزاهرة القوية ، الى ان يصل في الاخير للتأكيد على اننا امةٌ حيةٌ تامةُ التكوين والصفات وليست تابعةً لأحد وانها حياةٌ لن تزول ، وهذا هو السطر الاخير في النشيد :” امةٌ نحن يقيناً وحياةٌ لن تزول ” ..
هكذا باختصارنفهم النشيد الذي وضعه مؤسس الحزب القومي انطون سعاده سنة 1935 ولحّنه الفنان القومي الموسيقار المبدع زكي ناصيف .
Syrian town Sadad braces for ISIS attack: Repulsed by the steadfastness of its resistance fighters
Posted by: adonis49 on: November 3, 2015
Sadad braces for ISIS attack:
Repulsed by the steadfastness of its resistance fighters
After ISIS captured the nearby town of Mahin (10 km away from Sadad). The mostly Christian Village of Sadad (in East Homs) braced to defend it.
Nov 2, 2015 by Zaman al-Wasl (opposition website)
The Syrian regime forces lost Mahin for second time in two years.

Islamic State (ISIS) fighters took the central town of Mahin, east of Homs city, for the second time in two years, sparking fears of invasion in a nearby ancient Christian town, an affiliate news agency reported Sunday.
Activists said the radical Islamic group seeks to control the Assad regime’s largest ammunition depots amid fears of invading the neighboring Christian town of Sadad, about 25 kilometers southeast of Mahin.
The capture of Mahin came three months after ISIS successfully seized Qaryatain, located in the middle of the cities of Homs, Palmyra and Damascus.
Osama Edward, the director of the Assyrian Human Rights Network in Syria, said hundreds of families have fled the town of Sadad toward the government-held city of Homs and the capital, Damascus.
Christians make up about 10% of Syria’s prewar population of 23 million people.
Sadad was captured briefly in 2013 by members of the Al-Qaeda-affiliated Nusra Front, but was later retaken by government forces.
This article was edited by The Syrian Observer.
Note: 10 martyrs of the Syrian National Social Party resistant fighters in Sadad paid the tribute to repulse the ISIS attack that approached the town in total darkness, lights of trucks out, and taking a route in a ravine invisible to the defenders.
The defenders returned fires haphazardly for 45 minutes until rescue arrived to drive back ISIS adventurers.
The young and valiant “Resistance Martyr”: Mohammad Slim (Sleem)
Posted by: adonis49 on: July 5, 2014
“Resistance Martyr” Mohammad Slim (Sleem, February 1, 1951 – June 3, 1985)

محمد سليم (1 شباط 1951 – 3 حزيران 1985) أحد أبرز قادة ومؤسسي جبهة المقاومة الوطنية اللبنانية، كان عميد الدفاع في الحزب السوري القومي الإجتماعي وصاحب “نهج الأجسا…د المتفجرة” .
– ولد محمد سليم في بلدة الصرفند في الأول من شباط عام 1951، تلقى دروسه الإبتدائية في مدرسة البلدة وتابع المرحلة التكميلية في تكميلية صيدا للصبيان ودراسته الثانوية في ثانوية صيدا الرسمية، وأظهر في جميع هذه المراحل تفوقاً وذكاءً مميزاً. وتابع دروسه في فرنسا عام 1969 في الهندسة الإليكتروميكانيكية في جامعة مونبلييه وأكمل تخصصه العالي في جامعة القديس يوسف (اليسوعية) كلية الهندسة في بيروت وتخرج عام 1975. تزوج عام 1977 من الرفيقة فاطمة قشور (من الصرفند) ورزق بولدان، ليلى و حسين.
– إنتسب الشهيد إلى الحزب السوري القومي الإجتماعي – في فرنسا – العام 1969 وانطلق دؤوباً في العمل الحزبي. وتولى عدة مسؤوليات كانت أولاها مسؤول فرع الحزب في الجامعة اليسوعية عام 1970 ثم مديرا لمديرية الصرفند في العام ذاته. عين ناظرا للتدريب في منفذية صيدا عام 1971 وناظراً للإذاعة عام 1972 وفي عام 1975 تولى مسؤولية منفذ عام منفذية الجنوب الأولى ثم مندوباً مركزياً في الجنوب عام 1976 وعضواً في المكتب السياسي للحزب. برز على صعيد العمل الجبهوي في الجنوب ولعب دوراً في قيادة العمل الوطني بعد أن شارك في تأسيس الجبهة الوطنية في الجنوب – المؤلفة من مختلف الأحزاب والقوى التقدمية والوطنية. ولمع كقائد حزبي في الجنوب يسهر على مهماته التنظيمية ليبقى حزبه طليعة نضالية متميزة. انتخب عام 1980 عضواً في المجلس الأعلى للحزب وتم تعيينه في العام ذاته عميداً للدفاع واستمر في هاتين المسؤوليتين حتى تاريخ استشهاده في 3 حزيران 1985.
– قاد جميع المعارك منذ عام 1980 حتى 1985 بثبات وحنكة القائد باستراتيجية قومية ثورية ضد العدو الإسرائيلي وعملائه. وعندما اجتاحت قوات اللإحتلال الإسرائيلي الجنوب والجبل وبيروت عام 1982 تصدى العميد القائد بمقاتلي حزبه لدبابات وجنود الغزو وكان شعاره “لن ندعهم يدخلوا إلا على أجسادنا”. أطلق العميد الشهيد أولى عمليات المقاومة الوطنية ضد قوات الغزو الصهيوني، وكان ذلك يوم 21 تموز 1982 حين قصفت مجموعة من القوميين الإجتماعيين العاملين في جبهة المقاومة الوطنية مستعمرة كريات شمونة بالصواريخ من حاصبيا المحتلى مسقطين بذلك شعار “سلامة الجليل” (شعار حرب 1982) بعد شهر ونصف من الإجتياح. كما واشرف على جميع العمليات التي نفذها قوميون إجتماعيون في إطار جبهة المقاومة الوطنية ضد الإحتلال في بيروت ومناطق الجبل والجنوب، وكان أبرز مؤسسي وقادة جبهة المقاومة الوطنية منذ إنطالاقتها. ومع الشهيد وجدي الصايغ رسم العميد الشهيد نمطاً جديداً للمقاومة، إنه “نهج الأجساد المتفجرة” كما أسماه، إنه عصر البطولات الإستشهادية، عصر الزلزال ضد الإحتلال، عصر وجدي وسناء وابتسام وعلي وخالد وعمار ومالك ومريم. إلى جانب هذه الفصائل النضالية أجاد الشهيد محمد سليم في الخطابة والمحاضرة والحوار كما أجاد في الثقافة والتثقيف والتعبئة والإستنهاض. شجع أبناء شعبه على النضال وحب الأرض وكان مقصداً دائماً لهموم المواطنين ومشاكلهم يعينهم ما استطاع المعالجة.
Background: “Rainbow over the Levant”. Part 2
Posted by: adonis49 on: July 10, 2012
Part 2. Background: “Rainbow over the Levant”
Note: This is the second part of the historical background of my novel “Rainbow over the Levant”, published on my blog 5 years ago. You may read the first part on https://adonis49.wordpress.com/2012/07/09/background-rainbow-over-the-levant/.
Before the Arabic Empire, the Near East region (Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and Palestine) paid its tribute to the Byzantine Empire in Constantinople.
During the Arabic hegemony, after around the year 640, the Christian people within the Arabic Empire paid their tribute to the Caliphates in one of the successive capitals such as in Mecca, Damascus, Baghdad or Cairo, and later they paid it to the Ottoman Empire in Istanbul later on till 1918. The Moslems didn’t pay taxes and it were the non-Moslems who covered the budget for running “governments”.
In modern times, the people in the Near East were under the colonial powers of either France (in Lebanon and Syria) or Great Britain (in Iraq, Palestine, Jordan and Egypt).
Nowadays, the entire region is mostly under the control of the USA, with Israel playing the role of a lesser junior partner. Indeed, a Zionist State was created as a standing mercenary army to keep the region under close control.
In the period of our novel, the Mamluks’ dynasty had conquered all of Syria, Lebanon and Palestine with the exclusion of Iraq, which was under the Mogul and later the Tatar invaders.
The Mamluks established 6 Viceroys in Damascus, Aleppo, Hama (in current Syria), Tripoli in Lebanon, Safad and Karak in Palestine. Most of the coastal cities in Lebanon were ruined because of the successive attacks to dislodge the remaining Crusaders and also because the trading caravans stopped passing through them.
The Mameluks did not invade Mount Lebanon militarily at this stage, but made sure to collect the requisite tribute and set up special coastal guards of Turkmen and Kurdish origins to prevent any recurring European invasions.
While the feudal nobleman outside Mount Lebanon was an appointed Mamluks’ military officer, whose sole interest in the land was to collect his due profit because the appointment was temporarily allocated to him, the feudal landlord in Mount Lebanon was a native and actually resided in his property and was the authority in organizing the life of the residents who usually were of the same religious denomination.
The current borders of the Republic of Lebanon were drawn by the French General Gouraux in 1920 after his army defeated the nascent Syria army in Maysaloun and entered Damascus at the end of the First World War.
What was formerly known as Lebanon encompassed only Mount Lebanon. During the French mandate other districts were attached to Lebanon:
1. The northern regions of Tripoli and Akkar were part of the “Wilayat” of Tripoli (the city of Tripoli was the capital of the “Wilayat” of the Viceroy of Tripoli that extended in Syria to include the towns of Homs and Tartus and the Lebanese littoral including Beirut).
2. The Bekaa Valley was part of the “Wilayat” of Damascus,
3. The southern regions, including the cities of Sidon and Tyre were part of the “Wilayat” of Acre in northern Palestine.
The Viceroys of Tripoli, Damascus, Safad and Acre paid allegiance to either the Sultan of Egypt in Cairo, Istanbul in Turkey, or the Shah of Iran depending on which empire was the master of the Middle East at different periods in history.
In the sixteen century, at the start of the push of the Ottoman empire to expand toward Syria, there have been attempts for a self-autonomous status in Mount Lebanon. The Druze chieftain Emir Maan the First, of the Maan tribe in the Chouf’s county, managed to unite all the counties in Mount Lebanon and then expanded toward Syria in the north and Palestine in the south.
The Ottoman Sultan became suspicious of his intentions, militarily quelled his ambitions and decapitated him in Istanbul. His grandson Fakhr El Dine (Emir Maan the Second ) succeeded to reunite Mount Lebanon and expanded his authority even further to include the Bekaa Valley after crushing the army of the Viceroy of Damascus in Anjar.
Emir Maan II opened negotiations with Florence to supply him with modern weapons and expanded trade to Europe and Egypt. Again he overshot his potentials and was defeated by the Ottoman Sultan, was exiled to Istanbul and put to death within three years of his captivity.
A century later, Emir Bechir Chahab the Second, in the Chouf district, reunited Mount Lebanon, expanded his authority, and allied himself with General Napoleon Bonaparte and Mohamed Ali in Egypt against the Ottoman and the British Empires. His ambition was foiled and was exiled to Malta for the remaining of his life.
These Emirs of Mount Lebanon extended the dominion of Mount Lebanon to parts of Syria and Palestine once they secured the unity of Mount Lebanon but they failed to go beyond maintaining law and order during their reign and no viable administrative structures or solid social and public institutions were established toward building a stable and lasting state nation.
In the Antiquity, the Phoenicians City-States of Byblos, Sidon, and Tyre expanded their dominions to Syria and Palestine at different periods in their separate ascendance. While wealth was amassed from integrated maritime enterprising complexes such as warehousing, ship repairing and trade transports by sea and land, the real source of power of these city-states resided in trained skilled workers, inland bread basket plains (Bekaa Valley), timber from the adjacent mountain forests and ready stones for constructing magnificent temples and for fortifying almost impregnable maritime castles.
In the mid-nineteenth century, a local reformist by the name of Tanios Chahine lead a commune of peasants at the town of Antelias against the feudal and clerical privileges in the Metn district. His movement resisted two years against the onslaught of the powerful enemies of the people until the latter forces of both denominations, Christians and Druze, masterminded a civil war in Mount Lebanon in order to strengthen confessionalism and their hold on power.
The civil war started in 1860 in Mount Lebanon between the Maronite and Druze and was localized in the Chouf and part of the Bekaa Valley including the town of Zahle; it lasted two years and opened the doors for the European interventions in our internal affairs that secured and maintained the old system.
The Levant was called by various names throughout history; the Arab Empire called it either the Fertile Crescent starting with the Euphrates and Tiger Rivers and ending with the Al Assy, Litany and Jordan Rivers encompassing Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and Palestine. It was known as Al Sham (currently referring to the environ of Damascus) because the region was on the left of Mecca so that the region on its right was labeled Yemen.
The European colonialists called it Levant because it is where the sun dawned on the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea.
The first wave of Levantine immigrants to the United States and Latin America was identified as Turks because they were a citizen of the Ottoman Empire, then the second wave of Levantine immigrants that spread to Africa and Egypt was identified as Syrians regardless of their present nationalities after the defeat of Turkey in the First World War.
There were many Syrian luminaries at the end of the 19th century, immigrants and locals, who wrote extensively of the need for reforms and the rejuvenation of the nation among them Jubran Khalil Jubran, Kawakibi, Youssef El Azam, Boutros Boustany, Shebly Chmayel, and Ibrahim Yaziji.
However, there were few leaders for organizing the people into political parties. In the late 19th century, two overseas organizations from Levantine descendents proclaimed that the Syrian Nation is constituted of Lebanon, the actual Syrian State, Palestine and Jordan and published their reforms and ideologies in newspapers.
The first group, located in New York (1899) and calling itself “The Young Syrian Party”, was led by Emir Youssef Shadid Abi Lameh and based on the following principles:
1. Striving toward an independent Syria with natural borders from Ras Aqaba to El Arish;
2. Working for a comprehensive agreement to unify the Arabic Nations;
3. Instituting a total separation between the religious and civil authorities;
4. Nationalizing the riches and properties of the religious clergy and assigning for them the necessary funds for their subsistence;
5. Unifying the schooling programs throughout the Nation;
6. Imposing mandatory military enlistments to reflect the will of the citizens for holding on to a Nation.
The second group was formed in Sao Paolo, Brasil, in 1922 and was lead by Jamil Maaluf and Asaad Bechara. They named their political association the “Syrian National Party” which adopted the basic principles of the former group but added more principles with detailed exposition.
For example, the “Syrian National Party” specifically advocated:
1. the requisite of civil marriages among the different religious sects,
2. adopting the Arabic language as the national language in all the private and public schools,
3. giving Lebanon and Palestine self administrative autonomy
4. prohibiting the religious clergy from interfering in the civil status laws and executive decisions.
Unfortunately, these two political parties were never transplanted in their original homeland and did not take roots as formal political organization in Lebanon, Palestine or Syria.
This section will raise controversies among both the isolationists and greater Pan-Arab nationalists save that current facts should not be sacrificed at the altar of the whimsical confessional minds: we have a disposition of fabricating our history on flimsy emotional exigencies.
The only political party that is disciplined and grounded on solid ideological principles that proclaims Syria as a complete Nation and survived today is called the “Syrian National Social Party”. This political party was founded in 1932 by Antoun Saade, a native of Dhour Choueir in the Metn, during the French mandate of Lebanon as an underground party.
Saade was an immigrant in Brazil where his father Khalil published an Arabic daily. He relocated to Lebanon and taught at the American University of Beirut and founded his party. He was then forced to exile in 1936 by the French colonial authority and settled in Argentina during the Second World War.
Saade returned to Lebanon in 1947 to an unprecedented mass welcome at the airport to reorganize his party and affirm its ideology after a few discrepancies in views among its leaders emanating from the independence of Lebanon during his exile. The members of this party celebrate in July 8 the martyrdom of its founder, Antoun Saade, who was summarily executed in 1949 when he was in his late forties, after a kangaroo trial that lasted barely 48 hours.
Saade represented a serious danger as an organized force that exposed the forces of the defeatist isolationists and sectarianists in our communities.
While the Communist party in Syria was the first truly secular organization established in the first quarter of the 20th century, Antoun Saade was the first leader to create a secular political party affirming that Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Jordan and Iraq form one nation and one society. The ideology of the latter political party was based on a comprehensive project, politically, socially, philosophically, culturally and economically.
This party believes that the Syrian Nation is one of the four Arabic nations; the three other Arabic nations being: the Arabic Peninsula Nation of Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Oman and the Arab Emirate Union of States, then the Nile Arabic Nation of Egypt and Sudan, and then the North African Arabic Nation of Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco and Mauritania.
The “Syria National Social Party” was and still is secular in its ideology and practice, and even during Lebanon civil war of (1975-1991), it did not participate in the killing on confessional basis. The Syrian National Social Party exists officially in Lebanon and lately in Syria with substantial Palestinian adherents.
Antoun Saade was less successful politically to share responsibilities in any government or to unite our nation against Zionism and the colonial exploitation to our main national resources in oil with no significant strategic political and economic returns.
One characteristic that stand out in the concept of secular nationalism in the Levant, especially in Lebanon, Syria, and Palestine, is that almost all the nationalist political party leaders or founders were from minority Christians. For example:
Michel Aflak, the founder of the Baath Party, still in power in Syria and for three decades in Iraq; George Habache the founder of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine; Naef Hawatmeh the founder of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, and Antoun Saade the founder of the Syrian National Social Party.
It appears that the Moslems could not shed out the notion that their allegiance might be to any power that did not wrap itself up with the mantle of the Caliphate of Islam. Even during the First World War, the British had to seek support from the so-called House of the descended of the Prophet Mohammad in the tribe of El-Hashemite in Mecca.
It is no surprise that the cornerstone of the doctrines of the salafit Sunni Moslem political parties is the restitution of the Caliphate in the Moslem world.
Lebanon to where? After this intermediate stage (opposition government) to a State of citizenship
Posted by: adonis49 on: July 1, 2011
Lebanon to where? This intermediate stage to a State of citizenship
Finally, Mikati PM formed a government. For over four months, the Lebanese knew that Mikati was waiting for a “green light” from a regional power to stop suffocating Lebanon with irrelevant local smokescreens. Anyway, Lebanon has been run by “virtual governments” for decades, most of the time the sort of care-taker governments, governments that run daily affairs for their families, waiting for short-lived official governments to be sworn in. So what happened?
At first, Syria of Bashar al Assad was in no hurry for Mikati to constituting a government: Bashar was waiting for concessions from the US and Saudi Arabia to ease his way…Concessions were not forthcoming: Instead, a popular revolt was fomented against, or “naturally erupted as urgent moratorium on”, this dictator clannish regime of the Assad family.
Hezbollah was seriously shaken with the hysterical violent reactions of the Syrian regime in confronting peaceful early marches. Hezbollah felt that, if the Bashar al Assad fails to regain his composure as a reliable and viable legitimate entity, the Syrian dictator might cow down under the pressures of the US and European States, and strike a deal at the expense of Hezbollah’s growing power in Lebanon.
Consequently, Hezbollah lead a concentrated effort to coax Bashar to focusing some of his attention to the deteriorating situation in Lebanon and put the squeeze on Mikati PM to forming a government, and immediately.
The rational of Hezbollah was that, if Lebanon is left in the vacuum with no legitimate government, most probably Syria might be cornered to conduct incursions within Lebanon borders and things might get out of hand. The Syrian regime realized that it behaved hysterically and went overboard, killing and incarcerating scores of innocent people and peaceful demonstrators.
The Syrian opposition groupuscules were invited to meet in Damascus, instead of moving around between Turkey, Paris, and lately Russia…The strategy worked. And General Secretary of Hezbollah, Hassan Nasr Allah, delivered his third speech frankly supporting the Assad regime
Mikati PM formed a government quickly, but it has yet to submit to Parliament a unified paper of intent as to its guidelines. It is no surprise that this politisized International Court for the assassination of Rafic Hariri decided to submit the miserly four names as potential perpetrators to the assassination. Mikati PM government finalized its paper to coincide with the International Court decision.
Hezbollah is temporarily off the hook, and the threat of a deal with Syria of Bashar at its expense has been delayed. Why?
First, the submission of official names by the International Court (IC) releaves Lebanon from this masquerade that has been dragging on for over 6 years: The four names have been out of Lebanon for the last 30 years, and two of the names are believed to be virtual names, not registered as Lebanese “citizens”. The IC “bomb” landed but didn’t explode: Lebanon went on as usual. Even if the US and Israel detonate the bomb by remote control, most likely the bomb is totally outdated and rotten and will do no damage that the Lebanese have endured in the last decade.
Second, the blade of the sword of the International Court on the assassination of late Rafic Hariri PM has been blunted: Hezbollah did a good job discrediting this politicized court. The Lebanese have learned that the legitimacy in the institution of this special International Court is to be desired. Why?
First, the UN has no basis to seeking chapter seven: Lebanon was not experiencing any civil war, and no massacres were witnessed. A “legitimate” government was running the country. What of the far more serious cases of “crimes against humanity” of President of Bashir of Sudan that UN is waiting to be captured and yet being warmly welcomed in China? What of Qadhafi and his son…? What of Bush Jr., Ramsfield, Tony Blair,…
Second, the Lebanese government of Seniora PM was barely representing 30% of the people when it demanded for the institution of this court. All the Shiaa ministers (representing 60% of the people) had quit the government. And the ministers of the Christian political party of the Tayyar (representing more than 50% of the Christians) had also quit the government. By the Constitution, if one of the main religious group is out of the government then, the government is not “legitimate”…
Lebanon is a very tiny, highly volatile, unstable society, and NOT immune to radical revolts. How unstable?
First, since independence in 1943, Lebanon officially recognized two failed internal coup d’etats, one in 1949 and another in 1961. There are a dozen of other unofficial military coups. Lately, Lebanon witnessed a minor failed coup d’etat at the ministry of communication, because a private interest wanted to conserve its mobile communication business.
Second, Lebanon witnessed two civil wars, one in 1958 and another one in 1975 that lasted 17 years. Since the end of the civil war in 1991, Lebanon experienced a major military coup d’etat in 2008 that started in the Palestinian camp of Nahr el Bared around Tripoli: The army needed 11 months to overcome the uprising of the Islamist salafists Jund al Sham. Many short-lived unofficially recognized civil wars occurred since 1991.
Beirut experienced a quick military coup in 2007 by Hezbollah, as the government attempted to control land communication lines. The war of 2006 against Israel was actually a military coup perpetrated by the Lebanese government to control Hezbollah’s military might.
Third, Lebanon is practically a Non-State country since its independence. The 18 religious sects represent the main de-facto powers and also by law to exercising political influence. Civil status of every “citizen” is run and administered by the officially recognized religious sects that own more than 50% of the land. Every religious sect is backed by over three confessional “political parties”.
The two historically secular political parties, the communist and the Syrian National Social parties, were denied participation in the Parliament via biased and tailored-made election laws and procedures. The Syrian National Social party was recently permitted to enter the parliament, carried on the shoulders of other main confessional parties. The multi-theocratic system, backed by the financial institutions that lend Lebanon governments to cover their budget deficit, have vested interests in prohibiting the constitution of any viable and sustainable modern State governing system.
Fourth, Lebanon lacks sustainable public institutions and any long-term programs and policies. The only benefit the citizen enjoys is a mere passport. There exist no serious governance for the people to march against and demand reforms. It is like demanding from Qadhafi to relinquish his authority and Qadhafi replying: “But I have no official posts or even an official job to relinquish!”
This “opposition” government will do a great job “masking our virtual State” in strengthening the legal system, confront the highway robberies of the Hariri clan governments, and give the impression that Lebanon is an autonomous State…but the fundamentals will not change and Lebanon will remain a multi-theocratic State, run by the financial institutions and clerics…
The hot season has started in the northern hemisphere, and the stream of “Spring Revolts” might cool off a bit. In Lebanon, we missed the spring upheavals that swept the “Arab” world, but we planted the seed of a fresh drastic non-violent revolt for the next spring season.
The youth in Lebanon organized five marches in various cities in Lebanon demanding change in the confessional political structure. The banners of “We want to change the regime” is extending credit to a non-State, as if Lebanon has a State and non a virtual State run by de-facto clerical and financial powers. What the banners should say are: “We want to create a State”, and “We want to feel citizens in the modern concept of a State”.
Next Spring, the revolt will still be non-violent, but the target and purpose of the revolt will not be a matter of patching up a reform here and another there. The traditional “leaders” have demonstrated that they refuse to establish a functioning State for all “citizens”: Lebanon has been run by Non-State governments, or care-taker governments.
The youth Movement for Change must be ready for the dawn of the next spring season: It must start doing serious due diligence. For example,
First, specialized teams have to dig-up and dust-off the policies and programs stored in the basements of ministries. The goal of reviewing and revising already studied programs is: “A political system from the people to the people”.
The Lebanese have to feel true citizens with equal rights under the law. The Lebanese have to enjoy fair and equitable election laws that allow common people to accede to decision-making positions.
Laws have to be revised for citizens, regardless of genders, race, or religious affiliation, to have fair opportunities to all political positions and job opportunities in the public and private institutions and enterprises.
The Constitution has to be re-written to separate religion from civil power and responsibility…
Radical changes are possible: There are no other alternatives to patching up a rotten political and social structure; it is not feasible to move on with small incremental reforms under the power of the ferocious religious and financial oligarchies that have been dominating our lives and subjugating us to constant instability and indignities.
We have grown up to be mature and responsible adult “citizens”. Lebanon is Not immune to drastic revolts, and the next revolution will be successful!
Is Lebanon political system a typical application of Black Swan theory?
Posted by: adonis49 on: June 24, 2011
Is Lebanon political system a typical application of Black Swan theory? Is it immune to radical non-violent revolts?
Has anyone seen a swan (baja3) physically? In the flesh, or even flying or walking? If you are asked “what is the color of a swan?” I bet your answer is “White, obviously”. Actually, a black swan was identified a few years ago. Is it possible to eventually identify a multicolored swan?
You might say that finding a black swan, or even a tribe of black swans, or a mixture of black and white swans stand to reason, but is it feasible to have a green, blue… swan? You might respond that genetic engineering can produce whatever colored swan you desire as a pet…
Why do you think all of us believed that a swan must be white, and nothing but white? Most of us have not seen a swan, except in pictires, movies or documentaries; we might not even be able to identify a swan from a duck if the bird is not named…
If even nature, which changes slowly and its trends can be mostly predicted, has the potential of surprising us with rare events, a few of them catastrophic. We got in the habit of expecting frequent disasters from man-designed and man-made systems, within a few years of their applications and usage by people…
The variability in living creatures and the behaviors of users are a thousand folds more numerous than variability in nature. Wouldn’t you be appalled in total disbelief to hear any designer of systems claiming that the product is definitely designed and manufactured to be entirely controlled and managed according to users’ satisfaction, safety, and health?
The teams of designers of many professions such as scientists, engineers, psychologist, legal professionals… are aware of two things:
First, there will be frequent minor malfunctions to the system in terms of financial loss, safety and health causalities, but these malfunctions can be controlled and fixed.
Second, any system contains rare catastrophic malfunctions that will eventually occur (doud al khal minho wa fih) and predicting these rare events is very challenging and out of control and management. When you hear of economic-safety analysis trade-off of a system, bear in mind that the study concerns the number of casualties and the financial cost that owners (more frequently the State or the tax payers) will have to set aside for these calamitous eventualities.
The funny part is that:
First, no money is ever set aside by the private shareholders for these catastrophes and the States or tax-payers will eventually cover up the expenses.
Second, transparency and full disclosure to the general public is never disseminated widely, if ever published.
Third, the public and communities in most countries have no say in the design and decision-making processes of vast man-made systems.
Fourth, no man-made system has instituted an independent specialized and dedicated team responsible of gathering data and analysing statistics of the various malfunctions. Most malfunctions are barely reported and serious hazardous events are dusted-off under the carpet: No read, never happened!
Do you know that the UN agency for health is forbidden to collect and report statistics on nuclear disaster consequences? That the atomic UN agency is not to share statistics with other UN agencies concerned with health and safety of world population?
Nassim Nicholas Taleb, a mathematician by formation wrote “The Black Swan: The power of the unpredictable” and “Savage hazard”. Taleb was initially trying to explain the financial crisis since he is in the financial business. The theory is fine and explains many fluctuations in man-made designs, for example the international financial system.
The problem emerges when Taleb ventures to extend his theory to the current “Arab” revolts and Arab political systems. The is no doubt that political structures are essentially man-made designs and that the current acceptable varieties as within the realm of “How a democratic political system satisfies the criteria of the Western system democratic types.”
Taleb contends that since governments in Lebanon take turn, for example representing “opposition alliances”, as in Italy, the inherent and natural fluctuations in the system instability are resolved naturally.
Basically and literally, Taleb claimed that Lebanon political structure is immune to drastic revolts , on the ground that dictator regimes fall badly because the system try hard to control minor legitimate discontents, and consequently, the system is fragile when any major revolt strikes unexpectedly.
Either Taleb (Lebanese of origine) is using selective memory, or he is faking not to be that familiar with the history of Lebanon’s political structure.
I suspect that Taleb confused catalysts with causes in the case of Lebanon, a confusion he frequently warned against, in analyzing the cases of the “Arab Spring” revolts and the financial crisis.
First, since independence in 1943, Lebanon officially recognized two failed internal coup d’etats, one in 1949 and another in 1961. Lately, Lebanon witnessed a minor failed coup d’etat at the ministry of communication, because a private interest wanted to conserve its mobile communication business.
Second, Lebanon witnessed two officially recognized civil wars, one in 1958 and another one in 1975 that lasted 17 years.
Since the end of the civil war in 1991, Lebanon experienced a major military coup d’etat in 2008 that started in the Palestinian camp of Nahr el Bared around Tripoli: The army needed 11 months to overcome the uprising of the Islamist salafists Jund al Sham, and hundreds of fallen martyrs and handicapped soldiers.
Beirut experienced a quick military coup in 2007 by Hezbollah, as the government attempted to control land communication lines.
The war of 2006 against Israel was actually a military coup perpetrated by the Lebanese government to control Hezbollah’s military might.
Third, Italy has true political parties with programs and policies. The election laws in Italy are among the fairest and most equitable in the western States. Frequent changes in governments didn’t prevent Italy to continue being among the leading economic powers in the world.
Italy is very generous in investing in the poorer nations and its grants are relied upon in most States around the Mediterranean Sea basin. Italy has many contingents in the various UN peace-keeping forces…
Where as, for example, Lebanon is practically a Non-State country or a pseudo-State since its independence. The 18 religious sects represent the main de-facto powers and also by law to exercising political influence. Civil status of every “citizen” is run and administered by the officially recognized religious sects that own more than 50% of the land. Every religious sect is backed by over three confessional “political parties”.
The two historically secular political parties, the Communist and the Syrian National Social parties, were denied participation in the Parliament via biased and tailored-made election laws and procedures.
The Syrian National Social party was recently permitted to enter the parliament, carried on the shoulders of other main confessional parties. The multi-theocratic system, backed by the financial institutions that lend Lebanon governments to cover budget deficit, have vested interests in prohibiting the constitution of any viable and sustainable modern State governing system.
Fourth, Lebanon lacks sustainable public institutions and any long-term programs and policies. The only benefit the citizen enjoys is a mere passport. There exist no serious governance for the people to march against and demand reforms.
Was Taleb aware of the actual conditions and situation in Lebanon for him to categorize Lebanon as falling in line within the “stable” political systems and immune to radical revolts as Italy?
The hot season has started in the northern hemisphere, and the Spring Revolt might cool off a bit. In Lebanon, we missed the spring upheavals that swept the “Arab” world, but we planted the seed of a fresh drastic non-violent revolt for the next spring season.
The youth in Lebanon organized five marches in various cities in Lebanon demanding change in the confessional political structure.
Next Spring, the revolt will still be non-violent, but the target and purpose of the revolt will not be a matter of a reform here and another there. The traditional “leaders” have demonstrated that they refuse to establish a functioning State for all “citizens”: Lebanon has been run by Non-State governments, or care-taker governments.
The youth Movement for Change must be ready for the dawn of the next spring season: It must start doing serious due diligence. For example,
1. Specialized teams have to dig-up and dust-off the policies and programs stored in the basements of ministries. The goal of reviewing and revising already studied programs is: “A political system from the people to the people”.
2. The Lebanese have to feel true citizens with equal rights under the law.
3. The Lebanese have to enjoy fair and equitable election laws that allow common people to accede to decision-making positions.
4. Laws have to be revised for citizens, regardless of genders, race, or religious affiliation, to have fair opportunities to all political positions and job opportunities in the public and private institutions and enterprises.
5. The Constitution has to be re-written to separate religion from civil power and responsibility…
Radical changes are possible: There are no other alternatives to patching up a rotten political and social structure; it is not feasible to move on with small incremental reforms under the power of the ferocious religious and financial oligarchies that have been dominating our lives and subjugating us to constant instability and indignities.
We have grown up to be mature and responsible adult “citizens”. Lebanon is Not immune to drastic revolts, and the next revolution will be successful!
Note 1: Nassim Taleb, a mathematician, was a trader and worked for 20 years as consultant to large investment banks in New York and London. He created Empirica LLC for trading. He is engineering professor at the polytechnic institute at the University of New York.
Is Lebanon political system immune to radical non-violent revolts? Black Swan theory NOT applicable? Think again!
Posted by: adonis49 on: June 3, 2011
Is Lebanon political system immune to radical non-violent revolts?
Black Swan theory NOT applicable to Lebanon? Think again!
Nassim Nicholas Taleb (see note), the mathematician who wrote “The Black Swan: The power of the unpredictable” published an article in the French weekly Le Courrier International. Nassim stated that Lebanon’s political structure, as in Italy, is immune to drastic revolts similar to those taking place in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Yemen…
Taleb contends that since governments in Lebanon take turn representing “opposition alliances”, as in Italy, the inherent and natural fluctuations in the system instability are resolved naturally.
Taleb said that dictator regimes fall badly because the system try hard to control minor legitimate discontents, and consequently, the system is fragile when any major revolt strikes unexpectedly.
(As a reminder, Black Swan is a term coined after discovering a black swan a couple of years ago. People firmly believed that all swans were white: A few might have observed a black swan, but refused to identify it as a swan. Maybe black swans are common sight in particular regions and people had no idea that black swans are considered rarity all over the world and might be purchased for their weight in gold to be raised in zoos!)
Either Taleb is using selective memory, or he is not that familiar with Lebanon’s political structure history after staying abroad for so long. I suspect that Taleb confused catalysts with causes in the case of Lebanon, a confusion he frequently warned against in analyzing the cases of the “Arab Spring” revolts and the financial crisis.
First, since independence in 1943, Lebanon experienced two failed internal coup d’etats, one in 1949 and another in 1961, and several uprising such as in 1950, 1958, and 1974… Last week, the Moustakbal party that led an alliance which governed Lebanon since 1991, has tried a failed coup d’etat to conserve its mobile communication interests: The general director of the internal forces, General Reefy, led a force of 400 armed men and occupied the second flat in the communication ministry. The director of the communication ministry, Youssof, a stauch member of the Moustakbal of Saad Hariri PM party, participated in that stupid undertaking.
Second, Lebanon witnessed two civil wars, one in 1958 and another one in 1975 that lasted 17 years. Since the end of the civil war in 1991, Lebanon experienced a major military coup d’etat in 2008 that started in the Palestinian camp of Nahr el Bared around Tripoli: The army needed 11 months to overcome the uprising of the Islamist salafists Jund al Sham.
Beirut experienced a quick military coup in 2007 by Hezbollah, as the government attempted to control land communication lines. The war of 2006 against Israel was actually a military coup perpetrated by the Lebanese government to control Hezbollah’s military might.
Third, Italy has true political parties with programs and policies. The election laws in Italy are among the fairest and most equitable in the western States. Frequent changes in governments didn’t prevent Italy to continue being among the leading economic powers in the world. Italy is very generous in investing in the poorer nations and its grants are relied upon in most States around the Mediterranean Sea basin. Italy has many contingents in the various UN peace-keeping forces…
Whereas Lebanon is practically a Non-State country since its independence, a pseudo State by any criteria. The 18 religious sects represent the main powers by law, and they exercise de-facto political influence. Civil status of every “citizen” is run and administered by the officially recognized religious sects that own more than 50% of the land.
Every religious sect is backed by over three confessional “political parties”. The two historically secular political parties, the communist and the Syrian National Social parties, were denied participation in the Parliament via tailored-made election laws and procedures. The Syrian National Social party was recently permitted to enter the parliament, carried on the shoulders of other main confessional parties.
Fourth, Lebanon lacks sustainable public institutions and any long-term programs and policies. The only benefit the citizen enjoys is a mere passport. The are no serious governance for the people to march against and demand reforms. Was Taleb aware of the actual conditions and situation in Lebanon for him to catagorize Lebanon as falling in line within the “stable” political systems and immune to radical revolts as Italy?
The hot season has started in the northern hemisphere, and the Spring Revolt might cool off a bit. In Lebanon, we missed the spring upheavals that swept the “Arab” world, but we planted the seed of a fresh drastic non-violent revolt for the next spring season.
The youth in Lebanon organized 5 marches in various cities in Lebanon demanding change in the confessional political structure. Next Spring, the revolt will still be non-violent, but the target and purpose of the revolt will not be a matter of a reform here and another there.
The traditonal “leaders” have demonstrated that they refuse to establish a functioning State for all “citizens”: Lebanon has been run by Non-State governments, or care-taker governments.
The Movement for Change must be ready for the dawn of the next spring season: It must start doing serious due dilligence.
First, specialized teams have to dig-up and dust-off the policies and programs stored in the basements of ministries. The goal of reviewing and revising already studied programs is: “A political system from the people to the people”.
Second, the Lebanese have to feel true citizens with equal rights under the law. The Lebanese have to enjoy fair and equitable election laws that allow common people to acceed to decision-making positions.
Third, Laws have to be revised for citizens, regardless of genders, race, or religious affiliation, to have fair opportunities to all political positions and job opportunities in the public and private institutions and enterprises.
Fourth, The Constitution has to be re-written to separate religion from civil power and responsibility…
Radical changes are possible: There are no other alternatives to patching up a rotten political and social structure; it is not feasible to move on with small incremental reforms under the power of the ferocious religious and financial oligarchies that have been dominating our lives and subjugating us to constant instability and indignities.
We have grown up to be mature and responsible adult “citizens”
Note 1: Nassim Taleb, a mathematician, was a trader and worked for 20 years as consultant to large investment banks in New York and London. He created Empirica LLC for trading. He is engineering professor at the polytechnic institute at the University of New York. Taleb published “Savage hazard” and “The Black Swan: The power of the unpredictable.”
Note 2: The deposed Saad Hariri PM is a Saudi citizen first, and has been located in Saudi Arabia for the past three months, taking care of private business, and is currently established in Paris….