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Lebanon: The Case for a Secular Solution
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17991 |
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CURRENT ISSUES
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5 / 1990 |
3,369 Words |
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Wade R. Goria Wade R. Goria is assistant professor of modern Near Eastern
history at New York University. He is the author of
Sovereignty and Leadership in Lebanon, 1943-1976(London,
Ithaca Press). |
Ever since the first quarter of the nineteenth century, Lebanon's political life has been blackened by inescapable and destructive sectarianism that was institutionalized by edict of regional and great power rivalries. To find a solution to Lebanon's conflict it is necessary to take an unflinching look at mistakes and successes in the past. Nostalgia for a Lebanon that never truly existed must cease.
For centuries, Lebanon provided refuge for religious communities - including the Maronite Catholics, Druzes, and Shiite Muslims - seeking to avoid persecution. The emergence of Lebanon as a separate state can be traced back to the establishments of a principality on Mount Lebanon in the sixteenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries, a secular Druze-Maronite princedom existed.
Not until the 1820s did the communal problem become a dominant aspect of Lebanese life its emergence was partly due to socioeconomic factors but mainly to the existence of great power rivalry. As part of its effort to gain control of "geographical" Syria (present-day Syria, Lebanon, Israel, and Jordan), France aligned itself with the Maronite Catholics, whereas the British supported the Druzes. In 1841 the great powers, who had become the determinant force in the region, joined with the Ottomans to end the principality, cantonize Mount Lebanon and establish the first governing councils based on religious affiliation. Thus, whatever prospect existed for the reemergence of a secular prince to rule the whole of Mount Lebanon was eliminated by great power interference.
Following the Allied defeat of the Ottomans during World War I, France supported the Maronite plan for
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