Thursday, August 24, 2006

Miles Between Us...


There's a sea between us, love, and I wish that it weren't true,
for every day when I awake, I yearn to be with you.
There are many miles between us, love, though you're always here in my heart,
and every night, beneath the silver starlight, I pray for the day we'll never part.

I Miss You...

How could a relaxing evening with a steamy bubble bath, with soft romantic music (Love me tender... love me true...), the warm glow of candlelight, along with the taste of fine wine, and the scent and softness of rose petals get any better?

If you were here to share it with.

Peace...

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Lebanon 74- France 73


Congratulation for Lebanon again...

Lebanon 74, France 73
August 23, 2006
SENDAI, Japan (AP) -- Joseph Vogel's free throw with 23 seconds left lifted Lebanon to a stunning 74-73 win over France at the basketball world championship.

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

August 21st: Desert Safari....



I suggest you experience doing Safari In Dubai, but staying 3 hours at the camp is really boring, but for food is better to take with something. the Sunset is lovely, the desert driving is amazing...
it was my 1st safari in Dubai...
Peace

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Hadia Ties the Knot in Front of the Ruins of her Destroyed Home


a good example of the Lebanese Spirit
Congratulation Hadia... Mabrouk in Lebanese

Hadia Ties the Knot in Front of the Ruins of her Destroyed Home
She wore a white lace dress, a wide-brimmed hat and a radiant smile. Hadia Mneimseh was married in front of the ruins of her destroyed home. A primary school teacher, Mneimseh, 31, had planned to wed on July 13 in the apartment where she was born. Everything was ready: the announcements had been sent, the food ordered, the hall rented. But war decided otherwise. On the day before her wedding, after the abduction by Hizbullah of two Israeli soldiers, Israel began bombarding Lebanon, including Beirut's southern suburbs, a Hizbullah stronghold. The Mneimseh family apartment, an 11-storey building adjacent to the headquarters of Hizbullah's welfare arm, was hit. Worse still, the building where the couple had rented an apartment to start their new life together is cracked and could collapse at any moment. Each fled to the homes of relatives to escape the bombardment but more than that would have been necessary to crush Mneimseh's spirit. She insisted on a wedding in front of her childhood home. Her husband Hussein Daher, 37, a worker at a cooperative, agreed. The party took place Saturday at her sister-in-law's home in the mountains, far from the ruins. While war-battered Lebanon faces a struggle to rebuild after the 34-day war, Mneimseh declared herself "very happy."(AFP)

Beirut, 20 Aug 06, 11:53
(Naharnet) http://www.naharnet.com/domino/tn/NewsDesk.nsf/getstory?openform&09DC75FFB8CB612EC22571D000308570

A Thursday Night


A Thursday night,
From where shall I start, the only song I was able to hear at that dark was “Queen of My Heart” I was curious to check its lyrics (below), it’s really incredible. Some coincidence happen in life cannot be understood. To be with a person is very important, especially at Thursday night, here in Dubai, u need to go out relax, gather, enjoy some happy hours. Therefore, what you’ll do if you are alone. What miracle can u wait? You enter the crowd and chaos of the pub, take your drink, sit on a table, and try to enjoy the music. “But no matter how far… Or where you may be… I just close my eyes…And you're in my dreams”…

Suddenly, I enter to your world, cannot hear anything around, just you and me in a place…

she’s not far anymore, here she’s in the eyes of a swan… feel her soul captivating your breath, u try to smell her scent with every gasp… u can feel her, take her hand and fly again… to a peaceful world… your world… her wonderland… u can see more the lights around her face… she’s a queen with a bright crown … she’s dancing with the swan… lovely….

Where am I??? I’m not dreaming, since I’m feeling… it was a marvelous moment…

You finish your 1st drink; ask for another… ahhh u still have to take one, since you promise her to drink one extra… “No need…” I’m sharing u every drop, my soul is dancing with yours…. The light keep reflecting on a small pool, the colors look bright, mixing, moving floating, fill ur heart with tranquility… time run quickly… moment to move back, take the Taxi, enjoy the sequence of lights of Dubai… unexpectedly, u find urself in need to stay more with her, you stop the driver, decide to walk next to the creek, while the lights are reflecting in harmony, everything is silent…

just you and your mermaid… no instant can be comparable to that one… u share a small chat “loving people create a lot of love in the world…” she said, “Love leads to peace in the world” u replied …”I never felt so much love in my life…” she said… ahhh u shall be sleeping at that time you said, “ it’s better 2 hours with you like that than sleeping 8 hours…” she added… she took your breath away, u cannot tell if that’s a vision or reality… u get confused, u need to move to go out of that wonderful dream… u decide to leave the calmness of the creek, move forward to the street…

car passing fast at that time, roads are empty, hot air hits ur face even after midnights… u see ur building, u try to move fast ur steps… “no, why I’m heading fast there”, u sit on a bench look at the sky, no stars twinkled in the blue… u look upward to see her face again…. yes u feel scared to sleep and leave her alone… but why shall u be selfish like that… she wants to sleep, but u prevent her… Time still running, u r few steps from ur flat, but what r u waiting for don’t u move ahead… waiting for your soul to come back, or to the light of the dawn to wake you up…. Why ur heart is beating fast… are you in love? Why you don’t tell her your truth, what scare you… stop being hesitating, whatever you’ll not loose her… she’s the daughter of your thoughts, she’ll not leave her home anywhere… just stand up and tell her, be sincere and honest to yourself… such a lovely night cannot be lived by urself… she must be here alive just tell her…
“I Love you….”
Yes you do, why you shall lie to her… stop running… leave the lift… “no. I shall move on…”
I take the lift, reach my flat, sit on the couch… wash my face… actually I want to wake up from that dream, look at the mirror, it’s reflecting the beauty of her eyes…” huh, why u r smiling?” you see it was not a dream, it’s your reality… You were living that Thursday nigh with her… are you still scared to tell her the truth…

“No, no absolutely not…” hold your phone and tell her then…. Yes I will…

Gaby says:” I Love you my queen…”
Xoxox says:” Good Night…(k)”


And the storey has no end…..


"Queen Of My Heart" lyrics
So here we stand
In our secret place
With a sound of the crowd
So far away
And you take my hand
And it feels like home
We both understand
It's where we belong
[Bryan:]So how do I say?
Do I say goodbye?
We both have our dreams
We both wanna fly
So let's take tonight
To carry us through
The lonely times
[CHORUS:][All:]
I'll always look back
As I walk away
This memory
Will last for eternity
And all of our tears
Will be lost in the rain
When I've found my way
Back to your arms again
But until that day
You know you are
The queen of my heart
[Bryan:]Queen of my heart
[Shane:]So let's take tonight
And never let go
While dancing we'll kiss
Like there's no tomorrow
As the stars sparkle down
Like a diamond ring
I'll treasure this moment
Till we meet again
[Mark: (All:)]But no matter how far
(Matter how far)
Or where you may be(Where you may be)
I just close my eyes(I just close my eyes)
And you're in my dreams
And there you will be
Until we meet
[Repeat chorus twice]
[Shane: (All:)]Oh yeah
You're theQueen of my heart(Of my heart)
No matter
How many years it takes(Queen of my heart)
I'll give it all to you
Oh yeah(Queen of my heart)
Oh yes you are
The queen of my heart

Saturday, August 19, 2006

NUCLEAR WAR-FEARIranian cataclysm forecast

I hesitate to much to post this article, but let's share it togther...

NUCLEAR WAR-FEARIranian cataclysm forecast
Aug. 22Islamists seeking heaven could spark apocalypse, Princeton expert warns© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

A top expert on the Mideast says it is possible Iran could pick Aug. 22, the anniversary of one of Islam's holiest events, for a cataclysm Shiite Muslims believe will forever resolve the battle between "good" and "evil."Princeton's Bernard Lewis has written an opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal advising that the rest of the world would be wise to bear in mind that for those who believe the end of the world is imminent and good, there is no deterrent even to nuclear warfare.As WorldNetDaily has reported, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has urged his people to prepare for the coming of an Islamic "messiah," raising concerns a nuclear-armed Islamic Republic could trigger the kind of global conflagration he envisions will set the stage for the end of the world.He's also said, in a WND report, that Islam and its followers must prepare to rule the world, because it is a "universal ideology that leads the world to justice."Now comes Lewis, who notes that the world must be concerned about a leader for whom the possibility of death is not a deterrent."In this context, mutual assured destruction, the deterrent that worked so well during the Cold War, would have no meaning," Lewis wrote. "At the end of time, there will be general destruction anyway. What will matter will be the final destination of the dead – hell for the infidels, and heaven for the believers."For people with this mindset, MAD is not a constraint, it is an inducement," he said.Lewis noted that Ahmadinejad has referred to Aug. 22 several times, including when he rejected – until that date – United Nations requests for nuclear program information.Lewis, joining several other Mideast experts who have expressed similar concerns, said Aug. 22 corresponds to the 27th day of the month of Rajab of the year 1427."This, by tradition, is the night when many Muslims commemorate the night flight of the prophet Muhammad on the winged horse Buraq, first to 'the farthest mosque,' usually identified with Jerusalem, and then to heaven and back," Lewis wrote.In Islam, as in other religious, certain beliefs describe the "cosmic struggle" at the end of time. For Shiite Muslims, Lewis wrote, this will be "the long awaited return of the Hidden Imam, ending in the final victory of the forces of good over evil."The significance, he said, is that there's a "radical" difference between Iran and other governments with nuclear weapons."This difference is expressed in what can only be described as the apocalyptic worldview of Iran's present rulers," he wrote. Iran's leaders now "clearly believe that this time is now, and that the terminal struggle has already begun and is indeed well advanced."As for intent, a passage from the Ayatollah Khomeini, quoted in an 11th-grade Iranian schoolbook, reveals priorities: "I am decisively announcing to the whole world that if the world-devourers (i.e., the infidel powers) wish to stand against our religion, we will stand against their whole world and will not cease until the annihilation of all them. Either we all become free, or we will go to the greater freedom which is martyrdom."Lewis wrote, "This might well be deemed an appropriate date for the apocalyptic ending of Israel and if necessary the world. It is far from certain that Mr. Ahmadanejad plans any such cataclysmic events precisely for Aug. 22. But it would be wise to bear the possibility in mind."Lewis, the Cleveland E. Dodge professor emeritus of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University, specializes in Muslim history and interaction between Muslims and the West.His comments echoed those made just a few days earlier by Robert Spencer, another scholar of Islamic history, theology and law and the director of Jihad Watch.In an article for FrontPageMagazine.com, he wrote that Farid Ghadry, president of the Reform Party of Syria, noted the commemoration of Muhammad's ascent to heaven from the Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem.Spencer said the Night Journey, or Miraj, is what makes Jerusalem a holy site for Islam, and Islamic tradition believes Muhammad, along with the angel Gabriel, went to the Temple Mount, and then to heaven in a bathing of light over Jerusalem.Spencer reported that Ghadry talked of Ahmadinejad's plans for an illumination of the night sky over Jerusalem to rival the light of that Islamic belief.Ghadry said what the Iranian president is "promising the world by August 22 is the light in the sky over the Aqsa Mosque," Spencer said.He said a nuclear attack on Jerusalem, or even a conventional attack, would be consistent with the references that have been made, including Ahmadinejad's talk that Israel "pushed the button of its own destruction" by returning fire for Hezbollah's rocket barrage.Also, "Atomic Iran" author Jerome Corsi notes that it's less significant whether Hezbollah survives, "but it's really the first chapter in the play for Iran and the Shiite Islam nation to come to ascendancy in the Muslim world."First is the battle against Israel and the United States, he said, then against Sunni Islam. Where that group is more dominant, he said, is in Saudi Arabia and Egypt, where group members are "not unhappy to see Iran contained.""They may launch an attack, but I still think if they had a weapon they would just go ahead and use it," Corsi said. "Terrorists don't brag about things they're going to do until after they do it."He said the recent comments are more typical of terrorists' efforts to get attention."When Ahmadinejad is capable of taking action he will do it without any warning or bravado; he'll just do it," Corsi said.In the updated edition of "Atomic Iran: How the Terrorist Regime Bought the Bomb and American Politicians," now available in paperback from WND Books, Corsi discusses many of the disturbing developments related to Iran.Meanwhile, Tanzanian customs officials have uncovered an Iranian smuggling operation transporting large quantities of bomb-making uranium from the same mines in the Congo that provided the nuclear material for the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima 61 years ago, according to a recent report in the London Sunday Times.A United Nations report, outlining the interception last October, said there is "no doubt" the smuggled uranium-238 came from mines in the Democratic Republic of the Congo's mineral-rich Katanga province.The smuggled uranium discovered by Tanzanian customs agents was hidden in shipment of coltan, a rare mineral used to make chips in mobile telephones. According to the manifest, the coltan was to be smelted in the former Soviet republic of Kazakhstan after being shipped to Bandar Abbas, Iran's largest port.Uranium-238, when used in a nuclear reactor, can be used to create plutonium for nuclear weapons.
For further reading, more on religous side check this out:http://armageddoncocktailhour.wordpress.com/2006/08/08/ahmadinejad-august-22-and-irans-new-mission/

Thursday, August 17, 2006

Montserrat Pictures from Elena




So, I'm attaching you the pictures of the Montserrat mountain and a monastery there. It's a great place, I must admit. Just take a look at the mountain's structure!:) (Elena)

Actually when i received these pictures from my friend Elena, i thought 1st it's in Russia, even the architecture don't look like orthdox Russian but more benedictine one. i surf google to find that this mountain is in Spain, and it has some legends around it.
Thank you Elena

Location:
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/world/A0833895.html
Montserrat or Monserrat (both: mon"sur?t', mont"–, Catalan monsur-rät', Span. m?ns?rät') [key], mountain, 4,054 ft (1,236 m) high, NE Spain, rising abruptly from a plain in Catalonia, NW of Barcelona. On a narrow terrace, more than halfway up its precipitous cliffs, is a celebrated Benedictine monastery, one of the greatest religious shrines of Spain. Only ruins are left of the old monastery (11th cent.). The present monastery was built in the 18th cent. and restored after being destroyed by French troops in 1812. It has a valuable painting collection, library, and museum. The Renaissance church (16th cent.; largely restored in the 19th and 20th cent.) contains the black wooden image of the Virgin which, according to tradition, was carved by St. Luke, brought to Spain by St. Peter, and hidden in a cave near Montserrat during the Moorish occupation. In the Middle Ages the mountain, also called Monsalvat, was thought to have been the site of the castle of the Holy Grail. At Montserrat, St. Ignatius of Loyola devoted himself to his religious vocation just before the founding of the Society of Jesus.

The Legend:

MONTSERRAT, THE "HUMAN FACE" OF A MOUNTAIN

http://es.geocities.com/ramonramonetriu/


Everywhere, the Mankind ever desire try to watch the own face self-reflected in a bigger one. Rally, people is able to recognize that every human face -between all the things in the world- it´s the best image, because contains all the five human senses. In the "Landsat" NASA photosatellite of Mt. Montserrat (NE. of Spain), the conjunction of its most high peaks look like a "Human Face" image with severe expression, as never seen before
The Egyptian god Seth,whom the greeks called Tiphon and identify with the figure of an ass, is the key of the symbolism in my book "The Human Face of Montserrat"(LA CARA HUMANA DE MONTSERRAT), which, in 1990, I finally had to do the photolites and edit myself since the publishing companies were not prepared to do so.The distribution, sales and even the photos were all done by myself and for this reason is probably the last of the "artisan" books in the western world.In this book I have collected together ideas about God and Evil which I assimilated over more than a decade, beginning at the same time as my discovery, in a scale model, of the human face which appears in the aerial view, in my book, of a very circumspected bearded man (these aerial photos were part of the information gathered by a NASA satellite).I then dedicated the second part to summarising, as briefly as possible, all that I discovered written about asses over a period of more than 50 centuries all moralising done in light and amusing way. The only connection between such varied themes is the biblical scene "The Balam's ass".My subliminal intention was to refiried on God and Evil, because in the classical Mediterranean culture the ass represented the horned Egyptian god Seth, the forerunner of the figure later called Satan (I did not was well understood).

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Definition of Victory

i was looking for the meaning of Victory and find what the following:

3 entries found for victory.

vic·to·ry ( P ) Pronunciation Key (vkt-r)n. pl. vic·to·ries
1-Defeat of an enemy or opponent.
2-Success in a struggle against difficulties or an obstacle.
3-The state of having triumphed.


[Middle English, from Old French victorie, from Latin victria, from victor, victor. See victor.]
Synonyms: victory, conquest, triumphThese nouns denote winning a war, struggle, or competition.

1-Victory refers especially to the final defeat of an enemy or opponent: “Victory at all costs, victory in spite of all terror, victory however long and hard the road may be” (Winston S. Churchill). Conquest connotes subduing, subjugating, or achieving control over: “Conquest of illiteracy comes first” (John Kenneth Galbraith). Triumph denotes a victory or success that is especially noteworthy because it is decisive, significant, or spectacular: preaching the eventual triumph of good over evil.
Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth EditionCopyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.


2-victory: A victory that is offset by staggering losses.
see pyrrhic victory.
Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.Copyright © 1997 by The Christine Ammer 1992 Trust. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.
3-victory
n : a successful ending of a struggle or contest; "the general always gets credit for his army's victory"; "the agreement was a triumph for common sense" [syn: triumph] [ant: defeat]

Use of Loss

While loss is generally considered a sad or unfortunate thing, but I rather use this theme to explain and promote the positive aspects of absence; I’m an advocate of respecting and accepting the state of being without. Through losses, one can gain a richer and stronger appreciation for both success and belongings. My feelings on loss, I believe that possessing : neither material possessions nor the joy of success are the real keys to happiness.
A battle that could be considered both, literal in the sense of a war, or more symbolic as it could act as the anthem for any type of loss or failure. Success or winning is most valued by those who never prevail. Loss creates the strongest appreciation for a win. This implies that necessity is the only way in which to understand what you want. an actual battle has taken place by saying:
Not one of all the purple Host Who took the flag today Can tell the definition So clear of Victory.
Winners cannot value their victory. In fact the defeated group understands the meaning of victory when "The distant strains of triumph/ Burst agonized and clear!" the dying soldiers comprehending the meaning of winning the battle in a way that the victors never will. The reason that the winners can't understand the significance of their victory is that they did not taste defeat. The loss of a battle demonstrates to the unsuccessful how far they are from feeling the exuberating of success. Being in a losing state, at least sometimes, is better than winning all the time. The deflated feeling of being unsuccessful increases the state of appreciation one has for winning.
I remain consistent in the theme of loss but take an approach that is more appropriate for everyday life. One is happier and more contented when they are in a state of want. It is the moment before one receives what one wants that are the most fulfilling. The anticipation of obtaining the objects of desire creates an appreciation for the object that is lost upon possession… This satisfaction inhibits one's motivation to strive for more. To want, will be one's companion forever because we will always tend to want either something else or more of the same. A "commissary" as defined in Webster's Dictionary, is a person to whom special duties or trust is assigned. Want as this personified companion, is an unavoidable and persistent being. The fulfillment of human desire is to be fully satisfied would be an abnormal and unnatural state for human beings. This emphasizes the point that the anticipation of being satisfied creates the most joy. Humans are rarely completely satisfied but that this state of desire and necessity is a positive thing. Not only does it help one to appreciate gaining what they do not have, but it also creates a motivation that keeps one striving for higher goals. If we all had everything we wanted, what would keep us going?
Positive point of view of loss is through that not lost the feeling of want and desire. These states of being are natural and that they inspire people to strive for more and better things. Whether that motivation be to win a battle or obtain a material possession, the goal is still the same. In turn, that goal can't exist without the feeling of loss. The unfortunate people are those who win or possess things too easily. They do not have an appreciation for the things they have or their success because losing is the best way to relish victory.
Peace

Beirut, the Incredible Shrinking City"

click on the link "Beirut, the Incredicle Shrinking City" written by Maya Mikdashi, a Columbia University graduate and maker of the award-winning documentary About Baghdad.
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article5517.shtml
Very intresting article...

The Conspiracy: a Syrian Comeback...

Date: July 12th, 2006/Time: 1:30 pm/Place: IKEA restaurant at DFC:
It's lunch time, my mobile phone ring noticing me of a sms :"Hisbullah Kidnapped two Israelli Soliders...", i read it twice then said "shiitttttttttttttt". Even the act looks heroic for lot of Lebanese supporting the Islamic Resistance, i felt so upset and angry. "Goodbye the touristic season" another Lebanese expats told me. i replied:"it's a big conspiracy, not to distroy our Touristic season only, it's just the Syrian Comeback..."
I forwarded many sms to my friends in Lebanon and abroad telling them this is the Syrian comeback conspiracy; day after day i realized my 1st impression was correct to a certain limit... Pro-syrian media(NTV,MANAR, ASSAFIR...) news and live talkshows make me insist on it. They got the Mummies of syrian occupation era daily, attacking the goverment daily, they asked us to be unified but not with the Goverement BUT AGAINST IT, how come??...
Just yesterday when i heard the Syrian President's speech i was completely convinced... yes this war was "The Syrian Comeback conspiracy"
Lebanon now is distroyed to a certain limit, we are asking for help and support to overcome all the tragedy that war caused, but for Assad regime it's the right time for his ugly revenge from the "Cedars Revolution", he call our leaders "Traitors"... he's claiming victory forgetting that Golan Heights are still occupied since more than 35 years... The Syrian Comeback is here now, the pro-syrian puppets will launch their attack against "Cedars Revolution"... it's well known that Bashar informed Prime minister Rafic Harriri, may God rest his soul in peace, that "i'll distroy Lebanon on your head...." yes Bashar you did distroy Lebanon on all our heads, but unfortunately in Lebanese hands...

Again as i promised to have a high positive spirit, i'll say " We are stronger than you Bashar, Lebanon is strong by its goverment, your speech is just quixotic, so keep dreaming... an independent Lebanon will be your nightmare.... No for the Syrian comeback.... yes for the sovernity of Lebanon.... Fellow Lebanese just repeat with me No more Fear, We are One...we will survive"

Peace...

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

Enough!!!! Time for Truth Now

The war on Lebanon is it over?!!!! as millions of Lebanese abroad i wish it's, but why it stops, and who stops it??? is it the UN 1701 Resolution. Is it the persistance of Lebanese? or a claimed victory from here or there????? questions and questions but no single answer..

it's time for truth now. Since yesterday i'm trying to understand what happened during the last month, the news yesterday shocked me, but i cannot pass by it like that. the most important thing that i noticed is the attachement of southern citizens to the resistance (Moukawama), it's really amazing. it shows a deep faith, even under the worst circunstances, physical and moral one. the latest is much important, to see a mother who lost her 3 kids and still insisting "Fida el Sayyed Hassan..." it's really incredible, and amazing. yes houses we can build again, but, and here i insist to one question, "What's next???"....
i was planning to travel to Lebanon mid of July, to attend a friend's wedding see my sister, after she's recovering from her surgery, discuss some future plans... but this war changes all the plan, and makes me stuck on my TV screen, searching for a good news... praying for Peace...
what's Next? Lebanon is distroyed, we will build it again... huh... ok let's start, as an Architect i'm learned that a building must be on good foundation. on what kind of foundation we will rebuild Lebanon, our beloved country? well from my humble point of view i can assure that new Lebanon must be build on something similar to the tight relation between southern citizens and the islamic resistance. i mean, we Lebanese must trust our goverment, the same as we trust our political leader. Let's start from here, i can notice how people are attached to a leader who leads them to a full distruction, but they are still loyal to him. i respect this, but let's move this loyality to the unified strong Goverment of Lebanon. this is one point, the other point must be a national Dialogue, not to disarm Hizbullah only, but also to put a real vision for Lebanon. what we want from this sacred land... where we want to take it, shall it be always a ring for world Axis conflicts... we want & need to live in peace between ourselves, and in harmony... when a sect suffers all the others sects suffer too, it's a fact...
our ancestors dreamed to have and independent land, Lebanon was always the land of free thinkers in this region, it was a shelter, but let's find the way and right path to keep this land, a land of freedom, a land of peace and harmony...
now the war reachs its end, but is it a section of a large book of war and conflicts that we have always to read it with death and distruction... or we shall acheive the overlasting peace...
let's be unified and loyal to our govermemnt now... it's time to become Lebanese rather than christians, muslims... let's be unified, Enough war!!! enough distruction!!! enough arrogancy!!! at war there's no winner but looser... no gain but pain... no joy but suffer... no calmness but terror and fear...
The only way to defend Lebanon is to be unified behind a cause & a vision for a
"Lebanon land of beauty and peace...."
long life for Lebanon... and may God rest all our martyrs soul in peace...

Monday, August 14, 2006

9:00AM (UAE): Pray it Stops

  • CNN: BEIRUT, Lebanon: The scheduled cease-fire between Israel and Hezbollah began Monday morning, shortly after Israel papered Beirut with propaganda leaflets, blaming Hezbollah for bringing "destruction, displacement and death" to Lebanon and calling the militant group a puppet of Iran and Syria.

    The cease-fire took effect at at 8 a.m.(0500 GMT, 1 a.m. ET).
  • BBC: Mid-East hope as ceasefire begins : A UN-backed ceasefire ending more than a month of fighting between Israel and the Lebanese militant group, Hezbollah, has come into force.
    Violence went on through the night as the deadline neared, with heavy Israeli air raids reported in eastern Lebanon.
    Prime Minister Ehud Olmert had ordered an end to offensive actions in Lebanon at 0200 on Monday (2300 GMT Sunday).
  • Fox news:
    Mideast Cease-Fire Deal Goes Into Effect
    Israeli Cabinet Approves U.N. Cease-Fire Deal as Heavy Fighting Continues
    Monday, August 14, 2006
  • Nahanet:
    1,071 Dead
    3,628 Injured
    973,334 Displaced
    34 Days, 3 Hours since the start of the Israeli Attack on Lebanon
    08:27 - Calm prevails as Lebanon ceasefire takes effect
    08:10 - Lebanon ceasefire comes into effect
    08:03 - Lebanon ceasefire takes effect
  • Haaretz Correspondents:
    Last update - 08:33 14/08/2006
    Tense calm across Lebanon as UN-brokered truce takes effect
  • Arutz Sheva:Peretz: We’ll Silence the Guns, Won’t Lift the Blockade 07:58 Aug 14, '06 / 20 Av 5766 Israel will uphold the ceasefire resolution passed by the United Nations Security Council over the weekend, but will not lift its naval and land blockade on Lebanon yet.
  • Y-NET NEWS: Ceasefire begins; IDF: We'll give it a chance
    At 8 a.m. Monday, forces ordered to silence guns. Just before ceasefire comes into force, IDF continues to launch offensive and defensive actions, with artillery batteries firing shells at areas in southern Lebanon. Army officials admit ceasefire is fragile in light of vulnerable situation, but clarify they will 'give it a chance'

Ceasefire begins, at least officially: After 33 days of fighting, more than 150 people killed on the Israeli side and about 1,000 on the Lebanese side, the ceasefire in Lebanon came into force at 8 a.m. Monday, and forces were ordered to silence their guns.

  • Daily Star: Calm prevails as Lebanon ceasefire takes effectBy Agence France Presse (AFP) BEIRUT, Aug 14, 2006 (AFP) - Calm prevailed across Lebanon as soon as a UN-brokered ceasefire deal aimed at ending the month-long war in Lebanon entered into force at 0500 GMT on Monday.
    Israeli warplanes disappeared from the sky over the Lebanese capital, as well as the war-battered south and east of the country, police and AFP correspondents in the area said.
  • Christian Science Monitor: In Mideast, cease-fire is a start
    The cease-fire is set to take effect at 8 a.m. Monday, though fighting continued Sunday between Israel and Hizbullah.
    By Scott Peterson Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor BEIRUT, LEBANON – The diplomats and politicians have spoken: A cease-fire to end a five-week conflict between Israel and Hizbullah is to take hold at 8 a.m. Monday.
    The UN Security Council voted Friday for a 15,000-strong UN peacekeeping force and Lebanese Army control over southern Lebanon. But fighting continued Sunday, and deal-breaking questions remained in a conflict that the US and Iran - patrons of Israel and Hizbullah, respectively - have cast as a strategic struggle to redefine the Middle East.

Now, let's all share a few minutes praying for God to rest all the dying people soul in Peace... and let's all pray hard & work hard for Peace in this sacred land... land of Abraham...


Sunday, August 13, 2006

Why do You Love Beirut????

A member of A Small World community (ASW), answered the question to "Why do you love Beirut?"

"I love Beirut for its opposites. I love Beirut because I see a girl in a mini skirt and her sister in a tchador.
I love Beirut because it is neither West nor East it is both.
I love Beirut because one can party till 6 in the morning and not realize that it is tuesday morning.
I love Beirut because Beirutis live as if they are going to die tomorrow and party as if they are going to live forever.
I love Beirut because I can be swimming in the morning and 30 minutes later I'm on the slopes skiing or doing apres ski.
I love Beirut because I have never seen the sun this strong anywhere in the world.
I love Beirut because I can see 6,000 years of history.
I love Beirut because Christians and Muslims are living an understanding and do not need to have Christian Muslim understanding classes.
I love Beirut because every Beiruti has a political opinion and will share it with you even if you could care less about his and you want to share yours with him.
I love Beirut for all the conspiracy theories and how many people actually believe them.
I love Beirut because any night I can find a friend to go out with.
I love Beirut because I do not need to call my friends to go and see them at their houses I just stop by.
I love Beirut because as soon as I arirve at one of my friends houses his mom takes me to the kitchen and becomes the spokesperson of the refrigerator.
I love Beirut because one can smell gardenia , and jasmine.
I love Beirut because strawberries taste like strawberries and fruits taste like fruits.
I love Beirut because the food is so good that one gains so many pounds even if she tries to lose .
I love Beirut because although the Lebanese women at times look alike as some did their surgeries at the same plastic surgeon they are the most elegant women I have ever seen.
I love Beirut because when I go out at night I don't know at which women to look at as each one is gorgeous in her own way.
I love Beirut because everyone knows me by name.
I love Beirut because I don't have to explain myself. I love Beirut because of the traffic jams and the people you meet because of them.

I love Beirut because of the noise pollution from cars honking.
I love Beirut for the spirituality of the people whether Muslim or Christian.
I love Beirut because I'm the first to call my Muslim friends on Ramadan and they are the first to call me on Easter.
I love Beirut because on May 1st I see Muslims visiting Harissa ( Virgin Mary ) just like I see Christians.
I love Beirut because we can differentiate between a Jew and an Israeli.
I love Beirut because on the 22nd of every month I see Muslims going to Mar Charbel and believing that a miracle will happen.
I love Beirut because women look like as if they are out of a Vogue magazine.
I love Beirut because you eat to live and live to eat.
I love Beirut because one leaves one cafe to go to another and one does this all day.
I love Beirut because all the Lebanese living outside want to come back and the Lebanese who are in Lebanon envy the ones who are living abroad not realizing what it means to live away from Beirut.
I love Beirut because my sister , her husband are there and my niece and nephew who are 5 are waiting to see their uncle. I love Beirut because my niece asks me to bring her a pink skirt and tells me : "I love You".
I love Beirut because a girl or a guy can easily tell you I just had a couple of Lexo or Xanax as if they just had a chewing gum.
I love Beirut because for every Lebanese we have a singer.
I love Beirut because the Lebanese star singers sing in nightclubs.
I love Beirut because women go into the swimming pool with full make up. I love Beirut because guys go in with their cigars.
I love Beirut because it has been destroyed 7 times in History and has risen.
I love Beirut because since 1975 the Beirutis have withstood the PLO , Syrians , and the Israelis. I love Beirut because the Beirutis will not accept anyone to occupy them and rule over them.
I love Beirut because we feel that it is better to die on our feet than to live on our knees.
I love Beirut because each street is a two way street even if it is a one way officially.
I love Beirut because one can park anywhere and not get a ticket.
I love Beirut because one can go as fast as his speedometer.
I love Beirut because MEA lands there. I love Beirut because on MEA we can clap in unison when we are about to land.
I love Beirut not because it is my city , but because it is the city of every Lebanese.
I love Beirut because it welcomes every exile freethinker , independent mind of the Arab world.
I love Beirut because we have hundreds of newspapers and our press is finally Free.
I love Beirut because most Arabs dreams of coming to Beirut and wishes his capital was more like Beirut.
I love Beirut because when I explain Beirut to my Western friends, my friends see the passion of Beirut in my eyes.
I love Beirut because there is so much misconception about Beirut in the media and in the minds of people who have never visited.
I love Beirut because when I tell my friends that I'm going to Beirut they tell me can you take me with you.
I love Beirut because we argue over who is going to pay the bill at a restaurant as everyone wants to pay it.
I love Beirut because although many whine about not making enough money everyone is living. I love Beirut because if I do the cross before I start driving the person next to me does not ask me if I fear that I'm going to get into a car accident but instead does his cross as well.
I love Beirut because we accept our differences as we disagree with each other.
I love Beirut because it serves as a beacon of freedom to the rest of the Arab world.
I love Beirut because to praphrase what Gibran said about Lebanon " Had Beirut not been my city I would have chosen it to be."
I love Beirut because there is no city like it.
I love Beirut because even if Beirut is being destroyed you are still beautiful and will remain beautiful no matter how disfigured you are.
I love Beirut because you are always on my mind.I love Beirut for no reason.
I love Beirut for all the reasons of the world. "

Now it's my turn to say I love Beirut because simply it's Beirut
i miss you all my friends there...
may God bless
peace

Old Feud Over Lebanese River Takes New Turn

Is that war just a reaction on Hizbullah captured of 2 IDF soldiers or it has another moto? is water a good cause for this war? time only can prove this theory if it's a fact or a conspiracy.

WARFARE IN THE MIDDLE EAST
Old Feud Over Lebanese River Takes New Turn
Israel's airstrikes on canals renew enduring suspicions that it covets water from the Litani. The Jewish state denies having any such designs.
By Kim Murphy, Times Staff WriterAugust 10, 2006

QASMIYA, Lebanon — Israeli bombing has knocked out irrigation canals supplying Litani River water to more than 10,000 acres of farmland and 23 villages in southern Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley, prompting accusations here that Israel is using its war against Hezbollah to lay claim to Lebanon's prime watersheds.Heavy fighting and a series of targeted strikes on open water channels and underground water diversion pipes have suspended much of Lebanon's agricultural use of the Litani River along the coastal plain and in parts of the Bekaa Valley near Qaraoun Dam, said water engineers who have surveyed the south.
The damaged or broken facilities include a pumping station on the Wazzani River, whose inauguration by Lebanon in 2002 prompted Israel to threaten military action because it diverted water a few hundred yards from the Israeli border, in a watershed that feeds the Jordan River, Lebanese officials said. At the time, Hezbollah promised to defend the facility.The strikes went largely unnoticed by the outside world in the nearly monthlong air assault targeting Hezbollah guerrilla strongholds in southern Lebanon. But Lebanese point to the extensive damage to their irrigation and drinking water system as evidence that border security and water issues remain intertwined in a region short on both. "Whenever Israel throughout history has thought of its northern border, they don't talk, for example, of the mountains as a border. They always think of the valley of the Litani," said Mohammed Shaya, dean of the college of social sciences at Lebanese University in Beirut.Israel has said repeatedly that it has no designs on Lebanon's water."There's a policy decision at the highest level not to target those water pumping stations," said Mark Regev, a spokesman for the Israeli Foreign Ministry. "We don't claim an inch of Lebanese sovereign territory. We don't claim a gallon of Lebanese water. We have no hostile intentions whatever towards Lebanon as a country, towards the Lebanese people or towards Lebanese natural resources."But the enduring suspicion in Lebanon that Israel regards the water of the Litani as its own and the lands to its south as a security perimeter help explain Beirut's reluctance to accept any U.N. cease-fire resolution that does not call for an immediate Israeli withdrawal from the region.At a minimum, Lebanese officials fear that the repeated attacks on water facilities — as well as bridges, highways, power plants and roads — signal an intention to debilitate Hezbollah-dominated southern Lebanon and enable a long-term Israeli presence there. "They started [bombing] with the Litani water reservoir, the Litani dam. And we all know that the Litani has a special place in this country," said Fadl Shalaq, president of the Lebanese Council for Reconstruction and Development. "It's a big reservoir of water, and the Israelis don't hide it that there are several parts of the Litani that they would like to take for themselves."Officials in southern Lebanon said the attacks hit not only bridges, but open water canals, crippling irrigation to thousands of acres here in the Tyre region and in the Bekaa Valley. During fighting near the Wazzani springs, a guard at the pumping station was killed, the pump was knocked out of service and the underground pipes through which water is transported were heavily damaged, said Hussein Ramal, an engineer for the Litani Water Authority, which operates irrigation systems in the region. "Now every one of these villages is without water." The Litani flows 102 miles, entirely within Lebanon. It courses south through eastern Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, before turning sharply westward just 2 1/2 miles from the Israeli border, then heading through the coastal plain, past the town of Qasmiya to the Mediterranean, north of Tyre.Zionist leader Chaim Weizmann, who would become the first president of Israel, in 1919 included the Litani valley among the "minimum requirements essential to the realization of the Jewish National Home." David Ben-Gurion, Israel's first prime minister, proposed including the Litani again in the 1940s on the eve of the creation of the Jewish state. In the 1950s, historical records show, Moshe Dayan, then chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces, and others favored occupying and ultimately annexing southern Lebanon up to the Litani River.Occupation of the West Bank and Golan Heights, though motivated by security concerns, has provided Israel with an important source of water. Experts note that the small slice of land known as the Shebaa Farms, one of the issues in the current conflict, is graced with abundant groundwater flowing from the slopes of Mt. Hermon. Israel also sees Shebaa Farms as a strategic asset because of its proximity to the Israeli, Syrian and Lebanese borders.Israel has always argued that much of the Litani's water flows to the sea, wasted.A large portion of the river's flow is diverted to a series of hydropower dams, leaving relatively little for irrigation in southern Lebanon. But the Lebanese government had planned to offer a $200-million contract this summer to irrigate major new sections of the region.Both states would benefit if Israel sold Lebanon power and Lebanon sold Israel water, said Haim Gvirtzman, hydrology professor at Hebrew University."Should there be peace between Israel and Lebanon, then it will be possible to use the Litani's water as a trigger for a fruitful cooperation between the two countries," Gvirtzman said.But the Lebanese fear that a prolonged Israeli occupation would give the Jewish state ample time to develop its own international "projects" for sharing the Litani's water."In this war, the whole symbol of water has come back with the insurgency now. Because Israel's declared war is to push out the Katyushas" — the rockets being fired by Hezbollah militants — "but the long-range aim, I believe, is to again enter the water issue and push it on the Lebanese," said Mahmoud Haidar, head of the Delta Center for Research and the Press in Beirut."If Israel is the winner in this war, in any settlement," he said, "water will become an issue. It will become part of the Israeli demands." A report on Debka File, a website often described as reflecting the thinking of Israeli intelligence, described "Israel's recovery of control over its main sources of water" at Wazzani as "the most important gain from the crisis" in Lebanon. "Israel will not cede this asset in a hurry," the website predicted. "Worth citing in this regard is Defense Minister Amir Peretz's statement after U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice left the Middle East, that Israel would retain control of a security belt in southern Lebanon until a multinational force takes over."Israeli officials say any damage to water facilities is collateral to strikes on bridges and roads used by Hezbollah to transport weapons."The whole idea that we are trying somehow — and this is going back to conspiracy theories — that we are trying to steal Litani water is ridiculous," said Regev, the Foreign Ministry spokesman.Here on the Litani, in the empty banana fields and citrus groves that stretch for miles, there is a sense among residents that the battle already has been lost.The airstrikes on the main irrigation canal, the trunk of a system that waters 9,800 acres, has doomed this year's banana crop. No one knows when the canal system might be repaired. The farmers have fled, and the banana plants stand drying under the hot summer sun."All the farmers depend on this water. It's drying up. There's nothing left here. It's collapsing," said Mohammed Saghir, a Qasmiya shop owner who stayed behind because he had nowhere to run."In 1948, the British hit the irrigation canal, and now the Israelis want to hit it. They know all our families depend on this water," he said.*
Special correspondent Vita Bekker in Tel Aviv and Times staff writer Henry Chu in Jerusalem contributed to this report.

Saturday, August 12, 2006

The most hypocritical people on earth

The most hypocritical people on earth /By Michael Béhé in Beirut

The politicians, journalists and intellectuals of Lebanon have, of late, been experiencing the shock of their lives. They knew full well that Hezbollah had created an independent state in our country, a state including all the ministers and parallel institutions, duplicating those of Lebanon. What they did not know – and are discovering with this war, and what has petrified them with surprise and terror – is the extent of this phagocytosis.

In fact, our country had become an extension of Iran, and our so-called political power also served as a political and military cover for the Islamists of Teheran. We suddenly discovered that Teheran had stocked more than 12,000 missiles, of all types and calibers, on our territory and that they had patiently, systematically, organized a suppletive force, with the help of the Syrians, that took over, day after day, all the rooms in the House of Lebanon. Just imagine it : we stock ground-to-ground missiles, Zilzals, on our territory and that the firing of such devices without our knowledge, has the power to spark a regional strategic conflict and, potentially, bring about the annihilation of Lebanon.

We knew that Iran, by means of Hezbollah, was building a veritable Maginot line in the south but it was the pictures of Maroun el-Ras and Bint J’bail that revealed to us the magnitude of these constructions. This amplitude made us understand several things at once : that we were no longer masters of our destiny. That we do not possess the most basic means necessary to reverse the course of this state of things and that those who turned our country into an outpost of their islamic doctrine’s combat against Israel did not have the slightest intention of willingly giving up their hold over us.

The national salvation discussions that concerned the application of Resolution 1559 and which included most of the Lebanese political movements were simply for show. Iran and Syria had not invested billions of dollars on militarizing Lebanon in order to wage their war, simply to give in to the desire of the Lebanese and the international community for them to pack up their hardware and set it up back home.

And then, the indecision, the cowardice, the division and the irresponsible behavior of our leaders are such that they had no effort to make to show their talent. No need to engage a wrestling match with the other political components of the Land of Cedars. The latter showed themselves – and continue to show themselves – to be inconsistent.

Of course, our army, reshaped over the years by the Syrian occupier so it could no longer fulfill its role as protector of the nation, did not have the capacity to tackle the militamen of the Hezballah. Our army whom it is more dangerous to call upon – because of the explosive equilibrium that constitutes each of its brigades – than to shut up behind locked doors in its barracks. A force that is still largely loyal to its former foreign masters, to the point of being uncontrollable ; to the point of having collaborated with the Iranians to put OUR coastal radar stations at the disposal of their missiles, that almost sunk an Israeli boat off the shores of Beirut. As for the non-Hezbollah elements in the government, they knew nothing of the existence of land-to-sea missiles on our territory… That caused the totally justified destruction of all OUR radar stations by the Hebrews’ army. And even then we are getting off lightly in these goings-on.

It is easy now to whine and gripe, and to play the hypocritical role of victims. We know full well how to get others to pity us and to claim that we are never responsible for the horrors that regularly occur on our soil. Of course, that is nothing but rubbish! The Security Council’s Resolution 1559 – that demanded that OUR government deploy OUR army on OUR sovereign territory, along OUR international border with Israel and that it disarm all the militia on OUR land – was voted on 2 September 2004.

We had two years to put implement this resolution and thus guarantee a peaceful future to our children but we did strictly nothing. Our greatest crime – which was not the only one! – was not that we did not succeed but that we did not attempt or undertake anything. And that was the fault of none else than the pathetic Lebanese politicians.

Our government, from the very moment the Syrian occupier left, let ships and truckloads of arms pour into our country. Without even bothering to look at their cargo. They jeopardized all chances for the rebirth of our country by confusing the Cedar Revolution with the liberation of Beirut. In reality, we had just received the chance – a sort of unhoped-for moratorium – that allowed us to take the future into our own hands, nothing more.

To think that we were not even capable of agreeing to “hang” Émile Lahoud – Al-Assad’s puppet – on Martyrs’ Square and that he is still president of what some insist on calling our republic… There is no need to look any further : we are what we are, that is to say, not much.

All those who assume public and communicational responsibilities in this country are responsible for this catastrophe. Except those of my colleagues, journalists and editors, who are dead, assassinated by the Syrian thugs, because they were clearly less cowardly than those who survived. And Lahoud remained at Baadbé [the president of the Lebanese Republic’s palace. Editor’s note]!

And when I speak of a catastrophe, I do not mean the action accomplished by Israel in response to the aggression against its civilians and its army, which was produced from our soil and that we did strictly nothing to avoid, and for which we are consequently responsible. Any avoiding of this responsibility – some people here do not have the minimal notions of international law necessary to understand! – means that Lebanon, as a state, does not exist.

The hypocrisy goes on : even some editorialists of the respectable L’Orient-le-Jour put Hezbollah’s savagery and that of the Israelis on a par! Shame! Spinelessness! And who are we in this fable? Poor ad æternum victims of the ambitions of others?

Politicians either support this insane idea or keep silent. Those we would expect to speak, to save our image, remain silent like the others. And I am precisely alluding to general Aoun, who could have made a move by proclaiming the truth. Even his enemy, Walid Jumblatt, the Druse leader, has proved to be less… vague.

Lebanon a victim? What a joke!

Before the Israeli attack, Lebanon no longer existed, it was no more than a hologram. At Beirut innocent citizens like myself were forbidden access to certain areas of their own capital. But our police, our army and our judges were also excluded. That was the case, for example, of Hezbollah’s and the Syrians’ command zone in the Haret Hreik quarter (in red on the satellite map). A square measuring a kilometer wide, a capital within the capital, permanently guarded by a Horla army [1], possessing its own institutions, its schools, its crèches, its tribunals, its radio, its television and, above all… its government. A “government” that, alone decided, in the place of the figureheads of the Lebanese government – in which Hezbollah also had its ministers! – to attack a neighboring state, with which we had no substantial or grounded quarrel, and to plunge US into a bloody conflict. And if attacking a sovereign nation on its territory, assassinating eight of its soldiers, kidnapping two others and, simultaneously, launching missiles on nine of its towns does not constitute a casus belli, the latter juridical principle will seriously need revising.
Thus almost all of these cowardly politicians, including numerous shiah leaders and religious personalities themselves, are blessing each bomb that falls from a Jewish F-16 turning the insult to our sovereignty that was Haret Hreik, right in the heart of Beirut, into a lunar landscape. Without the Israelis, how could we have received another chance – that we in no way deserve! – to rebuild our country?
Each Irano-Syrian fort that Jerusalem destroys, each islamic fighter they eliminate, and Lebanon proportionally starts to live again! Once again, the soldiers of Israel are doing our work. Once again, like in 1982, we are watching – cowardly, lying low, despicable, and insulting them to boot – their heroic sacrifice that allows us to keep hoping. To not be swallowed up in the bowels of the earth. Because, of course, by dint of not giving a damn for southern Lebanon, of letting foreigners take hold of the privileges that belong to us, we no longer had the ability to recover our independence and sovereignty. If, at the end of this war, the Lebanese army retakes control over its territory and gets rid of the state within a state – that tried to suffocate the latter –, it will only be thanks to Tsahal [the Israeli Defense Forces. Translator’s note], and that, all these faint-hearted politicians, from the crook Fouad Siniora, to Saad Hariri, the son of Lebanon’s plunderer, and general Aoun all know perfectly well.

As for the destruction caused by the Israelis… that is another imposture : look at the satellite map! I have situated, as best I could, BUT IN THEIR CORRECT PROPORTIONS, the parts of my capital that have been destroyed by Israel. They are Haret Hreik – in its totality – and the dwellings of Hezbollah’s leaders, situated in the large Shi’a suburb of Dayaa (as they spell it) and that I have circled in blue.

In addition to these two zones, Tsahal has exploded a nine-storied building that housed Hezbollah’s command, in Beirut’s city center, above and slightly to the left (to the north west) of Haret Hreik on the map. It was Nasrallah’s “perch” inside the city, whereby he asserted his presence and domination over us. A depot of Syrian arms in the port, two army radars that the Shiite officers had put at the Hezb’s disposal, and a truck suspected of transporting arms, in the Christian quarter of Ashrafieh.

Moreover the road and airport infrastructures were put out of working order : they served to provide Hezbollah with arms and munitions. Apart from that, Tsahal has neither hit nor deteriorated anything, and all those who speak of the “destruction of Beirut” are either liars, Iranians, anti-Semites or absent. Even the houses situated one alley’s distance from the targets I mentioned have not been hit, they have not even suffered a scratch; on contemplating these results of this work you understand the meaning of the concept “surgical strikes” and you can admire the dexterity of the Jewish pilots.

Beirut, all the rest of Beirut, 95% of Beirut, lives and breathes better than a fortnight ago. All those who have not sided with terrorism know they have strictly nothing to fear from the Israeli planes, on the contrary! One example: last night the restaurant where I went to eat was jammed full and I had to wait until 9:30 pm to get a table. Everyone was smiling, relaxed, but no one filmed them: a strange destruction of Beirut, is it not?

Of course, there are some 500,000 refugees from the south who are experiencing a veritable tragedy and who are not smiling. But Jean [Tsadik. Editor’s note], who has his eyes fixed on Kfar Kileh, and from whom I have learned to believe each word he says, assures me that practically all the houses of the aforesaid refugees are intact. So they will be able to come back as soon as Hezbollah is vanquished.

The defeat of the Shi’a fundamentalists of Iranian allegiance is imminent. The figures communicated by Nasrallah’s minions and by the Lebanese Red-Cross are deceiving: firstly, of the 400 dead declared by Lebanon, only 150 are real collateral civilian victims of the war, the others were militiamen without uniform serving Iran. The photographic report “Les Civils des bilans libanais” made by Stéphane Juffa for our agency constitutes, to this day, the unique tangible evidence of this gigantic morbid manipulation. Which makes this document eminently important.

Moreover, Hassan Nasrallah’s organization has not lost 200 combatants, as Tsahal claims. This figure only concerns the combats taking place on the border and even then the Israelis underestimate it, for a reason that escapes me, by about a hundred militiamen eliminated. The real count of Hezbollah’s casualties, that includes those dead in Beirut, the Bekaa Valley, Baalbek and their other camps, rocket and missile launchers and arms and munition depots amounts to 1,100 supplementary Hezbollah militiamen who have definitively ceased to terrorize and humiliate my country.

Like the overwhelming majority of Lebanese, I pray that no one puts an end to the Israeli attack before it finishes shattering the terrorists. I pray that the Hebrew soldiers will penetrate all the hidden recesses of southern Lebanon and will hunt out, in our stead, the vermin that has taken root there. Like the overwhelming majority of Lebanese, I have put the champagne ready in the refrigerator to celebrate the Israeli victory.

But contrary to them – and to paraphrase Michel Sardou [a French singer. Translator’s note] –, I recognize that they are also fighting for our liberty, another battle “where you were not present”! And in the name of my people, I wish to express my infinite gratitude to the relatives of the Israeli victims – civilian and military – whose loved ones have fallen so that I can live standing upright in my identity. They should know that I weep with them.

As for the pathetic clique that thrives at the head of my country, it is time for them to understand that after this war, after our natural allies have rid us of those who are hindering us from rebuilding a nation, a cease-fire or an armistice will not suffice. To ensure the future of Lebanon, it is time to make peace with those we have no reason to go to war against. In fact, only peace will ensure peace. Someone must tell them because in this country we have not learnt what a truism is.

Note :

[1] Michael Béhé is alluding to the book Le Horla, by Guy de Maupassant [Editor’s note].

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Six Years ago Martyr Gebran Tueni wrote: Army must go to the south

Please read this article posted in 2000, 6 years ago...
http://www.annaharonline.com/HTD/JOBRAN060810.HTM
at the time of war we shall not forget our free thinkers, our beloved Martyr Gebran was always the voice of truth and the free Lebanese; he never lost his faith in Lebanon; we shall never forget his vow on 14th of March...
Honestly speaking every time i hear about UN draft Solution i fly directly back in my memory to see and read Gebran words years ago... Gebran we miss your honesty, rare are men like you...





http://www.annaharonline.com/HTD/JOBRAN060810.HTM

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

Save Children of Lebanon, By Nayla Tueni



Nayla Tueni is the daughter of the cedar's revolution leader & our beloved martyr Gebran Ghassan Tueni.
During this war, every day i remember how sincere and wise was Gebran, when he was insisting to send the Lebanese Army to the south. if that happened in 2000 i can assure for all of you my friends that this war will never take place, and our children will not suffer. may God rest your soul in peace Gebran, and don't worry because Nayla is holding the Torch of truth & independence... we are here to stay

Peace
this article is published at annahar today Aug 9th, 2006
http://www.annaharonline.com/htd/NAYLA060809.HTM


early i sent my admire to Nayla for that article, and i got that reply:

Dear Gaby,

I truly thank you for your words.
I hope that the articles I write will always get to the hearts and minds of people as I also wish that somehow, they will make a difference.

Best regards,

Nayla Tueni-



From: G Fadel Sent: Wednesday, August 09, 2006 12:29 PMTo: Nayla Tueni
Subject: Save children of Lebanon,

Dear Nayla,
Your article is amazing, that’s what we have to care about; yes you are right bridges and houses we can rebuild, but a children tears we can never bless. When I read your article (save children of Lebanon) this morning tears full my eyes, your simplicity in writing remind me of our beloved leader and Martyr, I meant your great father. Go ahead, never be scared, write the truth that what we need. Your father voice is still alive, I can hear his voice loudly at the parliament and on every talk show, “The army must go to the south….”. Unfortunately, we have always to sacrifice our leader through ages in front of the blind fanatics and zealots, who never love Lebanon, neither its children nor its future.

Nayla, thank you

Peace,
Don't worry Nayla your words will be always ringing and shaking our minds, just because it's written by the Blood of the Independence... long life for Lebanon, a land of peace and love

Monday, August 07, 2006

Lebanon In the Bible

5Do you ever wonder how old is Lebanon, it is surely older than the Bible. Lebanon is mentioned 65 times in the Bible.

Lebanon will survive my friends...

Search words: "Lebanon" 65 results.


Deuteronomy 1:7Break camp and advance into the hill country of the Amorites; go to all the neighboring peoples in the Arabah, in the mountains, in the western foothills, in the Negev and along the coast, to the land of the Canaanites and to Lebanon, as far as the great river, the Euphrates.Deuteronomy 1:6-8 (in Context) Deuteronomy 1 (Whole Chapter)

Deuteronomy 3:25Let me go over and see the good land beyond the Jordan—that fine hill country and Lebanon."Deuteronomy 3:24-26 (in Context) Deuteronomy 3 (Whole Chapter)

Deuteronomy 11:24Every place where you set your foot will be yours: Your territory will extend from the desert to Lebanon, and from the Euphrates River to the western sea.Deuteronomy 11:23-25 (in Context) Deuteronomy 11 (Whole Chapter)

Joshua 1:4Your territory will extend from the desert to Lebanon, and from the great river, the Euphrates—all the Hittite country—to the Great Sea on the west.Joshua 1:3-5 (in Context)
Joshua 1 (Whole Chapter)

Joshua 9:1[ The Gibeonite Deception ] Now when all the kings west of the Jordan heard about these things—those in the hill country, in the western foothills, and along the entire coast of the Great Sea as far as Lebanon (the kings of the Hittites, Amorites, Canaanites, Perizzites, Hivites and Jebusites)-Joshua 9:1-3 (in Context) Joshua 9 (Whole Chapter)

Joshua 11:17from Mount Halak, which rises toward Seir, to Baal Gad in the Valley of Lebanon below Mount Hermon. He captured all their kings and struck them down, putting them to death.Joshua 11:16-18 (in Context) Joshua 11 (Whole Chapter)

Joshua 12:7These are the kings of the land that Joshua and the Israelites conquered on the west side of the Jordan, from Baal Gad in the Valley of Lebanon to Mount Halak, which rises toward Seir (their lands Joshua gave as an inheritance to the tribes of Israel according to their tribal divisions-Joshua 12:6-8 (in Context) Joshua 12 (Whole Chapter)

Joshua 13:5the area of the Gebalites ; and all Lebanon to the east, from Baal Gad below Mount Hermon to Lebo Hamath.Joshua 13:4-6 (in Context) Joshua 13 (Whole Chapter)

Joshua 13:6"As for all the inhabitants of the mountain regions from Lebanon to Misrephoth Maim, that is, all the Sidonians, I myself will drive them out before the Israelites. Be sure to allocate this land to Israel for an inheritance, as I have instructed you,Joshua 13:5-7 (in Context) Joshua 13 (Whole Chapter)

Judges 3:3the five rulers of the Philistines, all the Canaanites, the Sidonians, and the Hivites living in the Lebanon mountains from Mount Baal Hermon to Lebo Hamath.Judges 3:2-4 (in Context) Judges 3 (Whole Chapter)

Judges 9:15"The thornbush said to the trees, 'If you really want to anoint me king over you, come and take refuge in my shade; but if not, then let fire come out of the thornbush and consume the cedars of Lebanon!'Judges 9:14-16 (in Context) Judges 9 (Whole Chapter)

1 Kings 4:33He described plant life, from the cedar of Lebanon to the hyssop that grows out of walls. He also taught about animals and birds, reptiles and fish.1 Kings 4:32-34 (in Context) 1 Kings 4 (Whole Chapter)

1 Kings 5:6"So give orders that cedars of Lebanon be cut for me. My men will work with yours, and I will pay you for your men whatever wages you set. You know that we have no one so skilled in felling timber as the Sidonians."1 Kings 5:5-7 (in Context) 1 Kings 5 (Whole Chapter)

1 Kings 5:9My men will haul them down from Lebanon to the sea, and I will float them in rafts by sea to the place you specify. There I will separate them and you can take them away. And you are to grant my wish by providing food for my royal household."1 Kings 5:8-10 (in Context) 1 Kings 5 (Whole Chapter)

1 Kings 5:14He sent them off to Lebanon in shifts of ten thousand a month, so that they spent one month in Lebanon and two months at home. Adoniram was in charge of the forced labor.1 Kings 5:13-15 (in Context) 1 Kings 5 (Whole Chapter)

1 Kings 7:2He built the Palace of the Forest of Lebanon a hundred cubits long, fifty wide and thirty high, with four rows of cedar columns supporting trimmed cedar beams.1 Kings 7:1-3 (in Context) 1 Kings 7 (Whole Chapter)

1 Kings 9:19as well as all his store cities and the towns for his chariots and for his horses —whatever he desired to build in Jerusalem, in Lebanon and throughout all the territory he ruled.1 Kings 9:18-20 (in Context) 1 Kings 9 (Whole Chapter)

1 Kings 10:17He also made three hundred small shields of hammered gold, with three minas of gold in each shield. The king put them in the Palace of the Forest of Lebanon.1 Kings 10:16-18 (in Context) 1 Kings 10 (Whole Chapter)

1 Kings 10:21All King Solomon's goblets were gold, and all the household articles in the Palace of the Forest of Lebanon were pure gold. Nothing was made of silver, because silver was considered of little value in Solomon's days.1 Kings 10:20-22 (in Context) 1 Kings 10 (Whole Chapter)

2 Kings 14:9But Jehoash king of Israel replied to Amaziah king of Judah: "A thistle in Lebanon sent a message to a cedar in Lebanon, 'Give your daughter to my son in marriage.' Then a wild beast in Lebanon came along and trampled the thistle underfoot.2 Kings 14:8-10 (in Context) 2 Kings 14 (Whole Chapter)

2 Kings 19:23By your messengers you have heaped insults on the Lord. And you have said, "With my many chariots I have ascended the heights of the mountains, the utmost heights of Lebanon. I have cut down its tallest cedars, the choicest of its pines. I have reached its remotest parts, the finest of its forests.2 Kings 19:22-24 (in Context) 2 Kings 19 (Whole Chapter)

2 Chronicles 2:8"Send me also cedar, pine and algum logs from Lebanon, for I know that your men are skilled in cutting timber there. My men will work with yours2 Chronicles 2:7-9 (in Context) 2 Chronicles 2 (Whole Chapter)

2 Chronicles 2:16and we will cut all the logs from Lebanon that you need and will float them in rafts by sea down to Joppa. You can then take them up to Jerusalem."2 Chronicles 2:15-17 (in Context) 2 Chronicles 2 (Whole Chapter)

2 Chronicles 8:6as well as Baalath and all his store cities, and all the cities for his chariots and for his horses —whatever he desired to build in Jerusalem, in Lebanon and throughout all the territory he ruled.2 Chronicles 8:5-7 (in Context) 2 Chronicles 8 (Whole Chapter)

2 Chronicles 9:16He also made three hundred small shields of hammered gold, with three hundred bekas of gold in each shield. The king put them in the Palace of the Forest of Lebanon.2 Chronicles 9:15-17 (in Context) 2 Chronicles 9 (Whole Chapter)

2 Chronicles 9:20All King Solomon's goblets were gold, and all the household articles in the Palace of the Forest of Lebanon were pure gold. Nothing was made of silver, because silver was considered of little value in Solomon's day.2 Chronicles 9:19-21 (in Context) 2 Chronicles 9 (Whole Chapter)

2 Chronicles 25:18But Jehoash king of Israel replied to Amaziah king of Judah: "A thistle in Lebanon sent a message to a cedar in Lebanon, 'Give your daughter to my son in marriage.' Then a wild beast in Lebanon came along and trampled the thistle underfoot.2 Chronicles 25:17-19 (in Context) 2 Chronicles 25 (Whole Chapter)

Ezra 3:7[ Rebuilding the Temple ] Then they gave money to the masons and carpenters, and gave food and drink and oil to the people of Sidon and Tyre, so that they would bring cedar logs by sea from Lebanon to Joppa, as authorized by Cyrus king of Persia.Ezra 3:6-8 (in Context) Ezra 3 (Whole Chapter)

Psalm 29:5The voice of the LORD breaks the cedars; the LORD breaks in pieces the cedars of Lebanon.Psalm 29:4-6 (in Context) Psalm 29 (Whole Chapter)

Psalm 29:6He makes Lebanon skip like a calf, Sirion like a young wild ox.Psalm 29:5-7 (in Context) Psalm 29 (Whole Chapter)

Psalm 72:16Let grain abound throughout the land; on the tops of the hills may it sway. Let its fruit flourish like Lebanon; let it thrive like the grass of the field.Psalm 72:15-17 (in Context) Psalm 72 (Whole Chapter)

Psalm 92:12The righteous will flourish like a palm tree, they will grow like a cedar of Lebanon;Psalm 92:11-13 (in Context) Psalm 92 (Whole Chapter)

Psalm 104:16The trees of the LORD are well watered, the cedars of Lebanon that he planted.Psalm 104:15-17 (in Context) Psalm 104 (Whole Chapter)


Song of Solomon 3:9King Solomon made for himself the carriage; he made it of wood from Lebanon.Song of Solomon 3:8-10 (in Context) Song of Solomon 3 (Whole Chapter)

Song of Solomon 4:8Come with me from Lebanon, my bride, come with me from Lebanon. Descend from the crest of Amana, from the top of Senir, the summit of Hermon, from the lions' dens and the mountain haunts of the leopards.Song of Solomon 4:7-9 (in Context) Song of Solomon 4 (Whole Chapter)

Song of Solomon 4:11Your lips drop sweetness as the honeycomb, my bride; milk and honey are under your tongue. The fragrance of your garments is like that of Lebanon.Song of Solomon 4:10-12 (in Context) Song of Solomon 4 (Whole Chapter)

Song of Solomon 4:15You are a garden fountain, a well of flowing water streaming down from Lebanon.Song of Solomon 4:14-16 (in Context) Song of Solomon 4 (Whole Chapter)

Song of Solomon 5:15His legs are pillars of marble set on bases of pure gold. His appearance is like Lebanon, choice as its cedars.Song of Solomon 5:14-16 (in Context) Song of Solomon 5 (Whole Chapter)

Song of Solomon 7:4Your neck is like an ivory tower. Your eyes are the pools of Heshbon by the gate of Bath Rabbim. Your nose is like the tower of Lebanon looking toward Damascus.Song of Solomon 7:3-5 (in Context) Song of Solomon 7 (Whole Chapter)

Isaiah 2:13for all the cedars of Lebanon, tall and lofty, and all the oaks of Bashan,Isaiah 2:12-14 (in Context) Isaiah 2 (Whole Chapter)

Isaiah 10:34He will cut down the forest thickets with an ax; Lebanon will fall before the Mighty One.Isaiah 10:33-34 (in Context) Isaiah 10 (Whole Chapter)

Isaiah 14:8Even the pine trees and the cedars of Lebanon exult over you and say, "Now that you have been laid low, no woodsman comes to cut us down."Isaiah 14:7-9 (in Context) Isaiah 14 (Whole Chapter)

Isaiah 29:17In a very short time, will not Lebanon be turned into a fertile field and the fertile field seem like a forest?Isaiah 29:16-18 (in Context) Isaiah 29 (Whole Chapter)

Isaiah 33:9The land mourns and wastes away, Lebanon is ashamed and withers; Sharon is like the Arabah, and Bashan and Carmel drop their leaves.Isaiah 33:8-10 (in Context) Isaiah 33 (Whole Chapter)

Isaiah 35:2it will burst into bloom; it will rejoice greatly and shout for joy. The glory of Lebanon will be given to it, the splendor of Carmel and Sharon; they will see the glory of the LORD, the splendor of our God.Isaiah 35:1-3 (in Context) Isaiah 35 (Whole Chapter)

Isaiah 37:24By your messengers you have heaped insults on the Lord. And you have said, 'With my many chariots I have ascended the heights of the mountains, the utmost heights of Lebanon. I have cut down its tallest cedars, the choicest of its pines. I have reached its remotest heights, the finest of its forests.Isaiah 37:23-25 (in Context) Isaiah 37 (Whole Chapter)

Isaiah 40:16Lebanon is not sufficient for altar fires, nor its animals enough for burnt offerings.Isaiah 40:15-17 (in Context) Isaiah 40 (Whole Chapter)

Isaiah 60:13"The glory of Lebanon will come to you, the pine, the fir and the cypress together, to adorn the place of my sanctuary; and I will glorify the place of my feet.Isaiah 60:12-14 (in Context) Isaiah 60 (Whole Chapter)

Jeremiah 18:14Does the snow of Lebanon ever vanish from its rocky slopes? Do its cool waters from distant sources ever cease to flow?Jeremiah 18:13-15 (in Context) Jeremiah 18 (Whole Chapter)

Jeremiah 22:6For this is what the LORD says about the palace of the king of Judah: "Though you are like Gilead to me, like the summit of Lebanon, I will surely make you like a desert, like towns not inhabited.Jeremiah 22:5-7 (in Context) Jeremiah 22 (Whole Chapter)


Jeremiah 22:20"Go up to Lebanon and cry out, let your voice be heard in Bashan, cry out from Abarim, for all your allies are crushed.Jeremiah 22:19-21 (in Context) Jeremiah 22 (Whole Chapter)

Jeremiah 22:23You who live in 'Lebanon, ' who are nestled in cedar buildings, how you will groan when pangs come upon you, pain like that of a woman in labor!Jeremiah 22:22-24 (in Context) Jeremiah 22 (Whole Chapter)

Ezekiel 17:3Say to them, 'This is what the Sovereign LORD says: A great eagle with powerful wings, long feathers and full plumage of varied colors came to Lebanon. Taking hold of the top of a cedar,Ezekiel 17:2-4 (in Context) Ezekiel 17 (Whole Chapter)

Ezekiel 27:5They made all your timbers of pine trees from Senir ; they took a cedar from Lebanon to make a mast for you.Ezekiel 27:4-6 (in Context) Ezekiel 27 (Whole Chapter)

Ezekiel 31:1[ A Cedar in Lebanon ] In the eleventh year, in the third month on the first day, the word of the LORD came to me:Ezekiel 31:1-3 (in Context) Ezekiel 31 (Whole Chapter)

Ezekiel 31:3Consider Assyria, once a cedar in Lebanon, with beautiful branches overshadowing the forest; it towered on high, its top above the thick foliage.Ezekiel 31:2-4 (in Context) Ezekiel 31 (Whole Chapter)

Ezekiel 31:15" 'This is what the Sovereign LORD says: On the day it was brought down to the grave I covered the deep springs with mourning for it; I held back its streams, and its abundant waters were restrained. Because of it I clothed Lebanon with gloom, and all the trees of the field withered away.Ezekiel 31:14-16 (in Context) Ezekiel 31 (Whole Chapter)

Ezekiel 31:16I made the nations tremble at the sound of its fall when I brought it down to the grave with those who go down to the pit. Then all the trees of Eden, the choicest and best of Lebanon, all the trees that were well-watered, were consoled in the earth below.Ezekiel 31:15-17 (in Context) Ezekiel 31 (Whole Chapter)

Hosea 14:5I will be like the dew to Israel; he will blossom like a lily. Like a cedar of Lebanon he will send down his roots;Hosea 14:4-6 (in Context) Hosea 14 (Whole Chapter)

Hosea 14:6his young shoots will grow. His splendor will be like an olive tree, his fragrance like a cedar of Lebanon.Hosea 14:5-7 (in Context) Hosea 14 (Whole Chapter)

Hosea 14:7Men will dwell again in his shade. He will flourish like the grain. He will blossom like a vine, and his fame will be like the wine from Lebanon.Hosea 14:6-8 (in Context) Hosea 14 (Whole Chapter)

Nahum 1:4He rebukes the sea and dries it up; he makes all the rivers run dry. Bashan and Carmel wither and the blossoms of Lebanon fade.Nahum 1:3-5 (in Context) Nahum 1 (Whole Chapter)

Habakkuk 2:17The violence you have done to Lebanon will overwhelm you, and your destruction of animals will terrify you. For you have shed man's blood; you have destroyed lands and cities and everyone in them.Habakkuk 2:16-18 (in Context) Habakkuk 2 (Whole Chapter)

Zechariah 10:10I will bring them back from Egypt and gather them from Assyria. I will bring them to Gilead and Lebanon, and there will not be room enough for them.Zechariah 10:9-11 (in Context) Zechariah 10 (Whole Chapter)

Zechariah 11:1Open your doors, O Lebanon, so that fire may devour your cedars!Zechariah 11:1-3 (in Context) Zechariah 11 (Whole Chapter)