Articles



Date: 25 Octobre, 2011
A) Introduction The Lebanese Civil War was both an internal Lebanese affair
and a regional conflict involving a host of regional and
international actors. It revolved around some of the issues
that dominated regional politics in the Middle East in the
latter part of the 20th century, including the
Palestine-Israel conflict, Cold War competition, Arab
nationalism and political Islam. Conflicts over these issues
intersected with longstanding disagreements in the Lebanese
political elite, and in parts of the population, over the
sectarian division of power, national identity, social
justice and Lebanon’s strategic alliances. During 15 years
of fighting, around 90,000 people lost their lives,
according to the most reliable statisticians, Labaki and
Abou Rjeily (1994). The much higher numbers of up to 150,000
that are often given appear to have been based on
international press reports from the early 1990s and
subsequently repeated uncritically (Hanf 1993: 339). By
contrast, Labaki and About Rjeily, supported by the second
most reliable statistical source (Hanf 1993: 339-57), base
their figures on information from the Lebanese army,
security forces, Red Cross and various professional
organisations, parties and militias, as well as reports in
the Lebanese press during the war. Even so, this information
was gathered under extreme difficulties, and it is possible
that the real number exceeds 100,000. Of the 90,000 killed,
close to 20,000 are individuals who were kidnapped or
disappeared, and who must be assumed dead as they have not
been accounted for. Nearly 100,000 were badly injured, and
close to a million people, or two-thirds of the Lebanese
population, experienced displacement (Labaki and Rjeily
1994: 20).
B) Outbreak, cores issues and driving forces of the war What is habitually referred to as the Lebanese Civil War was
in fact a series of more or less related conflicts between
shifting alliances of Lebanese groups and external actors,
who from 1975 to 1990 destabilised the Lebanese state. The
conflicts can be divided into five main periods: the
two-years war from April 1975 to November 1976; the long
interlude of failed peace attempts, Israeli and Syrian
intervention and a host of internal conflicts between
November 1976 and June 1982; the Israeli invasion and its
immediate aftermath from June 1982 to February 1984; the
internal wars of the late 1980s; and finally the
intra-Christian wars of 1988-90, which led to the end of the
war.
C) Debates over sectarian violence
D ) Massacres and mass violence
1982 invasion and Sabra and Shatila
E) Shelling, car-bombs and “habitual” forms of mass violence While Hanf (1993) and Labaki and Abou Rjeily (1994) give
convincing data for the death toll, there are few
substantiated accounts of the exact nature of the violence
from which people died. In up to 25% of all cases of death
by violence reported in the Lebanese press, the exact reason
could not be given (Hanf 1993: 341). Although the massacres
described above account for around one-fifth of the 90,000
killed during the war, the largest number of civilians
perished in almost daily shelling, sniper fire, murder and
other indiscriminate acts more or less directly related to
actual warfare throughout the 1975-1990 period. In the
struggle for control over Palestinian camps in West Beirut,
known as the “War of the Camps”, between former allies of
the LNM from April 1985 to 1987, more than 2500 Palestinian
fighters and non-fighters are estimated by the Lebanese
government to have been killed (Brynen 1990: 190). The real
number is likely to be higher, because thousands of
Palestinians were not registered in Lebanon; and since no
officials could access the camps in the aftermath of
fighting, the casualties could not be counted. In addition,
Amal and Shiite inhabitants suffered considerable losses
(Sayigh 1994: 317).
F) Testimonies Hundreds of personal testimonies of the war have been
written in English, Arabic and French. They give rich detail
of life during the war, and in many cases seek to challenge
established histories of the war. Many more novels and films
are based on memories and can be read as testimonies. They
fall into four different categories: combatants, political
leaders, civilians and foreign observers.
G) Memory cultures and memory studies Written historical accounts of the war are but a small part
of the total production of historical memory in Lebanon
after the war. Political parties, sectarian groups,
neighbourhoods, families, schools and other institutions of
socialisation have produced their own, often very skewed and
antagonistic versions of the war. The difficulty of
producing a national history in the aftermath of a divisive
conflict has been made more difficult by the fact that the
Lebanese state has refused to engage in a debate about how
to commemorate the war and how to produce a space for open
national debate about the past. It has been argued that the
Lebanese state, through the semi-public reconstruction
project conducted under the auspices of late Prime Minister
Rafiq al-Hariri, actively erased reminders of the war and
sought to create a downtown memory-space that emphasised the
good aspects of Lebanon’s pre-war years and ignored the war
itself (Makdisi 1997). In reaction to this (lack of) policy,
which many critics have linked to the general amnesty
announced in the wake of the war and labelled a
“state-sanctioned politics of amnesia”, a big group of
activists, artists, journalists and a few politicians have
since the mid-1990s mobilised to “break the silence”. Their
aim has been to “shake the Lebanese population out of its
lull”, in order for the country to avoid “repeating the
mistakes of the past”. Learning more about the Civil War,
they argue, will teach people that it was a painful and
pointless war that only benefited a small group of political
and economic leaders – the same group who are today running
the country (Haugbolle 2010: 64-84).
Author: Haugbolle Sune
Historiography and memory of the Lebanese Civil War
1975-1990
ISSN 1961-9898
In addition to the large number of dead, much of Lebanon’s
infrastructure was shattered, as was Lebanon’s reputation as
an example of cross-sectarian coexistence in the Arab Middle
East. The Lebanese Civil War was one of the most devastating
conflicts of the late 20th century. It left a number of
political and social legacies that make it paramount to
understand why it involved so many instances of mass
violence. The question of Civil War memory is acute for many
Lebanese, who have come together in the post-war period to
debate the war and create public commemoration. In their
view, the war has continued through other means in the
post-war period, and the periodic rounds of violent conflict
plaguing Lebanon since 1990 are directly related to the
Civil War. Remembering, analysing and understanding mass
violence in Lebanon, therefore, is not just an academic
exercise, but for many Lebanese an urgent task directly
linked to political reform and reconciliation.
The Ta’if Accord that ended the war in 1989 failed to
resolve or even address the core conflicts of the war,
including the sectarian division of power in Lebanon, the
Palestinian refugee issue, the presence of Syrian forces on
Lebanese soil and Syrian tutelage, and Hizbollah’s status as
the only armed militia. The killing of former Prime Minister
Rafiq al-Hariri in 2005, the 2006 war between Hizbollah and
Israel, and continued political instability in the country
have only added to the sense among many Lebanese that
political violence is endemic to their body politic. In
daily discourse in Lebanon, and even in academic writings
about the war, the widespread experience of being caught in
recurrent cycles of mass violence can translate into
descriptions of violence as “irrational”, or simply beyond
belief (see Khalaf 2002: 1-22 for a discussion of the
“rationality” of civil war).
Lebanon is not an anomaly, and its experience with mass
violence does not defy social analysis. It does, however,
require the outside observer to be aware of the deeply
divisive context in which Civil War historiography is being
produced. The perceived unfinished nature of the war has
rendered debates about it very contentious inside Lebanon.
Some historical work has been politicised under the
influence of the political and physical reconstruction
process that followed in the 1990s and 2000s, and, more
generally, under the influence of political discourses
surrounding the immediate past in reconstructing Lebanon,
while other work – much of it produced by scholars of
Lebanon in Western universities – maintains a high standard
of objectivity. This is not to extol non-Lebanese scholars
over Lebanese ones. In fact, two of the most painstaking and
convincing histories of the war were written in French by
Lebanese scholars (Beydoun 1993, Kassir 1994). However, as
Beydoun (1984) has shown, Lebanese scholars during the war
were under the heavy influence of political and ideological
projects that sought to mould history in their shape. Given
the vast amount of historical work on the war, this review
does not pretend to be all-inclusive, but seeks to summarise
some of the main debates surrounding the war.
Some of the most salient engagement with the Civil War has
been produced outside the realm of academic history, in
elite and popular cultural production, political discourse,
urban space and mass media. It is a key point of this
scholarly review that such material should be viewed as part
of the historiography of the war. By making a conceptual
distinction between academic history and memory culture, the
review does not validate one over the other, nor claim that
the two realms are hermetically sealed from one another. On
the contrary, the aim of this review is to show how the
different genres of memory production overlap and form part
of the ongoing assessment of the war. Hence, it gives an
overview of the main themes and topics in academic
literature, cultural and media production, and public debate
relating to the war. Finally, it examines a body of
meta-historical literature analysing the production of
historical memory in Lebanon.
In each of those periods, notorious battles, massacres and
assassinations took place, including the Black Saturday, Tal
al-Za’tar and Damour massacres of 1975-76; the War of the
Mountain between Druze and Christian forces in 1982-83;
Israeli bombardment of West Beirut in August 1982, and the
Sabra and Shatila massacres that followed; the War of the
Camps between Palestinian and Shiite forces from 1985 to
1987; and Michel Aoun’s war with Samir Ja’ja’’s Lebanese
Forces and the Syrian army in 1989 and 1990. Debates over
these particular events intersect with a number of thematic
debates, which this review will summarise.
There is agreement among historians that the war broke out
as a result of a period of growing division between those
Lebanese who supported the right of the Palestinian
resistance to stage operations against Israel from Lebanese
soil, and those who opposed it. This division intersected
with other contentious issues, most prominently whether or
not the system of power sharing in place since the 1943
National Pact was sustainable or due for radical reform, and
whether Lebanon should orient its international alliances
towards the Arab world and the Soviet Union or towards the
West and its local allies. On the one hand, the Lebanese
National Movement (LNM), under the leadership of Kamal
Junblatt, called for an overhaul of the sectarian quota
system, and for a leftist-Muslim alliance that would realign
Lebanon with other “radical” regimes including Syria, Libya
and Iraq. Destabilisation of the internal security situation
allowed various militias to arm, not just those affiliated
with the LNM, but also the Christian-conservative front.
Hence, many scholars (e.g. Traboulsi 2007: 174) point to
President Suleiman Franjieh’s decision to dismantle the
deuxième bureau security services in 1970 as a crucial
turning point following the statist approach of his
predecessors Fouad Chehab and Charles Helou.
The biggest bone of contention regarding the outbreak of the
war is the role of the Palestinian armed presence. The
historiographic debate is not just over the Palestinian
question as such, and the right of the LNM to support the
PLO, but over whether or not Lebanon from 1943 to 1975 had
developed a viable system of consociationalism, and over the
relative impact of external powers on the Lebanese state. In
Breakdown of the state in pre-war Lebanon, Farid Al-Khazen
(2000: 385) argues that the Lebanese system had by and large
proven itself a flexible mode of power sharing between the
countries’ sects. From the Cairo Agreement in 1969 to
outbreak of war in 1975, he points out, all but one of
Lebanon’s many cabinet crises revolved around the PLO. The
destabilisation of the Lebanese state, therefore, must
primarily be seen as an effect of the Palestinian question.
Although well argued and scholarly, Al-Khazen’s book can be
boxed with more simplistic attempts to place the blame with
outside forces. For those who stress internal factors such
as the inability of the quota system to deal with the rising
numbers of Shiites, and Maronite hegemony over the state
more generally, emphasis on the Palestinian issue overwrites
critiques of the Lebanese system, and can even be read as
part of a “Christian” or conservative historical discourse
that seeks to admonish either the Christian right or the
sectarian system. A famous shorthand for externalising the
war by pointing to outside forces is the idiomatic term “a
war of others”, or une guerre pour les autres, the title of
journalist and diplomat Ghassan Tueni’s renowned 1985 book
(Tueni 1985). After the war, “a war of others” became
shorthand for externalising collective and individual
feelings of guilt associated with the Civil War. Much of
public debate about the war since 1990 has revolved around
the external/internal question, and critical historiography
has not been immune to these debates (Khalaf 2002: 15-22).
Another group of scholars who stress the internal dynamics
of the Civil War are interested in interpretations of
political economy. They highlight the over-reliance of the
Lebanese economy on Western capitalism from the late 19th
century onwards. Inspired by dependency theory, sociologist
Salim Nasr (1978), among others, shows how the penetration
of foreign capital dovetailed with the social and political
dominance of a both local and wider Arab bourgeoisie in
Lebanon. This bourgeoisie was in collusion with the zu’ama
political class of political bosses of wealthy and
influential families. As Michael Johnson showed in his 1986
study Class and client in Beirut, the zu’ama were critical
in maintaining a check on violence at a local level. By
controlling lower-ranking political bosses, who in their
turn reigned in “the street”, the zu’ama were critical both
to the parliamentary system of consociationalism, and to the
local negotiation of sectarian power and influence. When
their influence – particularly that of the Sunni zu’ama in
West Beirut – waned in the late 1960s and early 1970s,
Johnson argues, the wider system of social control in
Lebanon began to unravel (Johnson 1986). In a later work
entitled All Honourable Men, Michael Johnson returns to his
earlier work and critiques it for being too based on a class
reading of the roots of the Civil War. Instead, he proposes
a socio-psychological reading that places emphasis on the
changing relations in the nuclear family in Beirut before
the war (Johnson 2002).
The work of Marxist sociologists like Salim Nasr (1983),
Fawwaz Traboulsi (1993) and Fuad Shahin (1980) presents a
corrective to what they see as over-reliance on sectarianism
as a catchall to explain the conflict. The sectarian
explanation is even more problematic, as it dovetails with
hardened stereotypes repeated in journalistic accounts of
the war as a resurgence of age-old sectarian hatred.
Sectarian identification and the way in which it shaped
political subjectivities during the war and leading up to
it, however, cannot be explained away completely. The issue
of sectarianism in the war intersects with a much longer
debate about sectarianism in Lebanon going back, at least,
to the 1840-60 wars in Mount Lebanon (Weiss 2009). One side
in the debate believes that Lebanese nationalism emerged not
because of political sectarianism but despite it. As Firro
(2003: 67) puts it, the French creation of Lebanon in 1920
empowered sectarian representation and the leadership of
political oligarchies locally and nationally. In this view,
the institutional arrangement of sectarianism has produced
an idea of two separate people and coexistence between them.
Critics of the sectarian system believe that only the
resilience of civil society during the war saved the future
existence of Lebanon as a country. Frequent sectarian
bickering in the political leadership, resulting in
political stalemate, inefficiency and stalled reforms, has
only reinforced this view in the post-war period.
On the opposing side in the debate, proponents of the
confessional system stress its historically proven ability
to contain and resolve conflict (Weiss 2009: 143-4). As
Samir Khalaf (2002: 327-28) has formulated this idea,
despite their ungratifying social and political expressions
in the recent past, communitarian roots can be stripped of
bigotry and become the base for equitable forms of power
sharing. The Lebanese national identity may be fragile, but
it is nevertheless a well-established identification with a
long history that rests on an overlap of multiple
identities. The insistence on one seamless national unity
led to disasters for Lebanon as well as for its proponents
in the Lebanese National Movement. Lebanese nationalism in
this view can be defined as “a fragile net of confessional
identity, national identity and superstrata ideologies”, and
the acceptance of this loosely connected net (Reinkowski
1997: 513). In political terms, this implies that, because
the sectarian system merely reflects the makeup of society,
it is ultimately better suited to regulate conflict than a
secular system would be (Messara 1994).
Sectarian violence has been a difficult topic for novelists,
filmmakers and others. Many have skirted the issue, focusing
instead on civilians who resisted the logic of separation
and exclusivity. A case in point is the most popular film
about the Civil War, and the first such film to be shown in
mainstream Lebanese cinemas, Ziad Doeuiry’s West Beyrouth
(Doueiry 1997). It portrays a Muslim boy and a Christian
girl and their middle-class families, as they become victims
of a war that they wholly reject. The conclusion is
comforting, as it falls in line with the war-of-others
thesis. Militiamen and sectarian violence here is presented
as an outside force, external to the life-worlds of ordinary
Lebanese. The focus on a victimised middle-class can partly
be explained by the fact that many cultural producers hail
from this group, and in any case rejected the logic of
militia warfare and sectarian violence.
Other artists have produced less self-censored descriptions
of sectarian bloodshed. Two of Lebanon’s foremost novelists,
Elias Khoury and Rashid al-Daif, have written
semi-biographically about their experiences as fighters for
the LNM in the two-years war. The much younger Rawi Hage, in
his prize-winning De Niro’s game (2007), describes the
experiences of a young Christian fighter in East Beirut and
his motivations for joining the Lebanese Forces and
participating in the Sabra and Shatila massacre. The novel
suggests that ideology was only secondary to a range of
personal circumstances ranging from poverty to broken
families that could motivate young men to join the militias
and participate in mass violence. A similar description from
West Beirut can be found in Yussef Bazzi’s Arafat looked at
me and smiled (Bazzi 2007). On film, Randa Chahal Sabag’s
1999 Civilisées (Civilised People), a portrait of militiamen
during the war, suggests that the Lebanese populace bore
more responsibility for the violence than they would like to
believe (Sabag 1999). However, such bluntness is rare. In
public debates about memory of the Civil War since 1990,
critics of self-delusion have more commonly linked the
problem to political and sectarian leaders who are blamed
for keeping a lid on discussions about the war in order to
pacify the population and avoid uncomfortable discussions
about their own involvement in the war (Haugbolle 2010:
74-84). Equally, the more than 50 Lebanese films that deal
with the war tend to treat individuals – even perpetrators –
as victims caught up in a war beyond their control and
design (Khatib 2008: 153-184).
There is no disagreement over the fact that several
massacres took place and that hundreds, in some cases
thousands of civilians were murdered. Rather,
historiographic debates centre on the interpretation of the
political circumstances surrounding the massacres and the
perceived necessity of these crimes. In several cases, the
events have become foundational for the self-understanding
of political groups. Disentangling them from ideological
discourse is a difficult task, and not one that Lebanese
historians are always able to fulfil. Today, a phalangist
narrative, as represented on the Lebanese Forces’ webpage,
maintains that the massacres of 1975-76 and 1982 were in
fact reactions to onslaughts on the Christians of Lebanon,
defensive measures made necessary by the actions of the LNM1
http://www.lebanese-forces.org/lf_history/index.shtml
. Conversely, proponents of the left (who outnumber
“rightists” in the group of intellectuals and artists
dominating public debate about the war) stress that the
worst massacres were committed by members of the Christian
right.
Massacres of the two-years war
The outbreak of the war was marked by its first massacre,
known as the Ayn al-Rumana incident on 13 April 1975, where
27 Palestinians were killed by Kata’ib militants (Picard
2002: 105). Although the assault was clearly committed by
Kata’ib, Christian leaders accused the Palestinians and
their leader Arafat for provoking a confrontation in an
environment of heightened tension (Hanf 1993: 204). Ayn
al-Rumana was followed by other massacres in the so-called
two-years war from April 1975 to November 1976. As Elizabeth
Picard points out, the attacks on refugee camps and villages
in this period were not the product of lawlessness and
militias ruling the street, although a vast number of
militias were active and many areas were quite lawless.
Rather, the massacres followed a logic of forming
homogeneous cantons propagated by leaders such as Pierre
Jumayil and Camille Chamoun, but equally – even if in
retaliation – by leaders of the LNM like Kamal Jumblatt
(Picard 2002: 110). The logic necessitated cleaning areas of
non-Christian, or non-progressive, elements, and it
sanctioned mass murder.
The killing of civilians was also motivated by a cycle of
revenge, as massacre followed massacre in the two-years war.
The first major incident was the Black Saturday massacre of
6 December 1975, when falangists killed between 150 (Chami
2003: 57) and 200 (Hanf 1993: 210) civilians in East Beirut.
The LNM responded to Black Saturday and the ensuing massacre
of civilians in the slum districts of Maslakh and Karantina
on 18 January 1976, where several hundred (Hanf 1993: 211) –
perhaps as many as 1,500 (Harris 1996: 162) – civilians were
murdered, by bombarding and pillaging the coastal cities of
Damour and Jiyé on 20 January, killing more than 500
inhabitants (Nisan 2003: 41).
In the meantime, Kata’ib laid siege on the Palestinian camp
of Tal al-Za’tar. The camp fell on 12 August 1976. Syrian
forces participated in or at least accepted the massacre
that followed. The number of people killed varies. Harris
(1996: 165) writes that “perhaps 3,000 Palestinians, mostly
civilians, died in the siege and its aftermath”, whereas
Cobban (1985: 142) estimates that 1,500 were killed on the
day and a total of 2,200 throughout the siege. More reliable
is Yezid Sayigh’s estimate of 4,280 Lebanese and Palestinian
camp dwellers, as he bases it on reports in the immediate
aftermath of the massacre (1997: 401). In retaliation, LNM
forces attacked the Christian villages of Chekka and Hamat,
killing around 200 civilians (Chami 2003: 94).
The Israel Defence Forces’ (IDF) invasion of Lebanon and
subsequent shelling of West Beirut in the summer of 1982
must be considered an instance of mass violence. The
invasion was the single most violent incident of the war,
costing at least 17,000 people their lives and wounding up
to 30,000 others (Hanf 1993: 341). One of the most
influential artistic renderings of the civilian experience
of invasion is Mahmoud Darwish’s long prose poem Memory for
forgetfulness: Beirut August 1982 (Darwish 1995), a series
of testimonies and reflections on the relation of writing to
memory and human suffering.
The invasion paved the way for the best documented of the
war’s massacres, at the Palestinian camps of Sabra and
Shatila (for details of the history and numbers, see Aude
Signole’s article in EMV)2
http://www.massviolence.org/Article?id_article=142&artpage=4
. In painstaking works like al-Hout’s Sabra and Shatila
(2004), reliable figures have been garnered from
international organisations such as the Red Cross and
extrapolated with individual accounts, media reports and
military accounts, reaching a total of between 1,400 and
2,000 killed. Partly as a result of numerous and very
detailed accounts of participants of the Christian right,
from Joseph Abou Khalil to Robert Hatem (Eddé 2010), as well
as investigative journalists like Alain Ménargues (2004), we
know who participated (Lebanese Forces), what their motives
were (revenge for Bashir Jumayil’s death days before), and
what they did – in the most disturbing detail. In fact, it
is probably the viciousness of the killings, as well as
their international exposure, that has made Sabra and
Shatila the iconic massacre of the Lebanese Civil War. Sabra
and Shatila has been the object of commemorations and
political co-optation by various parties, including
Hizbollah, while other massacres have not been commemorated
as vigorously (Khalili 2007:168-76). On the positive side,
at least from an historian’s perspective, the attention has
resulted in detailed documentation.
Similar objective works on Damour, Black Saturday and other,
less prominent massacres like the inter-Christian attacks on
Ehden and Safra in 1978 and 1980, are yet to be written.
Episodes 3 and 4 of Al-Jazeera’s 2001 documentary on the
war, Harb Lubnan (War of Lebanon), contain detailed footage
of these massacres, eye-witness accounts and interviews with
political leaders, but no statistical information comparable
to that available on Sabra and Shatila (Issawi 2004). Harb
Lubnan may lack the apparatus of academic history, but it
has become the most widely distributed piece of Civil War
history, and the best-selling documentary DVD in Lebanon. It
is particularly interesting for its large number of
extensive and sometimes candid interviews with some of the
leaders in the war.
Generally speaking, the historiography of the war has not
been devoted to precise descriptions of massacres, body
counts or debates over responsibility. Histories of the
early war by writers such as Deeb (1980), Petran (1987) and
Cobban (1985) stress how sectarian divisions in the
political elite and the population led to a level of
divisiveness that condoned indiscriminate killing of
“others”. Less scholarly accounts, including bestsellers by
Fisk (1990), Randall (1983) and Friedman (1990), tend to
linger more on the massacres, but stop short of any
systematic documentation.
Although the famous massacres of the war were very serious
instances of mass violence, they tend to overshadow less
prolific forms of violence that became an “habitual” part of
life during the war. Part of this habitual violence took
place between soldiers and militiamen. It is impossible to
make a neat distinction between legitimate violence during
battles and indiscriminate violence against civilians and
combatants. During all phases of the war and on all sides,
atrocities were committed against both groups. Kidnappings,
road-block executions on the basis of people’s sectarian
identity, revenge killings of civilians, torture, wanton
shelling of residential areas, and many other breaches of
the conduct of war were integral and well-documented parts
of the Civil War (Hanf 1993: 341).
Another category of mass violence was car bombs and planted
bombs, which throughout the war claimed more than 3,000
lives, most of them civilian (Chami 2003: 317-19). At least
49 political and religious leaders were murdered between
1975 and 1990 (Chami 2003: 323-26). However, these numbers
pale in comparison with the kidnapped and disappeared during
the war, which have been estimated at 17,415 by the civil
society organisation Committee of the Families of Kidnapped
and Disappeared in Lebanon. Founded in 1982, the Committee
has worked since then for the release of information about
the thousands of individuals who were abducted by militias
(Haugbolle 2010: 199). The Committee has also become one of
the proponents of a more open debate about the war, along
with other civil society organisations.
In total, around 25 former combatants have written
testimonies of the war, most of them political leaders (Eddé
2010). A larger number of personal accounts have been given
to the Lebanese press (Haugbolle 2010a). On the one hand,
former militia leaders like Walid Jumblatt3
Jumblatt speaks about the violence perpetrated by his
militia in episode 7 of Al-Jazeera’s Harb Lubnan
and Elias Hobayqa, as well as lower-ranking leaders like
Assa’ad Shaftari and Robert Hatem, have spoken publicly
about their experiences and reflections on the war
(Haugbolle 2010a). Other examples of self-representations
include semi-biographical novels (Bazzi 2007, Hage 2008) and
memoirs by former soldiers, among them two women (Beshara
2003, Sneifer 2008).
Memories of Israeli soldiers who participated in the 1982
invasion have been treated artistically in a number of
internationally acclaimed films like Lebanon and Waltz with
Bashir, which address (and occasionally dodge) the question
of Israeli responsibility. Yermia (1983), a soldier during
the invasion, details the IDF’s indiscriminate behaviour in
the war, in particular atrocities committed in Sidon in
1982. It also includes detainees’ narratives from the
Israeli “special” camp of al-Ansar set up close to Ayn
al-Helwa. Further narratives from these camps have been
collected by Khalili (2010).
A much more systematic and detailed assessment of crimes
committed by the IDF can be found in the report of the
International Commission into reported violations of
international law by Israel during the 1982 invasion
(MacBride 1984). The report is based on testimonies and
researched accounts. It contains a long section on Sabra and
Shatila, which concludes that “at a minimum, Israel’s role
in planning and coordinating the militia operation amounts
to a reckless disregard of probable consequence” (MacBride
1984: 179). As a whole, the report is a severe indictment of
Israel’s breach of international law in the invasion of
Lebanon. On the use of weapons, the report finds that the
“use of fragmentation and incendiary weapons by the Israeli
armed forces violated the international legal principle of
proportionality and discrimination” (MacBride 1984: 188). It
found evidence of “degrading treatment often leading to
death” during the imprisonment of Lebanese and Palestinian
fighters. And it further lambasted the IDF for
indiscriminate and systematic bombing of civilian areas, as
well as complicity in Sabra and Shatila (MacBride 1984:
194). An international law assessment of the 1982 invasion
from 1985 comes to similar conclusions (Mallison and
Mallison 1985).
Foreign medical relief workers have also provided valuable
accounts of serious human rights violations in Sabra and
Shatila, other Palestinian camps like Rashadiya, Bourj
al-Shamali and Mieh Mieh, and the Israeli camps of al-Ansar
and Khiam in South Lebanon (al-Qasem 1983). Cutting (1988)
and, more ethnographically and reflected, Sayigh (1994),
have written narratives of the War of the Camps, while
Nassib (1983) and Mikdadi (1983) contain vivid descriptions
of the 1982 invasion of Beirut. Perhaps the best testimony
of the invasion, as well as other periods in the war, has
been written by Edward Said’s sister Jean Makdisi (Makdisi
1990).
The results of this loosely connected social movement aimed
at commemorating and debating the war have been mixed. On
the one hand, awareness of the problem has undoubtedly been
raised, and this may have contributed to a greater
reluctance to start new armed struggles despite periods of
enormous political tension since 2005. On the other hand,
the movement suffers from elitism, and its events often
cater to a crowd of educated Beirut-dwellers who are already
well aware of the problem of amnesia. It has also been
difficult for the movement to develop new strategies and
arguments. In 2011, many arguments are still being heard
that were first formulated in the mid-1990s. However, the
tensions of the 2007-08 crises in Lebanese politics in the
aftermath of Hizbollah’s and Israel’s 2006 war have arguably
also revitalised parts of Lebanese civil society in defence
of civic virtues, cross-sectarian collaboration and
anti-sectarian activism (Kanafani Zahar 2011: 111-24).
Moreover, new kinds of events that seek to engage the public
more openly and draw in non-elite groups have also been
launched, not least under the auspices of the largest NGO
devoted to memory work, UMAM, whose institute is located in
the southern suburbs of Beirut (Barclay 2007). UMAM was
founded by the German-Lebanese couple Lokhman Slim and
Monika Borgman, and has strong links to most of Lebanese
civil society. Since 2005, UMAM has organised close to a
hundred events and run several large-scale projects
including interactive local history writing. UMAM also
produced the documentary “Massaker” in 2004, a series of
interviews with participants in the Sabra and Shatila
massacre. The film provoked discussions about the
difficulties of giving perpetrators of violence a voice in a
state where formal prosecution of their heinous crimes is
made impossible.
Concurrent with the growth of this social movement in favour
of public memory work, a number of academic studies about
memories of the Civil War have been published. My own book,
on which some of this review is based, analyses the
different ways in which Civil War history was made the
subject of public representation in Lebanon from 1990 to
2005. It argues that a particular pacifist-leftist group of
intellectuals have dominated the debate, giving it an
anti-sectarian tinge that does not necessarily correspond to
sentiments in the wider population (Haugbolle 2010). Volk
(2010) puts the politics of commemoration and martyrdom into
a longer historical perspective, arguing that post-war
debates and public commemorations draw on long-running
contentions over sectarian and national identity. Aïda
Kanafani-Zahar’s study (2011) includes long accounts of the
war in Mount Lebanon and deals in particular with the
psychological dimension of the war legacy and the fractured
social contract in Lebanese localities. From an equally
ethnographic perspective, Larkin (2008) has studied how
young Lebanese rely almost completely on “postmemory”,
passed-on accounts and cultural production in their
understanding of the war. The result is sometimes troubling
repetitions of clichés and hardened myths, while other young
Lebanese seek to counteract the signs of brewing sectarian
conflict around them by exploring and subverting political
language.
Perhaps the biggest challenge facing the historiography of
the war is to combine the rich and varied cultural and
academic productions dealing with the war and memory of the
war with actual history writing. Many periods of the war,
and many perspectives beyond political and military history,
are understudied. If social historians of the war begin to
make use of the sources collected and created in cultural
memory work, and to systematise these sources, we could gain
insight into some of the blind spots of the historiography
of the war. Memory work should of course be treated
critically, as it often serves ideological purposes. Having
said that, memory culture is not just a collection of
dubious sources. Constructions of memory in post-war Lebanon
also point to narratives about history. History is not just
numbers, dates and facts, but equally the telling of
stories, and the blending of events into salient narratives.
In Lebanon, there are many different narratives, many
different histories of the war. Any attempt to write a
history of the war – or to forge a national history – must
start by acknowledging the multiplicity of historical
narratives. The next step must be a proper research agenda,
in Lebanon or by foreign research institutions, to support
collective projects that include archival studies,
ethnography, oral history and cultural studies. French
scholars Franck Mermier and Christophe Varin (2010) recently
published the results of such a comprehensive research
project. Similar projects that actively involve Lebanese
academics and memory activists in a creative collaboration
could open the door to the immense archive of sentiments,
memories, impressions and expressions from and about the
Civil War and begin working on it in earnest. The result
could be a more precise and more textured history of the
Lebanese Civil War, hopefully materialising in the coming
years.
A much more systematic and detailed assessment of crimes
committed by the IDF can be found in the report of the
International Commission to enquire into reported violations
of International law by Israel during the 1982 invasion
(MacBride 1984). The report is based on testimonies and
researched accounts. It contains a long section on Sabra and
Shatila, which concludes that “at a minimum, Israel’s role
in planning and coordinating the militia operation amounts
to a reckless disregard of probable consequence” (MacBride
1984: 179). As a whole, the report is a severe indictment of
Israel’s breach of international law in the invasion of
Lebanon. On the use of weapons, the report finds that
Israeli “use of fragmentation and incendiary weapons by the
Israeli armed forces violated the international legal
principle of proportionality and discrimination.” (MacBride
1984: 188). It found evidence of “degrading treatment often
leading to death” during imprisonment of Lebanese and
Palestinian fighters. And it further lambasted the IDF for
indiscriminate and systematic bombing of civilian areas, as
well as complicity in Sabra and Shatila (MacBride 1984:
194). An international law assessment of the 1982 invasion
from 1985 comes to similar conclusions (Mallison and
Mallison 1985).
Foreign medical relief workers have also provided valuable
accounts of serious human rights violations in Sabra and
Shatila and other Palestinian camps like Rashadiya, Bourj
al-Shamali, Mieh Mieh, as well as the Israeli camps of
al-Ansar and Khiam in South Lebanon (al-Qasem 1983). Cutting
(1988) and, more ethnographically and reflected, Sayigh
(1994), have written narratives of the War of the Camps,
while Nassib (1983) and Mikdadi (1983) contain vivid
descriptions of the 1982 invasion of Beirut. Perhaps the
best testimony of the invasion as well as other periods in
the war has been written by Edward Said’s sister Jean
Makdisi (Makdisi 1990).
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1. http://www.lebanese-forces.org/lf_history/index.shtml
2. http://www.massviolence.org/Article?id_article=142&artpage=4
3. Jumblatt speaks about the violence perpetrated by his
militia in episode 7 of Al-Jazeera’s Harb Lubnan
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Citer cet article
Haugbolle Sune, The historiography and the memory of the
Lebanese civil war, Violence de masse et Résistance - Réseau
de recherche, [en ligne], publié le : 25 Octobre, 2011,
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