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Showing posts with label Lebanonpalestine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lebanonpalestine. Show all posts

Sunday, June 26, 2011

a larger version of my icon. lebanon: under construction.



but its not just Palestine that is / was affected by Israel’s murderous acts….

The Lebanon War

Destruction in the wake of Israeli bombs that targeted Beirut. Since June 6, the Israeli army launched a major offensive in South Lebanon, aimed at destroying Palestinian camps.

IMAGE:
© Patrick Chauvel/Sygma/Corbis

DATE PHOTOGRAPHED
June 24-25, 1982

Too excited for Lebanon, it’s getting ridiculous. Summer really starts when I’m there, then I finish it back home. Ahhhh too much happiness.



Electricity of Lebanon building shot from down under; #beirut #Lebanon (Taken with Instagram at EDL)



Driving to the Cedars a few months ago. 



A few months ago, driving near The Cedars.



a larger version of my icon. lebanon: under construction.

Saturday, June 25, 2011

In the mountains of Lebanon

“People whom you will meet and, by saying nothing, will approve of their actions are responsible for war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide. You will be remembered as someone who did collaborate with Apartheid.”

- Joey Ayoub to the co-founder of WikipediaHezbollah moving missile stock from Syria to Lebanon





Martyr square in 1991.

In the 19th century, the square was known as Place des Canons. During World War I, Lebanon was under Ottoman rule. In 1915, Beirut suffered a blockade by the Allies, which was intended to starve the Turks out. The effect was a famine, followed by plague, which killed more than a quarter of the population. A revolt against the Turks broke out which resulted in hanging of many nationalists on 6 May 1916 in the renamed Martyrs’ Square. Among them were Said akl, Father Joseph Hayek, Abdul Karim al-Khalil, Abed al-Wahab al-Inglizi, Joseph Bishara Hani, Mohammad and Mahmoud Mahmassani, Omar Hamad, Philip and Farid el-Khazen, and Sheikh Ahmad Tabbara.

Currently some remains of the old Cinema Opera building (now a Virgin Megastore) and the bronze Martyrs statue are the only features left of the Martyrs’ Square. The statue, riddled with bullet holes, has become a symbol for all that was destroyed during the Lebanese Civil War.

The Martyrs’ Square is a common location for protests and demonstrations, among the more notable demonstrations were the 2005 anti-Syrian protests of the Cedar Revolution and 2007 anti-government opposition protests led by Hezbollah and The Free Patrotic Movement.

I do not own these pictures, only found them at work in an old film.



In the mountains of Lebanon

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