Meetings with Hezbollah and Lebanese officials together with a trip to
southern Lebanon, as a member of a Council for National Interest peace
delegation, revealed much about the nature of the Party of God. The
voyage started in Beirut.

The tenement building in Beirut is indistinguishable from the adjoining
buildings in a Shiite district of Beirut. Hezbollah followers crowd the
sidewalk to greet and lead to a simple apartment on an upper floor.
Sayyid Nawaf Al-Musawi, the head of Hezbollah’s International
Relations, is dressed in conventional clothes. The only indication of
religious fervor is the beads he rotates in his right hand. He sits
relaxed but talks seriously and with conviction. The female
translator’s minor errors and dubious translations of colloquial
expressions are politely excused. The head of Hezbollah’s International
Relations has a lot to say - about everything.
The Region
“In Iraq there is a severe humane problem – same as in Palestine.
The West Bank is now a prison. The US gives no importance to the Iraqi
people. US policy is based on Israel safety and Middle East oil.”
“America is creating chaos and the region is under its hegemony. The
regime is increasing the problems rather than resolving them. Now they
are talking about a new war in Iran. Iraq was weak, but Iran is strong
and it will be a much harder war. A barrel of oil and a barrel of
gunfire will create a catastrophe that is beyond comprehension. A
disaster is happening and Americans are given a story that is false.
They were lying about WMDs in Iraq and now they are lying about nuclear
issues in Iran. They told the people that the Iraqis would welcome them
as liberators. This is an example of a delusion to the citizens of the
US. American citizens deserve to know the truth. Colin Powell gave
false information to the UN but he thought it was the truth. When
someone tries to find the truth he is called a terrorist. America
operates on misleading evidence.”
Governing Lebanon
“The one who rules must be accepted by all the others. Now
the minority is ruling, but this is supported by the U.S. Why does the
U.S. want this? For the benefit of the Israelis. We are a movement only
against Israeli attack and Israeli occupation. We support unity. We
encourage consensus. The Vatican, the Arabs want unity in Lebanon, but
the American influences in Lebanon do not want this. We want a
multi-ethnic nation and not as in Israel, which calls itself a Jewish
country even though ¼ of its citizens are Christians and Muslims. We
cannot have an election with 50% plus one because the text of the
constitution is clear — there has to be a 2/3 majority. A person
elected by 50% plus one is not the President and only an imposter.”
Israel
“Hezbollah will never recognize Israel. Israel (Palestine?) should be a
democratic nation where all religions exist together and have equal
freedom. In the 1919 Paris meeting, the Zionists presented a document
which coveted South Lebanon and delineated four river basins they
wanted to own.”
Sayyid Nawaf Al-Musawi ended his conversation with prophetic expressions”
“We don’t judge you on the basis of your stand on Israel. Do not judge us on that issue.”
“There are natural ties between Shia Lebanon and Iran. They have the
same source. The fifteenth Century Iranian studies came from Lebanon”.
“The geography of Lebanon enabled the Shia to stay. It is tough to conquer Southern Lebanon because of its geography.”
Leaving Beirut for the South of Lebanon is similar to leaving any
metropolis – traffic jams, new expressways, roadways that cut through
residential areas. The Paris of the Middle East has lost much of its
charm. It is heavy until the view of the blue green Mediterranean
waters calm the atmosphere. Banana groves, similar to those that
camouflaged the Hezbollah rocket carriers during the 2006 summer war,
are prominent. Also prominent are posters of Rafiq Hariri, the
assassinated and previous Prime Minister.
After the Sunni city of Sidon, a peaceful countryside of groves and
orchards, with newly repaired bridges that cross ready-to-be-paved
roads, leads to Tyre. The Shiite city has freshly sanded beaches and a
picturesque seaside promenade. The poster have changed – they now
feature Hassan Nasrallah, Hezbollah’s political leader,
Tyre is the home of Sheik Nabil Kaook, Hezbollah commander of South
Lebanon. The Sheik narrowly escaped death when Israeli warplanes bombed
his home in 2006 war.

In his presence, women are not greeted with handshakes, but with hands
respectfully placed over the heart. The women sit veiled and separate
from the men. The cleric is well groomed and well tailored – his white
turban shows his status and his brown cloak matches the brown chair on
which he sits, Words are spoken politely and softly. Nevertheless, the
message, interspersed with feelings for the dispossessed, is harsh and
accusatory: The Hezbollah Sheik has one succinct message: “The United
States took the decision to go to war and to continue the war. It
treats Lebanon as just another occupation.”
Tyre is also identified with the Al-Sadr foundation, which manages an
orphanage under control of Rabab al-Sadr, sister of disappeared Shiite
cleric Sayyid Musa al-Sadr. Shi‘a clerics who have the title of
sayyid
claim descent from Muhammad. Sayyid Musa al-Sadr is more famous than
his designation. His life, a story of dedication, success and an
eventual mystery, reveals strong links between Shiites from Iran, Iraq
and Lebanon.
B
orn in Qom, Iran in 1928 to a Lebanese family of theologians, Musa al-Sadr studied
theology
in Najaf, Iraq. Being related to the father of Iraq’s Muqtada al-Sadr,
Iraq was another home for him. In 1960 Musa al-Sadr moved to Tyre, his
father’s birthplace. He soon became recognized as a strong advocate for
the economically and politically disadvantaged Shi'ite population. His
role in establishing schools and medical clinics throughout southern
Lebanon led to the 1974 founding of the Movement of the Disinherited,
whose armed wing became Amal, the other Shiite party in Lebanon. While
successfully improving economic and social conditions for a
disenfranchised Shiite population, he made enemies of landlords,
corrupt officials, political establishment and members of the
Palestinian Liberation Oganization. In 1978, while attending a
conference in Libya, Musa al-Sadr mysteriously vanished. No clue to his
disappearance has ever surfaced.
Musa al-Sadr‘s eventual disassociation with, what was then, a corrupt
Amal, created other groups, some of whom later coalesced into
Hezbollah. On February 16, 1985, an “
Open Letter to the Downtrodden in Lebanon and the World,” alerted the world to Hezbollah’s formal existence.

Elegant chalets grace the barren hills of southern Lebanon. Many of
them are homes of expatriate Lebanese, who have always been principal
contributors to Lebanon’s economy. The expatriates from Sierra Leone,
Gulf States and many from Dearborn, Michigan and other U.S. cities,
send funds to their Lebanese relatives and purchase properties
throughout Lebanon. Southern Lebanon has many retired Dearborns who
have returned to their families and to a land they always cherished.
But that’s not all – informed persons claim Southern Lebanon has
diamond and drug smuggling that help finance Hezbollah and local
communities. For expediency and revenue, the Party of God can depart
from being a religious movement.
The elegant chalets emphasize the destruction to villages during the 2006 summer war. Bint Jbiel,
“the daughter of the mountain,”
rested in a path of the invading Israeli army. Israel’s military
dropped leaflets that ordered the population to leave the village. The
inhabitants obeyed the order and now the old city, not the new part, is
70% destroyed; a mound of rubble that includes the 600 year old mosque.
Homes along a near by dirt road are pocked with shell and bullet holes,
evidence of tanks having discharged random fire at empty houses for no
apparent reason except they were close to the path of the tank. A total
of eighteen Israeli tanks broke down, crashed or were destroyed by
Hezbollah ambush during the Israeli invasion.
The Israeli border is several kilometers away. From a hill close to the
mined border with Israel, the deputy mayor of Marjayoun pointed to the
verdant fields of Northern Israel. He claimed that in 1948 Israel
seized one kilometer of Lebanese territory and that the houses in the
distance are mainly empty.
Damage weary Lebanon is not confined to the border area. Timur Goksel,
former senior advisor to the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon
(UNIFIL), who has been in Lebanon for twenty years, noted he had never
witnessed so much wanton destruction. He said that Iran funds an
Iranian Hezbollah that has no connections with Lebanese Hezbollah. Five
hundred million dollars of these funds are being used to repair
war-damaged southern Lebanon. In contrast, the U.S. is contributing 34
million dollars to repair a large bridge. Timor Goksel refutes the
March 14 majority party charge that Hezbollah is obstructionist: “The
Shiites (not all Hezbollah) are 30% of the country and cannot rule on
their own. They want to have a role in the government and they want to
be a mainstream party.”
Principal leaders in the Lebanese government support Goksel’s evaluation. Former general Michel Aoun, Christian head of the
Change and Reform
parliamentary bloc, wants what Hezbollah wants; a new parliament where
the new majority will be accepted. Aoun’s bloc has a memorandum of
understanding (MOU) with Hezbollah. He insisted the MOU is not an
alliance but a strategy for integrating Hezbollah into a mutual defense
of Lebanon.
Pictured ex-general and Maronite President of Lebanon, Emil Lahoud,
agreed with Hezbollah’s determination to follow constitutional law and
only elect a president with a 2/3 quorum. The Lebanese president
describes Hezbollah as “one hundred percent Lebanese. Hezbollah takes
material assistance from Iran and would take it from the devil if
necessary to protect their country. They are not terrorists.”
Fawsi Salloukh, Lebanon’s Minister of Foreign Affairs talked from a
prepared document that severely criticized Israel and the United
States. He also wants a new election and not a litigious issue. He
doesn’t believe Iran wants to dominate Hezbollah and stressed its
natural for Shiites in Lebanon and Iran to establish good relations.
Forgotten amidst the rhetoric, but mentioned by Michel Aoun and Emil
Lahoud are simple facts: Hezbollah has had electoral alliances with
Saad Hariri’s
Future Movement,
Druze leader Walid Jumblatt and Noah Berri’s Amal . In 1999, Hezbollah
members of Lebanon's engineering syndicate formed a coalition with the
Phalange Party, a rightist Christian group, and the National Liberal
Party, both allies of Israel during the civil war.
The Halifee restaurant in the Dahieh neighborhood is considered a
popular dining place for Hezbollah followers; only two blocks from the
Haret Hreil Hussineyeh mosque, whose senior cleric is Hezbollah
religious leader Mohammad al-Husein Fadlalalh. Israeli bombers, during
the July 2006 war, leveled the cleric’s home, as well as part of the
surrounding area. The restaurant crowds with persons enjoying the food,
enjoying the elegant surroundings, enjoying the evening. There is no
indication of a particular type of person; no sign of a distinctive
Hezbollah character.
La Terase is a restaurant located on Hadi Nasrallah, a street, named
after Hasan Nassrallah’s deceased son. Huge craters from Israeli
bombing still remain in the adjacent neighborhood. Enter la Terrase and
first have a choice of a coffee bar. Go deeper and there is a
cafeteria. Further in is a small restaurant. Climb the stairs and enter
a huge restaurant surrounded by couches on which linger multitudes of
young couples; drinking coffee, engaged in conversations and quiet
embraces – hardly images of Hezbollah.
Innocent Americans were killed on September 11, 2001 by Al-Qaeda
terrorists who considered the World Trade Center to be imperialist land
- the center of the U.S. establishment. Innocent Lebanese were killed
on July 15, 2006, one day of many bombardments that contributed to vast
destruction of the Dahieh district by Israeli military who considered
Dahieh to be Hezbollah land - the center of the Hezbollah
establishment. The U.S. and Hezbollah establishments still exist. Many
innocents died in both places. The U.S. remembers the day 9/11 as a
bitter memory. Lebanon had a mid-summer nightmare of smaller 9/11’s;
angry memories the residents of Dahieh will forever retain. The western
world rightfully memorializes America’s tragedy but neglects Lebanon’s
equal tragedies. It is that neglect which created Hezbollah, sustains
Hezbollah and makes Hezbollah popular throughout the Arab world.
Dan Lieberman, January 3, 2008