Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Lebanese Manifesto: A Cedar For All Seasons

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Lebanese Manifesto: A Cedar For All Seasons

    THE LEBANESE MANIFESTO: A CEDAR FOR ALL SEASONS
    Talal Nizaneddin

    The Daily Star
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?editi on_id=1&categ_id=2&article_id=106621
    Sept 18 2009
    Lebanon

    The perennial breakdown of the Lebanese political order has become
    more than a tedious joke. On a human level the pain and the stress is
    driving people to despair. Internationally, the sequence of Lebanese
    crises threaten the region and beyond with an escalation toward an
    Armageddon pitting one alliance of states against another. There has
    to be change and this change can only come from within Lebanon itself.

    The Cedar Revolution in 2005 promised a new Lebanon with a future to
    fulfill the pent up expectations of so many lost years. Four years
    later and hopes are rapidly evaporating after a turbulent period in
    which the country endured phases of having no president, no parliament
    and currently no government. Scattered doses of violence spilt blood
    in the streets of Beirut and the mountains of the Chouf. In the
    current situation, even if a government is formed, it will be yet
    another stop-gap measure to delay yet another crisis. No country can
    continue surviving this way, nor does it deserve to.

    Martyrs of the Cedar Revolution sacrificed their lives for a Lebanon
    that would enjoy sovereignty, freedom and independence. Currently,
    of the three, only freedom remains to exist but it is holding on
    barely by its fingertips. We are all in the dark in the pursuit of
    justice through the international tribunal for Lebanon. The Chief
    Prosecutor Judge Daniel Bellemare tells us that such ignorance is
    our bliss and we are forced to believe him. Apparently betrayed by
    France and later by the United States, the March 14 movement has
    lost its way. The pressure has led to fragmentation, with one of its
    original pillars, Walid Jumblatt, taking his Druze community out of
    the coalition altogether under the pretext of group survival.

    And so, the Lebanese wait once more for a solution to be imported
    based on a settlement among bigger and stronger nations. Shamelessly,
    some political leaders state this as if it is a natural state of
    affairs. Self-inflicted impotence is not nature's way by any stretch
    of the imagination, unless you are Lebanese it seems.

    In all this doom and gloom, dear reader, there is a way out
    for Lebanon. This begins with honesty but without bitterness or
    reprisals. This lays the groundwork for an intellectual revolution for
    political changes to rescue Lebanon from its demise. I propose three
    key tenets driving the Cedar Revolution and Lebanese thinking toward
    withstanding all the tests and trials of nations and international
    politics.

    First, there must be a reassessment of cultural identity. The American,
    French and Russian Revolutions all were based on an idea. The first
    two survived successfully, despite counter-revolutions and turbulence,
    because they were based on notions of justice and liberty linked to
    national identity. While respecting the specificities of Lebanon's
    religious communities, the leaders of the Cedar Revolution should
    ensure that ideals of liberty and justice should never be compromised
    and they should not be afraid or ashamed to state it out loud. If
    they cannot be achieved today, it can light a beacon of hope for
    tomorrow's generation.

    The cultural identity of Lebanon needs also to sincerely recognize
    the richness of diversity in the nation's history. This means giving
    due weight to its Canaanite origins and its multi-lingual road
    toward the modern usage of Arabic. There was a nation with a rich
    civilization here before Islam and Christianity, both of which are
    great contributors to the modern Lebanon. Nonetheless, for millennia
    the traits of this patch of land have not changed. Curiosity about the
    outside world, interaction through trade and exploration, diversity,
    freedom, community and an amazing self-confidence that does not fear
    importing new technologies, arts and ideas from the East and West. This
    is much unlike other great civilizations which based their greatness on
    military conquest. The heavy emphasis on Arab identity represents only
    a part of a much richer mosaic and unfairly alienates some Lebanese
    constituents, most obviously the Armenians but also others.

    Second, there is a need for a unique political representation
    system. At the heart of the conflict in Lebanese politics is the
    rivalry between the state and the communities and the struggle for
    supremacy among them. The state can mean an undesirable authoritarian
    rigid system in the way President Emile Lahoud attempted to assert
    himself over communitarian leaders. But it can also represent the
    opposite extreme, as the entity that protects the freedoms and rights
    of the individual from the authoritarianism of the community or the
    clan. However, eradicating the communities is not a solution because
    it would undermine the unique features of Lebanon that justify its
    existence.

    The solution is a distinct communitarian democracy system in which
    regardless of demographics, all communities, mainly based on sects,
    vote directly for a strong President. The key here is that each
    of the major communities receives a maximum share of the total
    vote. Maintaining the 50-50 Muslim Christian division, on the Christian
    side for example the Maronites count for 30 percent of the total,
    Orthodox about 15 percent and other Christians would be allocated
    the remainder. On the Muslim side Sunnis and Shiites would get 20
    percent each and other Muslims would divide up the rest with the
    Druze getting about 7 percent. A successful president would require
    the largest sum of all the major allotted voting shares and cross
    50 percent. This system would protect against a nationally unpopular
    candidate even if s/he gets 100 percent of a community's vote because
    in the case of Sunni or Shiite voters it would only account for 20
    percent of the total. This way, Lebanon can have a nationally and
    directly elected popular Maronite president without upsetting the
    sectarian framework of the country. As a balance, a vice presidency
    for the Druze can be created as a message that the interests of the
    smallest sects are represented in the state apparatus.

    The new system would promote autonomous regional administration
    in local affairs, including schools, hospitals and other social
    services. Central government would be responsible for law and order,
    administering a broad fiscal policy and foreign affairs. The central
    government would also protect the right of those secularists who do
    not feel comfortable in their communitarian setting. This includes
    the right for a secular education and life-style. Communities must
    respect the state as the state respects the communities.

    Third, a new foreign policy thinking is required. Lebanon needs
    a steel-cold pragmatism in its foreign policy that rejects
    emotionalism. Relations with states must be based on national
    interests, regardless of how near or far it is or if it is Arab
    or Asiatic. This means rejecting the idea of special relationships
    because of linguistic or religious ties. Syria is a very important
    nation for Lebanon but only because it is a geographic neighbor and
    relations should not be at expense of its own interests. Likewise,
    the United States and the West in general are not natural enemies
    of Lebanon. Lebanon should in fact look to joining the European
    Union if it serves stabilization of its economy and its political
    system. Lebanon has a moral responsibility to prioritize relations with
    countries that share its values. Likewise, Lebanon has no interest
    in peace with Israel until the Palestinian issue is resolved. One of
    the chief reasons for this is that Palestinian refugees in Lebanon
    should not be naturalized and this demands the promotion of a just
    settlement to the Palestinian cause.

    Talal Nizameddin is assistant student affairs dean at the American
    University of Beirut.
Working...
X