Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Fisk: A French colonial legacy of despair

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

  • Fisk: A French colonial legacy of despair

    Robert Fisk: A French colonial legacy of despair
    They wanted Lebanon's 'independence' - but they wanted it in France's favour

    The Independent/UK
    25 November 2006

    I couldn't help a deep, unhealthy chuckle when I watched the French foreign
    minister, Philippe Douste-Blazy arrive outside the wooden doors of Saint
    George's Maronite Cathedral in Beirut this week. A throb of applause drifted
    through the tens of thousands of Lebanese who had gathered for the funeral of
    murdered industry minister Pierre Gemayel. Here, after all, was the
    representative of the nation which had supported the eviction of the Syrian army last
    year, whose president had been a friend of the equally murdered ex-prime
    minister Rafiq Hariri, whose support in the UN Security Council was helping to set
    up the tribunal which will - will it, we ask ourselves in Beirut these days? -
    try the killers of both Hariri and Gemayel.

    Douste-Blazy was aware of all this, of course, and uttered a statement of
    such self-serving exaggeration that even Lord Blair of Kut al-Amara would have
    felt jealous. "President Jacques Chirac is the best defender on earth of
    Lebanon's sovereignty," he proclaimed. "France is determined ... now more than
    ever (to) defend Lebanon's sovereignty and independence." Now I'm not sure I
    would want the man who once embraced Saddam Hussein as a close friend to be my
    greatest defender, let alone my greatest defender "on earth" - funny, isn't
    it, how the French can never shake off their Napoleonic self-regard - and like
    the doggy poo on Parisian streets, I'd certainly want to tread carefully
    around France's interest in Lebanon's "independence".

    I hasten to add that - compared to the mendacious, utterly false,
    repulsively hypocritical and cancerous foreign policy of Dame Beckett of Basra -
    Chirac's dealings with France's former colonies and mandates are positively
    Christ-like in their integrity. But the Lebanon that France was to create after the
    First World War was to be based on the sectarian divisions which the infamous
    François Georges-Picot had observed earlier as a humble consul in this jewel
    of the old Ottoman empire, divided as it was between Shia Muslims and Sunni
    Muslims and Druze and Christian Maronites - France's favourite community and
    the faith of the murdered Pierre Gemayel - and the Greek Orthodox and the
    Greek Catholics and the Chaldeans and the rest. At that time the Maronites
    represented a thin majority, but emigration and their propensity for smaller
    families than their Muslim neighbours steadily turned the Christians into a
    minority which may now number 29 per cent or less.

    But the French wanted the Maronites to run Lebanon and thus after
    independence bequeathed them the presidency. Sunni Muslims would hold the prime
    ministership and the Shias, who are today the largest community, would be
    compensated by holding the speakership of parliament. The French thus wanted Lebanon's
    "independence" - but they wanted it to be in France's favour.

    Two problems immediately presented themselves to the Lebanese. By claiming
    the largest area which it was possible to rule with the tiniest majority - the
    Maronite religious leader of the time, Patriarch Hayek, was responsible for
    this - the Christians ensured that they would soon be outnumbered and thus
    rule their country from a position of minority power. After Irish partition, old
    James Craig, the founder of Northern Ireland, was a wiser bird than Hayek.
    >From the historic province of Ulster, he ruthlessly dispensed with the three
    counties of Donegal, Monaghan and Cavan because their Protestant communities
    were too small to sustain - and created a new Ulster whose six counties
    ensured a Protestant majority for decades to come.
    The other Lebanese problem - which the people of Northern Ireland will
    immediately spot - is that a sectarian state, where only Maronites can be the
    president and where only Sunnis can be the prime minister, cannot be a modern
    state. Yet if you take away the sectarianism France created, Lebanon will no
    longer be Lebanon. The French realised all this in the same way - I suspect - as
    the Americans have now realised the nature of their sectarian monster in
    Iraq. Listen to what that great Arab historian, Albert Hourani, wrote about the
    experience of being a Levantine in 1946 - and apply it to Iraq. To live in
    such a way, Hourani wrote:

    "is to live in two worlds or more at once, without belonging to either; to
    be able to go through the external forms which indicate the possession of a
    certain nationality, religion or culture, without actually possessing it. ... It
    is to belong to no community and to possess nothing of one's own. It reveals
    itself in lostness, cynicism and despair."

    Amid such geopolitical uncertainties, it is easy for westerners to see these
    people in the borders and colours in which we have chosen to define them.
    Hence all those newspaper maps of Lebanon - Shias at the bottom and on the
    right, the Sunnis and Druze in the middle and at the top, and the Christians
    uneasily wedged between Beirut and the northern Mediterranean coast. We draw the
    same sectarian maps of Iraq - Shias at the bottom, Sunnis in the middle (the
    famous "Sunni triangle" though it is not triangular at all) and Kurds at the
    top.

    The British army adopted the same cynical colonial attitude in its
    cartography of Belfast. I still possess their sectarian maps of the 1970s in which
    Protestant areas were coloured orange (of course) and Catholic districts were
    green (of course) while the mixed, middle-class area around Malone Road
    appeared as a dull brown, the colour of a fine, dry sherry. But we do not draw these
    maps of our own British or American cities. I could draw a map of Bradford's
    ethnic districts - but we would never print it. I could draw a black-white
    ethnic map of Washington - but the Washington Post would never dream of
    publishing it.

    And thus we divide the "other", while assiduously denying the "other" in
    ourself. This is what the French did in Lebanon, what the British did in
    Northern Ireland and the Americans are now doing in Iraq. In this way we maintain
    our homogenous power. Pierre Gemayel grew up in Bikfaya, firmly in that wedge
    of territory north of Beirut. Many Lebanese now fear a conflict between those
    who support the "democracy" to which Gemayel belonged and the Shias, the
    people - in every sense of the word - at the "bottom". And the French are going
    to ensure the country in which all these poor people are trapped remains "i
    ndependent".

    Quite so. And by the way, when did we ever see an ethnic map of Paris and
    its banlieues?
Working...
X