The Different Classes of Lebanese Prisoners in Syria

First Class:

13 pilgrims were kidnapped in the Syrian city of Aleppo today. These pilgrims are all Shiite and were taken by rebels as their bus passed through the city on their way back from Iran.

As a result, Hezbollah-supporters are now burning tires and closing the roads. Hassan Nasrallah is now having a speech to calm his people down. It’s obviously working. His level of control is unparalleled. Talks are already underway to release the 13 men.

Prediction: they will be out in a few days, max.

The Less-Than-Dogs Class:

Every other Lebanese prisoner present in Syrian prisons or still missing because of the Syrian occupation of Lebanon. Their parents have been protesting for the past 5 years non-stop, asking for any news about their sons and daughters. They’ve been hearing nothing. The parents of these men and women don’t want their children to return alive anymore; they just want any news about their children for the sake of a thirty-years stretched out closure. Even that is too much to ask for.

What’s the “fault” of these men and women? They are Christian or not part of the pro-Syrian assembly of the other sects.

The conclusion:

It is here that I have to ask: is burning tires, closing roads and threatening civil war the only way to get to something you want in Lebanon? Is turning the country into a more savage jungle the only path towards forcing others to meet your demands?

After the past few days, I’m beginning to think so.

It is here that I ask Christians in the country: In a country of savagery, is our civility the best option for self-preservation and to make our voices heard?

How much more double-facing can the other sects in Lebanon take until they crack as well?

7 thoughts on “The Different Classes of Lebanese Prisoners in Syria

  1. Pingback: Burning Tires in Lebanon? Here’s How You Can Make a Living « A Separate State of Mind | A Lebanese Blog

  2. I swear I was saying and discussing the same idea when this happened. I’m glad you pointed it out. I can’t help but think about the parents of the lebanese missing in Syria, how would they feel now! Like being abandoned all this time is not enough, here come events showing them how some people are more important than others in this f****** country… 3anjad it makes me sad, angry and ashamed

    Like

    Reply
    • I’m furious about this. Where was all this concern about Lebanese taken in Syria before? It took them a couple of hours to prepare a press conference and for their men to take it to the streets. No one cares about the “others” – they are from the wrong sect and political affiliation.

      Like

      Reply
  3. Pingback: The Shadi Mawlawi Lesson for Lebanon « A Separate State of Mind | A Lebanese Blog

  4. Pingback: Lebanon: It’s Back to Kidnapping Time :: Elites TV

Leave a comment