Tebnine
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tebnine (Arabic:تبنين, also spelled Tibnin),is a Mediterranean village spread across several hills (ranging in altitude from 700m to 800m (2,275' to 2,600') above sea level) located about 25km 915.6 miles) east of Tyre (Lebanon), in the heart of what is known as "Jabal Amel" or the mountain of "Amel". "Jabal Amel" designates the plateau situated between the western mountain range of Lebanon and the Galilee.
Contents |
[edit] Social Culture
Tebnine has several social and economic resources like a government hospital, post office, bank, and police station as well as several cafes, shops and restaurants.
In the summer, the village is a lively place. Summer residents come from the United States, Africa, Europe and Beirut. The nightlife there is a family-like gathering of the townspeople who dress fashionably to enjoy outdoor cafes and take long social walks on the "Kazdoorah".
The Kazdoo-rah is a long strip of road that extends from one end of the town to the other. Couples have met and married because of the Kazdoorah and it remains the most important social function after evening mass and evening prayer for most everyone who lives or visits the town.
[edit] History
Tebnine is the ancient town of Toron, which was a center for the Crusaders in Lebanon during the Middle Ages.
The town's population is mostly Shia Moslems and Christians. No exact population count has been taken since the census of 1932. The town could be ancient as there are references to the second largest town in the vicinity, Bint Jbeil; in the Book of Joshua, usually regarded as having been written in the 13th century BC. It is also widely believed that Jesus performed his first miracle by turning water into wine at Cana in Galilee.
[edit] Political figures
The Speaker of Parliament Nabih Berri, a Shia Moslem who is also the leader of the Amal (Hope) movement, is from Tebnine. The Mayor is Assad Fawaz.
In the United States The Honorable Charlene Mekled Elder is the first Moslem woman judge to serve in the Wayne County Circuit Court in Michigan. Suzanne Sareini and Tommy Berry are serving as City Council members of their respective cities of Dearborn and Dearborn Heights.
.
[edit] Crusader Castle
Prince Hugh of Saint Omer, the governor of Tiberias built the Crusader Castle in the year 1105 to prepare for the siege of Tyre but it was later conquered by Saladin in 1187 and then taken back by the Franks in 1229. Mamluke Sultan Al-Zahir Baibars of Egypt finally conquered it in 1266 and it's been in Arab hands ever since. [1]
The castle has been confused with other castles in the country e.g Beaufort Castle. But it is originally the Toron Castle. Today it is mostly referred to as "The Tebnine Castle".
The Crusader Castle has been used by many different factions and armies over the years because of its stragetic position overlooking miles of terrain. Tebnine, with its historic castle and and South Lebanon's history of occupiers and conquerors that include Alexander the Great, the Crusader Castle has the potential to be a monumental tourist attraction in more peaceful times.
[edit] Civil War
During the civil war, the town was mostly unaffected despite the co-existence of Muslims and Christians. As a whole however, it was subjected to the taunting of the South Lebanese Army (Israelis backed Christian Phalanges) who would every now and then fire on the outskirts of the town.
According to many of the elders in the village, The Palestine Liberation Organization was never allowed to set up in and or around Tebnine which would explain why the town often went unscathed during Israelis incursions in the seventies and eighties.
[edit] United Nations
In 1978, the United Nations took over the security of South Lebanon replacing the Lebanese Army. The Irish Battalion renamed the Tebnine army base Camp Shamrock.
The United Nations can be credited with providing jobs and social services to Tebnine and the surrounding villages. Camp Shamrock was responsible for the building and assistance of the Tebnin Orphanage.[2] Ninety percent of the townspeople speak English due to the presence of the United Nations and the US dollar is their primary monetary exchange.
[edit] Israeli-Hizbollah conflict
During the war between Israel and Hizbollah in July 2006, like other villages, Tebnine had many homes destroyed but not of the magnitude of villages like Bint Jbeil, Qana and Aita Shaab.
In the old center (Zakouk), located in the upper part of town near The Crusader Castle, most of the homes are completely destoyed or damaged.
Near the government hospital there is a central hub for transportation in and out of the village. The Israelis dropped several bombs near it forcing some 2000 refugees to take refuge inside of the hospital.[3]
It has been estimated that (Israel dropped) 100,000 cluster bombs in the area of Tebnine and the surrounding villages.[4] Two hundred cluster bombs were found by bomb defusing experts on the first day of the ceasefire near the government hospital. Experts say it will take months, if not years, to remove the unexploded bombs. A Chinese battalion attached to the U.N. forces in southern Lebanon is clearing 250 to 300 unexploded devices a day.
For the first time since the civil war in 1975, The Lebanese Army has returned to South Lebanon including Tebnine as one of the conditions of UN Resolution 1701.