Ahmad Ibrahim
Al Jazeera
6/8/2009
The upcoming Lebanese general election offers an opportunity to observe a monarchical democracy in action as sons and daughter of slain leaders compete in June's election in unprecedented number.
Nayla Tueni, 26 - the daughter of assassinated journalist and MP Gebran Tueni and granddaughter of current MP Ghassan Tueni - is standing in Achrafiyeh, also known as Beirut District One.
Her maternal grandfather is former minster
Michel Murr, whose own son Elias is now Lebanon's defence minster.
Nadim Gemayel, 27, is also running for
election in Achrafiyeh. Like Tueni, politics definitely runs in his
family.
Gemayel is the son of Bashir Gemayel,
a former president-elect assassinated days before his swearing-in ceremony
in September 1982.
Meanwhile the younger Gemayel's cousin,
29-year-old Sami who is also the son of another former president, is standing
for election in the Matn district of Mount Lebanon.
All of the Gemayels belong to the Phalange Party.
And voters, of their own free will, are rushing to usher in their parliamentary
representatives on the basis of surname and, effectively, right of succession.
So entrenched is this practice that
it transcends regions, but it is especially predominent among Christians.
Why?
Lebanese democracy is one of the biggest
myths in the modern Middle East.
Since independence in 1943, there have
been parties, elections and a parliament but another reality lies behind
this apparent democracy.
Dynastic tendency
Political power, either within parties
or as independent politicians, is largely transferred along hereditary
lines. Political careers are passed on from father to son, husband to
wife and brother to brother.
This dynastic tendency in Lebanese
politics is present in nearly every party to the point where it is virtually
impossible to distinguish between loyalty to the party and loyalty to
the family.
Myths seem to be an indispensible part
of the creation of the modern state. In the Middle East, most of the
countries were created either by the forceful inclusion of small entities
and principalities, or as the result of the disintegration of multi-national,
multi-religious empires.
And Lebanon was no exception.
As a result of the collapse of the
Ottoman Empire and the subsequent scramble by the victors of the World
War One to divide up the territories between themselves, Syria and Lebanon
were placed under French control.
Except there was no entity called Lebanon
before the French set foot in the region in 1920.
There was a Mount Lebanon and the majority
of its inhabitants were Maronite Christians - an eastern Catholic denomination.
So a viable state had to be built around, and for the benefit of, those
inhabitants.
The fact that they were allies and
co-religionists of France helped their cause.
But a myth had to be created all the
same, as the new country of Lebanon was both the result of the disintegration
of an empire and the forceful inclusion of at least three small regions
into a centralised state.
Maronite influence
The myth, of course, was the distinctiveness,
uniqueness and superiority of the Maronite sect, its mythical past in
Mount Lebanon and even its different ancestry to its neighbours.
Maronites were Christians. Their neighbours
were Muslim.
The Phalangists started out as a paramilitary
youth organisation modelled along 1930s German National Socialist lines, as
observed by the party's founder Pierre Gemayel.
Studying this party is studying the
history of Lebanon: it is the oldest of the Christian parties, and it
has produced Lebanon's best-known dynasty.
At 83, Joseph Abu Khalil, is one of
the oldest members of the current Phalange party, having joined it at
the age of 16.
"Lebanon was established in 1920
as a Christian project, stemming from a Christian political ideology.
The Phalange party is based on that, and is a defending force for it,"
he says.
Karim Paqradouni, a former leader of
the party and its past ideologue, echoes this sentiment: "The Maronites
regard themselves as the founders of Lebanon, it was established by
them, and for them. They can only see Lebanon through their religious
sect."
But Lebanon's other sects outnumber
Maronites by about two to one. Therefore, the 'founders of Lebanon' have
to struggle hard to maintain what many regard as their superior position
as given to them by the French, their former colonisers.
The Christian parties, and the Phalangists
in particular, have taken it upon themselves to do just that. And so
the political party became the representative of the religious sect.
In turn, as the family is at the centre of every party, surnames came
to represent each sect.
It is a position that attracted the
devotion of sect members and was cultivated by each of the political
families.
There are other factors behind Lebanon's
reliance on what could be described as a modern-day feudal political
system.
Protecting traditions
Sociologically, most communities living
in multi-ethnic entities and with no experience of representative democracy
there is a security dilemma.
Fear that their particular traditions
and culture will be overwhelmed and disappear altogether has allowed politicians
to overplay the need for voters to back and enforce their particular
sect's party - so ensuring their own survival.
Historically, the centrality of the
family is easily traced to feudal times when the overlord allowed peasants
and their families the use of land in exchange for unquestioned loyalty.
In more recent times, this social system
has been translated into the current political set-up; the overlord has
become a political leader, the peasants have become his constituents,
and, instead of land, favours are exchanged for electoral loyalty.
It follows, of course, that political
candidates need to demonstrate they fulfil the requirements set down
by this Lebanon legend by tracing their own ancestry.
Suleiman Franjieh, a former president
who hails from the northern Lebanese town of Zghorta, is an example of
this phenomena.
He has claimed to be a direct descendent
of a crusader - his name translates as Frankish, the term used by Arabs
to describe the Crusaders. Interestingly, his grandson, also named Suleiman,
is contesting the coming elections in the same town.
(CGGL note: Actually, “Franjieh”
is a feminine name which means a Frankish woman, presumably the wife
of an ancestor of Mr. Franjieh. It is similar to the case of Fouad Siniora.
An Italian siniora must have been the wife of one of Fouad’s ancestors.
)
Moreover, the first community to have
a long established ruling family were the former lords of Mount Lebanon:
the Druze.
Their former peasants, the Maronite
Christians, assumed this feudal tradition when they eventually outnumbered
and overwhelmed their former overlords. Having such families denotes
respectability and traceable tradition.
So, when the election score sheets
are counted at midnight on June 7, one obvious winner will be the decades-old fusing
of politics, history, region and religion.
It is unlikely this vote will unsettle
the elected dynasties that continue to dominate Lebanon's monarchical
democracy.