http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-East/2012/1221/In-Hezbollah-stronghold-Lebanese-Christians-find-respect-stability
In Hezbollah stronghold, Lebanese Christians find respect, stability
In a Christian home in a Shiite suburb of Beirut, images of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah share mantel and wall space with the Virgin Mary.
Ariel Zirulnick, Staff writer
December 21, 2012
Randa
 Gholam, a Christian living the Hezbollah stronghold neighborhood of 
Harat Hreik, stands next to a poster of Hasan Nasrallah in her home on 
November 15, in Beirut, Lebanon. Gholam supports and admires Hezbollah 
leader, Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, and says she feels and free to worship 
as a Christian in a predominately Shiite neighborhood.
(Ann Hermes/The Christian Science Monitor)
The face of the revered Shiite militant leader appears on posters, a
 calendar, and in several photographs nestled amid those of Christian 
homeowner Randa Gholam's family members. Mr. Nasrallah is, Ms. Gholam 
asserts amid a string of superlatives, “a gift from God.”
Lebanon’s sectarian divides are legendary, and the residents of the historically Christian neighborhood of Harat Hreik, now a Hezbollah stronghold, remember well the civil war that set Beirut
 on fire. They were literally caught in the middle of some of the most 
vicious fighting, with factions firing shots off at one another from 
either side of their apartment buildings.
But in the intervening years, as Hezbollah cemented its control over the suburb of Dahiyeh,
 which includes Harat Hreik, the militant group has been an unexpected 
source of stability and even protection for the few remaining Christian 
families. Just a few blocks away from Nasrallah’s compound is St. 
Joseph’s Church, a vibrant church that Maronite Christians from across 
Beirut flock to every Sunday. 
“I feel honored to be here. They 
are honest. They are not extremists. It’s not like everyone describes,” 
Gholam says. “I can speak on behalf of all my Christian friends. They 
would say the same thing." 
The Christians living in Harat Hreik 
are a bit of an anomaly, to be sure. Christians represent a sizable 
population in Lebanon, though no census has been held in decades. And 
while Beirut's neighborhoods are gradually becoming more integrated, 
they still divide largely along religious lines. The fragile peace is 
under deep strain as regional tensions swirl because of the conflict 
next door in Syria.
Not fanning the flames
In
 Hezbollah's early days, its creed was "virulent," and in the past, it 
may have been responsible for fanning some of those flames. But as 
Hezbollah gained power and joined the political system, that changed, 
says Paul Salem, director of the Carnegie Endowment Middle East Center.
“It
 doesn’t carry with it an anti-Christian strain anymore," he says. 
"That’s almost entirely gone. It’s not in their rhetoric, it’s not in 
their creed.” 
  
Recently,
 when the Shiite holiday of Ashura was approaching, the streets were 
choked with residents shopping and passing out sweets and blanketed with
 black banners commemorating the martyrdom of Hussein Ali. But 
Christians live openly here, and they describe Hezbollah as a tolerant 
group that has steadfastly supported their presence, even sending Christmas cards to Christian neighbors like Gholam.
Gholam, who throws a party every year in honor of Nasrallah’s birthday
 and places a photo of him in her Christmas tree, is certainly an 
anomaly. But other Christian families also speak approvingly of their 
life under Hezbollah, especially when compared to its predecessor, Amal,
 which they say forced many Christian residents to sell their homes. In 
contrast, Hezbollah extended financial support to the Christian families
 when Dahiyeh needed rebuilding after the civil war and the 2006 war 
with Israel.
     
     
   
   
Rony Khoury, a Maronite Christian who was born in Harat Hreik and 
still lives in the same apartment, says he feels comfortable drinking 
alcohol on his front porch, in full view of members of Hezbollah, and 
his wife feels no pressure to don a head scarf or follow other rules 
governing Muslim women's attire. They have property in a predominantly 
Christian area of Beirut, but have no desire to move.
“After 
Hezbollah came, we didn’t have any worries,” Mr. Khoury says, citing 
safe streets. "The security is No. 1 in the world. I leave my car open, I
 forget something outside…. It's very safe now, under Hezbollah."
Only
 between 10 and 20 of the pre-civil war Christian families remain, out 
of the thousands who lived there before the fighting. While the numbers 
are low, Khoury insists that many would come back, if only they could 
afford it. But property values have climbed, and many of those who left 
can’t afford to move back.
Of course, there are calculations 
behind Hezbollah's magnanimity. Hezbollah’s political alliance with the 
Lebanese Christian political party, the Free Patriotic Movement, is 
important to the group, and it “bends over backward to keep those 
relations comfortable,” Mr. Salem says.
It might also be a way to 
one-up Sunnis in Lebanon, with whom Shiites are constantly vying for 
dominance. “They pride themselves on saying they’re more tolerant, more 
open than Sunnis. In Lebanon, it’s a point of pride,” Salem says.
Both Khoury and Gholam, as well as neighborhood Shiites who dropped by their homes, said there are far more issues with Sunnis.
"Shiite
 extremists like Hezbollah, they come to our church" as a show of 
support, says Khoury. "But Sunni extremists, like Salafis, they kill me,
 they kill you."
Things could change
Ultimately,
 it is Hezbollah’s foreign backers dictating the mood in Harat Hreik. If
 it became politically expedient for Hezbollah to abandon its acceptance
 of Christian neighbors, Hezbollah would be compelled to make life 
difficult for them.
“For Iran
 and Syria, their main backers, Hezbollah is mainly a strategic force 
against Israel. That’s the point – not creating an Islamic state or 
fighting a sectarian war," Salem says. “Hezbollah is a very top-down 
organization. If Iran decrees something else, something else will 
happen.”
But that’s not something Gholam can fathom.
"I will never even think about Hezbollah giving anyone a hard time. I can't even think about answering that question," she says.

 
 
 
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