| Mission Report: Lebanon: July 2009 |
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Missionary Trip to Lebanon—Reported by Joseph Meaney, July 18-30, 2009.
“Lebanon is more than a country, it is a message!” These words, delivered in French at a Mass in Beirut by Pope John Paul II during his historic 1997 missionary voyage, evoke the tragic/inspiring nature of this land. Fr. Paul Marx journeyed to 91 countries in his decades of service as an international pro-life missionary, but it was almost impossible to go to Lebanon during its civil war from 1975-1990. Even after the official end of the civil war, internal conflicts and hostilities with Israel continued. In 2006, a month-long “mini-war” between the Hezbollah militia and Israeli Defense Forces resulted in tremendous damage to Lebanon’s infrastructure.
From July 18-30 I carried out Human Life International’s first official trip to this biblical land of saints, cedars and mountains. HLI has supported pro-life activities in Lebanon for many years, especially the work of Dr. Robert Caracache and the House of Light and Hope: Beit el Nour. Much of their efforts since 1986 have focused on the rehabilitation of prostitutes and juvenile delinquents. During my time there, I enjoyed a very cordial meeting with His Excellency Georges Bacaouni, the Melkite Catholic Archbishop of Tyr, whose religious vocation grew out of his involvement with the Beit el Nour group.
Planned Parenthood Depopulating Lebanon
Lebanon is just entering a totally new crisis, a demographic one. As recently as 1980, the average Lebanese family had 4.1 children. By the year 2000 this had fallen to 2.1, and the most recent total fertility rate (TFR) statistic for 2009 is 1.8 babies per woman.[1] It marks the first time in history they have fallen below the minimum replacement rate to prevent demographic decline over time. Lebanon has thus joined the expanding “club” of dying nations found on all continents now but especially dominant in the northern hemisphere. A sign of this demographic malaise is that Lebanon employs many foreign workers to keep their economy functioning. I was surprised to learn that many families have domestic servants from the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, and even Brazil or parts of Africa. A home builder told me that almost all his manual laborers come from abroad.
It is clear that both the Lebanon Family Planning Association and a decline in pro-life and pro-family values are at the heart of the new micro-family dominating Lebanon. The Lebanese, both Christians and Muslims, have traditionally valued large families. Yet, in modern times, many Christians began having fewer babies and large numbers of Christians fled the country. The Shi’a Muslims, on the other hand, experienced a demographic boom that has probably now made them the single largest religious denomination in the country. When we looked at the locations of Lebanon Family Planning Association birth control clinics, we discovered that they are all in Muslim, primarily Shi’a, areas. If Planned Parenthood has its way, the entire country will be contracepted and sterilized into oblivion.
The Lebanese situation is a real opportunity for a form of pro-life ecumenism. I am reminded of a beautiful story. HLI’s Dr. Antun Lisec is from Croatia. He frequently goes to Serbia in his travels and tells his audiences that he is a Croat and his message is “save the Serb babies!” His concern makes a big impression since these two peoples have a history of conflict and fought each other from 1991-1995. Planned Parenthood is clearly an enemy of humanity, not just of Catholics or Christians: Muslims should join with us in resisting these anti-baby ideologues of death.
The Lebanese Catholics are inspiring. It would be difficult to find a Christian family there that did not have at least one martyr for the Faith! Despite all this suffering, the people I met had forgiven their persecutors and enemies. Thousands upon thousands of martyrs through the centuries have sanctified this land that is mentioned 72 times in the Bible. They have beloved historical figures like St. Charbel, St. Neemtallah Hardini and St. Rafqa. More recently, Father Jacques El-Haddad, known as Abouna Yaaqoub, was beatified in 2008. He died in 1954 after founding a religious congregation, the Franciscans of the Cross of Lebanon, and creating many hospitals and schools. I saw large portraits of him on display in public spaces. Religious art is on street corners and part of the fabric of every home in Lebanon, particularly in the Christian areas.
HLI Ireland on the Pro-Life Mission to Lebanon
My trip to Lebanon was part of a mission organized by a Franciscan Friar of the Renewal, Br. Youssef-Mariam Hanna. This Lebanese friar, who is studying for the priesthood at St. Joseph’s Major Seminary in New York, decided to organize a series of pro-life events in his homeland during his summer break. HLI participated actively in this project with representation from myself, as well as Patrick McCrystal and Dr. Rita O’Connor of HLI Ireland. Several other friars and lay people rounded out the group. We spoke to young persons on retreat and in open air gatherings. One day was devoted to giving information to priests and religious on the pro-life issue and another involved speaking to Lebanese psychologists and mental health professionals about various aspects of Post-Abortion Syndrome.
Mrs. Bernadette Goulding came from Rachel’s Vineyard Ireland/UK and with Br. Youssef-Mariam organized the first ever post-abortion healing retreat in Lebanon. We learned that although the laws on the books are 100% pro-life, some women go to doctors who commit abortions in secret and others go abroad to abort their babies. One big motivator for recourse to abortion is family shame when an unmarried daughter becomes pregnant. It is very difficult in these cultural circumstances to find women with the courage to attend such a retreat or publicly witness to the devastation that abortion has wrought in their lives.
Unfortunately, Lebanon has an international sex-tourism dimension, and prostitution flourishes there.
So many wonderful experiences happened during this trip that it is difficult to choose the best ones to relate. I went with Dr. Robert Caracache to visit an orphanage run by Syriac-Orthodox nuns. They were forced to leave Baghdad after their chaplain was murdered by Muslim insurgents a few years ago. It was a tragedy like many we have heard. What struck me were the further details that the local Iraqi Shi’a Muslims begged the nuns to stay in their midst and promised to defend them with their lives. The sisters’ witness of goodness and charity had touched the hearts of their Muslim neighbors.
Spreading the Pro-Life Message via Satellite
HLI is just starting to break into the Arabic-speaking world. I went on our first mission trip to Tunisia this past summer. Please pray that we succeed in defending life in this region before the death peddlers impose their agenda. Hopefully, we shall expand HLI’s mission field to Egypt and other nearby nations soon. Planned Parenthood and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) have certainly targeted them. (The current head of the UNFPA is a Saudi Arabian national.) Certainly Lebanon, with its strong Christians, is an excellent base for HLI’s efforts to defend life in the Arabic-speaking world.
[1] http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/idb/country.php (The International Data Base (IDB) is a precious resource for accurate current and historic demographic information on most countries of the world.)
[2] I distributed over 15,000 of the St. Michael prayer cards in Arabic, French and English on this trip.
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We made excellent use of mass communications on this pro-life missionary journey. I was interviewed several times on