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Marada Movement

The Marada Movement (Arabic: تيار المردة, romanizedTayyār Al-Marada) is a Lebanese political party and a former militia active during the Lebanese Civil War named after the legendary Marada (also called Mardaites) warriors of the early Middle Ages that fought on the external edge of the Byzantine Empire. Originally designated the Marada Brigade (لواء المردة Liwa al-Marada), the group initially emerged as the personal militia of Suleiman Frangieh, president of Lebanon at the outbreak of the war in 1975. They were also initially known as the Zgharta Liberation Army, after Frangieh's hometown of Zgharta in northern Lebanon.

Marada Movement
تيار المردة
AbbreviationMM
PresidentSuleiman Frangieh, Jr.
FounderSuleiman Frangieh
Founded1967 (1967) (as militia)
1991 (1991) (as party)
HeadquartersZgharta, Lebanon
IdeologyLebanese nationalism
Christian democracy
Pro-Syrian government
Political positionRight-wing[1]
ReligionMaronite Catholicism
National affiliationMarch 8 Alliance
Colors    Blue[2] and green[3]
Parliamentary blocIndependent National Bloc
Parliament of Lebanon
2 / 128
Cabinet of Lebanon
2 / 24
Party flag
Website
elmarada.org

Marada in Lebanese history edit

The Marada were a group of independent communities in Lebanon and the surrounding highlands after the conquest of Syria by the Arab army in 630 CE. While some historians argue that the Marada "States" were that of a Maronite Aramaic-speaking Christian warrior elite, other historians tend to downplay their importance, and describe a more complex scenario. The Maronites and thus the Marada were given relative autonomy in the Umayyad Caliphate. The Marada were known by some as a fierce warrior group, and according to some, the name was synonymous with the Arabic word for rebels or also Maronites.

Lebanese civil war edit

During the Lebanese civil war was called one of the Maronite militias "Marada Movement". During the Lebanese civil war, Zgharta was the frontline and Christian stronghold of the north in northern Lebanon. The Zgharta-based Marada Brigade militia successfully repulsed and responded with attacks on armed militias from Tripoli, Danniyeh and Koura districts, and from PLO militias from the neighboring Palestinian refugee camps of Beddawi and Nahr al-Bared.

In March 1976, the Marada Brigade supported the hard-pressed Lebanese Army Republican Guard Battalion in defending the Presidential Palace in Baabda from a two-pronged combined LNMLAA assault, though prior to the attack the Lebanese President had decamped to the safety of Jounieh.[4]

The Marada were initially allied with the Kataeb until 1978, the year when Suleiman Frangieh refused the Lebanese Front's plan to declare a Christian canton, a Christian enclave separated from the rest of the country. A new alliance was formed between Suleiman Frangieh and Prime Minister Rachid Karami to counter the Lebanese Front's plan that called for separate enclaves/cantons of Christians, Druze and Muslims. Frangieh became firmly set against the onset of a Lebanese federal state that would make an alliance with Israel, promoted instead an Arab pro-Syrian alliance and stopped attending meetings with the Lebanese Front.

The incident is known as the Ehden massacre.[5] Kataeb member at the time Samir Geagea, who allegedly headed the Phalangist force responsible for the Ehden massacre, admitted that he was among the "military squad" that was in charge of the Ehden "operation", but he denied taking part in the massacre, claiming that he was shot in his right hand before getting to the area and was taken to a hospital. Elie Hobeika has always denied taking part in the killing.

Modern politics edit

After the 2005 legislative elections, the Marada became a member of the (pro-Syrian) opposition alliance together with Hezbollah.

In June 2006, the Marada Movement was officially launched as a political party during a ceremony attended by supporters and representatives from Hezbollah, Amal Movement, the Free Patriotic Movement, and several pro-Syrian political figures.

In the 2009 Lebanese general election, Marada won all 3 seats in the electoral district of Zgharta,[6] Marada was initially part of the Change and Reform bloc but left in 2013.[7]

In the 2010 municipal election, Marada won in Zgharta and won a total of 17 out of 31 municipalities in the Zgharta District.[8]

In the 2018 Lebanese general election, Marada won 3 seats in North III: 2 Maronite seats in Zgharta and 1 Orthodox seat in Koura. After the elections, Frangieh formed the Independent National Bloc (Arabic: التكتل الوطني) with Farid Haykal Khazen, Faisal Karami, Jihad Al Samad and Jbeil Shia MP Moustafa Husseini.[9]

Faisal Karami and Jihad Al Samad left the bloc, Koura MP Fayez Ghosn and Jbeil MP Moustafa Husseini died which left the bloc with only 2 MP.[10][11]

In the 2022 Lebanese general election, only one official Marada candidate Tony Frangieh Jr. won, Marada candidate in Tripoli Rafli Diab got the highest preferential votes for the Orthodox seat in North II but lost, Koura candidate Fadi Ghosn (brother of Fayez Ghosn) lost in favor of William Tawk.[12]

After the elections, Tony Frangieh formed a bloc with several MPs that represent feudal families (Frangieh, Khazen, Tawk, Murr) and their presidential candidate for the 2022-2023 Lebanese presidential election is Suleiman Frangieh.[13]

Controversy edit

Killings edit

On 16 June 1957, Sleiman Frangieh and his followers killed 30 loyalist to the Douaihy family in a church in Miziara, the massacre is known as Miziara massacre.[14][15]

Amid tensions in the North between the Kataeb and Marada parties when the Kataeb tried to expend their power in the region,[16] Marada militiamen assassinated Joud el Bayeh, a Kataeb leader in Zgharta, which ignited the Ehden massacre.[17] To seek revenge for the Ehden massacre, on 28 June 1978, Marada brigades affiliates captured and killed 26 Kataeb members in the villages of Qaa and Ras Baalback, the massacre is known as Qaa massacre.

On 2 May 1987, a Zgharta unit called Marada 3/400 set up an ambush to kill Bahaa Douaihy and Roumanos Douaihy amid the long-running Frangieh and Douaihy clans conflict.[18]

Between 2005 and 2008 numerous attacks targeted and killed multiple Lebanese Forces members. Those killed include: Riad Abi Khater in Batroun, Pierre Ishac in Bsarma and Tony Issa in Dahr al ain.[19]

Attacks edit

The Marada militia destroyed the house of Greek Orthodox MP Fouad Ghosn in the town of Kousba in the Koura district after he voted for Bachir Gemayel during the 1982 Lebanese presidential election.[20]

Marada loyalist burned the house of newly elected MP Samir Frangieh because Sleiman Frangieh lost the 2005 elections.[21]

List of Marada leaders edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Reconciliation, reform and resilience". Accord (24): 97. July 2012 – via Conciliation Resources.
  2. ^ El Marada Logo. http://www.elmaradaaustralia.org 2008-05-17 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ El Marada Logo. http://www.elmarada.org
  4. ^ O'Ballance, Civil War in Lebanon (1998), pp. 46–47.
  5. ^ "The Ehden Massacre: This is how the MOSSAD chose Samir Geagea". MARADA. May 14, 2009. Retrieved 15 June 2012.
  6. ^ "النتائج الرسمية - زغرتا".
  7. ^ "كتلة التغيير والإصلاح... تتقلّص من 27 نائباً إلى ما دون الـ20؟!". Elnashra News.
  8. ^ "نتائج الانتخابات في زغرتا". June 2010.
  9. ^ "التكتل الوطني". elmarada.
  10. ^ "Death of deputy Fayez Ghosn". en.akhbaralyawm.com.
  11. ^ "MP Farid Al-Khazen announces death of member of the National Bloc, MP Mustafa Al-Husseini, after a struggle with illness". MTV Lebanon.
  12. ^ "Elections 2022 - دائرة الشمال الثالثه". elections.gov.lb.
  13. ^ "لماذا انضم ميشال المر الى التكتل الوطني؟ – Beirut El Hora". June 23, 2022.
  14. ^ "Lebanese warlord Franjieh wields power like Mafia don".
  15. ^ "BQFP publishes English translation of Lebanese novelist Jabbour Douaihy's June Rain". 6 June 2014.
  16. ^ Itamar, Rabinovich (1984). The War for Lebanon, 1970-1983. p. 98. ISBN 1501742957.
  17. ^ Azzam, Roger J. (2005). Liban L'instruction d'un Crime. Cheminements. p. 292.
  18. ^ "من جرائم جماعة المردة بإمرة سليمان "الزغير" – الجزء الأول: اغتيال الشبّان بهاء سركيس الدويهي ورومانس الدويهي ووهيب طنوس في أرده في 2 أيار 1987". Lebanese Forces Official Website. 2010-06-14. Retrieved 2022-08-13.
  19. ^ "إن ننسَ فلن ننسى: أبطال الحرب شهداء السلام… من سامي أبو جودة الى بيار إسحق (أوغيت سلامة)". Lebanese Forces Official Website. 2014-09-24. Retrieved 2022-08-15.
  20. ^ "من حكايا لبنان السياسية 2/2 بشير الجميل.. رئيساً منتخباً لم يتسلّم سلطاته الدستورية". IMLebanon. 2019-01-04. Retrieved 2022-08-13.
  21. ^ "حريق مفتعل يستهدف منزل نائب منتخب في شمال لبنان". aawsat.

Bibliography edit

  • Claire Hoy and Victor Ostrovsky, By Way of Deception: The Making and Unmaking of a Mossad Officer, St. Martin's Press, New York 1990. ISBN 0-9717595-0-2
  • Denise Ammoun, Histoire du Liban contemporain: Tome 2 1943-1990, Fayard, Paris 2005. ISBN 978-2-213-61521-9 (in French)
  • Edgar O'Ballance, Civil War in Lebanon, 1975-92, Palgrave Macmillan, London 1998. ISBN 0-333-72975-7
  • Rex Brynen, Sanctuary and Survival: the PLO in Lebanon, Boulder: Westview Press, 1990.
  • Robert Fisk, Pity the Nation: Lebanon at War, London: Oxford University Press, (3rd ed. 2001). ISBN 0-19-280130-9
  • Matthew S. Gordon, The Gemayels (World Leaders Past & Present), Chelsea House Publishers, 1988. ISBN 1-55546-834-9

External links edit

  • المَــوقع الرسمي لتيار المَـــرده - El Marada Party Official Website

marada, movement, arabic, تيار, المردة, romanized, tayyār, marada, lebanese, political, party, former, militia, active, during, lebanese, civil, named, after, legendary, marada, also, called, mardaites, warriors, early, middle, ages, that, fought, external, ed. The Marada Movement Arabic تيار المردة romanized Tayyar Al Marada is a Lebanese political party and a former militia active during the Lebanese Civil War named after the legendary Marada also called Mardaites warriors of the early Middle Ages that fought on the external edge of the Byzantine Empire Originally designated the Marada Brigade لواء المردة Liwa al Marada the group initially emerged as the personal militia of Suleiman Frangieh president of Lebanon at the outbreak of the war in 1975 They were also initially known as the Zgharta Liberation Army after Frangieh s hometown of Zgharta in northern Lebanon Marada Movement تيار المردةAbbreviationMMPresidentSuleiman Frangieh Jr FounderSuleiman FrangiehFounded1967 1967 as militia 1991 1991 as party HeadquartersZgharta LebanonIdeologyLebanese nationalismChristian democracyPro Syrian governmentPolitical positionRight wing 1 ReligionMaronite CatholicismNational affiliationMarch 8 AllianceColors Blue 2 and green 3 Parliamentary blocIndependent National BlocParliament of Lebanon2 128Cabinet of Lebanon2 24Party flagWebsiteelmarada orgPolitics of LebanonPolitical partiesElections Contents 1 Marada in Lebanese history 1 1 Lebanese civil war 1 2 Modern politics 2 Controversy 2 1 Killings 2 2 Attacks 3 List of Marada leaders 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksMarada in Lebanese history editThe Marada were a group of independent communities in Lebanon and the surrounding highlands after the conquest of Syria by the Arab army in 630 CE While some historians argue that the Marada States were that of a Maronite Aramaic speaking Christian warrior elite other historians tend to downplay their importance and describe a more complex scenario The Maronites and thus the Marada were given relative autonomy in the Umayyad Caliphate The Marada were known by some as a fierce warrior group and according to some the name was synonymous with the Arabic word for rebels or also Maronites Lebanese civil war edit During the Lebanese civil war was called one of the Maronite militias Marada Movement During the Lebanese civil war Zgharta was the frontline and Christian stronghold of the north in northern Lebanon The Zgharta based Marada Brigade militia successfully repulsed and responded with attacks on armed militias from Tripoli Danniyeh and Koura districts and from PLO militias from the neighboring Palestinian refugee camps of Beddawi and Nahr al Bared In March 1976 the Marada Brigade supported the hard pressed Lebanese Army Republican Guard Battalion in defending the Presidential Palace in Baabda from a two pronged combined LNM LAA assault though prior to the attack the Lebanese President had decamped to the safety of Jounieh 4 The Marada were initially allied with the Kataeb until 1978 the year when Suleiman Frangieh refused the Lebanese Front s plan to declare a Christian canton a Christian enclave separated from the rest of the country A new alliance was formed between Suleiman Frangieh and Prime Minister Rachid Karami to counter the Lebanese Front s plan that called for separate enclaves cantons of Christians Druze and Muslims Frangieh became firmly set against the onset of a Lebanese federal state that would make an alliance with Israel promoted instead an Arab pro Syrian alliance and stopped attending meetings with the Lebanese Front The incident is known as the Ehden massacre 5 Kataeb member at the time Samir Geagea who allegedly headed the Phalangist force responsible for the Ehden massacre admitted that he was among the military squad that was in charge of the Ehden operation but he denied taking part in the massacre claiming that he was shot in his right hand before getting to the area and was taken to a hospital Elie Hobeika has always denied taking part in the killing Modern politics edit After the 2005 legislative elections the Marada became a member of the pro Syrian opposition alliance together with Hezbollah In June 2006 the Marada Movement was officially launched as a political party during a ceremony attended by supporters and representatives from Hezbollah Amal Movement the Free Patriotic Movement and several pro Syrian political figures In the 2009 Lebanese general election Marada won all 3 seats in the electoral district of Zgharta 6 Marada was initially part of the Change and Reform bloc but left in 2013 7 In the 2010 municipal election Marada won in Zgharta and won a total of 17 out of 31 municipalities in the Zgharta District 8 In the 2018 Lebanese general election Marada won 3 seats in North III 2 Maronite seats in Zgharta and 1 Orthodox seat in Koura After the elections Frangieh formed the Independent National Bloc Arabic التكتل الوطني with Farid Haykal Khazen Faisal Karami Jihad Al Samad and Jbeil Shia MP Moustafa Husseini 9 Faisal Karami and Jihad Al Samad left the bloc Koura MP Fayez Ghosn and Jbeil MP Moustafa Husseini died which left the bloc with only 2 MP 10 11 In the 2022 Lebanese general election only one official Marada candidate Tony Frangieh Jr won Marada candidate in Tripoli Rafli Diab got the highest preferential votes for the Orthodox seat in North II but lost Koura candidate Fadi Ghosn brother of Fayez Ghosn lost in favor of William Tawk 12 After the elections Tony Frangieh formed a bloc with several MPs that represent feudal families Frangieh Khazen Tawk Murr and their presidential candidate for the 2022 2023 Lebanese presidential election is Suleiman Frangieh 13 Controversy editKillings edit On 16 June 1957 Sleiman Frangieh and his followers killed 30 loyalist to the Douaihy family in a church in Miziara the massacre is known as Miziara massacre 14 15 Amid tensions in the North between the Kataeb and Marada parties when the Kataeb tried to expend their power in the region 16 Marada militiamen assassinated Joud el Bayeh a Kataeb leader in Zgharta which ignited the Ehden massacre 17 To seek revenge for the Ehden massacre on 28 June 1978 Marada brigades affiliates captured and killed 26 Kataeb members in the villages of Qaa and Ras Baalback the massacre is known as Qaa massacre On 2 May 1987 a Zgharta unit called Marada 3 400 set up an ambush to kill Bahaa Douaihy and Roumanos Douaihy amid the long running Frangieh and Douaihy clans conflict 18 Between 2005 and 2008 numerous attacks targeted and killed multiple Lebanese Forces members Those killed include Riad Abi Khater in Batroun Pierre Ishac in Bsarma and Tony Issa in Dahr al ain 19 Attacks edit The Marada militia destroyed the house of Greek Orthodox MP Fouad Ghosn in the town of Kousba in the Koura district after he voted for Bachir Gemayel during the 1982 Lebanese presidential election 20 Marada loyalist burned the house of newly elected MP Samir Frangieh because Sleiman Frangieh lost the 2005 elections 21 List of Marada leaders editSuleiman Frangieh 1967 1976 Tony Frangieh 1976 1978 Robert Frangieh 1978 1990 Suleiman Frangieh Jr 1990 present See also editArmy of Free Lebanon Ehden massacre Lebanese Civil War Lebanese Front Lebanese National Salvation Front Marada BrigadeReferences edit Reconciliation reform and resilience Accord 24 97 July 2012 via Conciliation Resources El Marada Logo http www elmaradaaustralia org Archived 2008 05 17 at the Wayback Machine El Marada Logo http www elmarada org O Ballance Civil War in Lebanon 1998 pp 46 47 The Ehden Massacre This is how the MOSSAD chose Samir Geagea MARADA May 14 2009 Retrieved 15 June 2012 النتائج الرسمية زغرتا كتلة التغيير والإصلاح تتقل ص من 27 نائبا إلى ما دون الـ20 Elnashra News نتائج الانتخابات في زغرتا June 2010 التكتل الوطني elmarada Death of deputy Fayez Ghosn en akhbaralyawm com MP Farid Al Khazen announces death of member of the National Bloc MP Mustafa Al Husseini after a struggle with illness MTV Lebanon Elections 2022 دائرة الشمال الثالثه elections gov lb لماذا انضم ميشال المر الى التكتل الوطني Beirut El Hora June 23 2022 Lebanese warlord Franjieh wields power like Mafia don BQFP publishes English translation of Lebanese novelist Jabbour Douaihy s June Rain 6 June 2014 Itamar Rabinovich 1984 The War for Lebanon 1970 1983 p 98 ISBN 1501742957 Azzam Roger J 2005 Liban L instruction d un Crime Cheminements p 292 من جرائم جماعة المردة بإمرة سليمان الزغير الجزء الأول اغتيال الشب ان بهاء سركيس الدويهي ورومانس الدويهي ووهيب طنوس في أرده في 2 أيار 1987 Lebanese Forces Official Website 2010 06 14 Retrieved 2022 08 13 إن ننس فلن ننسى أبطال الحرب شهداء السلام من سامي أبو جودة الى بيار إسحق أوغيت سلامة Lebanese Forces Official Website 2014 09 24 Retrieved 2022 08 15 من حكايا لبنان السياسية 2 2 بشير الجميل رئيسا منتخبا لم يتسل م سلطاته الدستورية IMLebanon 2019 01 04 Retrieved 2022 08 13 حريق مفتعل يستهدف منزل نائب منتخب في شمال لبنان aawsat Bibliography editClaire Hoy and Victor Ostrovsky By Way of Deception The Making and Unmaking of a Mossad Officer St Martin s Press New York 1990 ISBN 0 9717595 0 2 Denise Ammoun Histoire du Liban contemporain Tome 2 1943 1990 Fayard Paris 2005 ISBN 978 2 213 61521 9 in French Edgar O Ballance Civil War in Lebanon 1975 92 Palgrave Macmillan London 1998 ISBN 0 333 72975 7 Rex Brynen Sanctuary and Survival the PLO in Lebanon Boulder Westview Press 1990 Robert Fisk Pity the Nation Lebanon at War London Oxford University Press 3rd ed 2001 ISBN 0 19 280130 9 Matthew S Gordon The Gemayels World Leaders Past amp Present Chelsea House Publishers 1988 ISBN 1 55546 834 9External links editالم ــوقع الرسمي لتيار الم ـــرده El Marada Party Official Website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marada Movement amp oldid 1209199084, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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