The environmental movement continues to gain steam, thanks to the
efforts of literally dozens of organizations both local and
national. One of the newer organizations is T.E.R.R.E., or Tentons
Ensemble de Realizer un Reve a nos Enfants (Let us try together to
realize a dream for our children). This campaign was started by
28-year-old Paul Abi-Rached and aims to educate the country's school
children. He visits schools to talk about the environmental problems
of Lebanon: waste, recycling, bird hunting, the sea, quarries,
forests. He believes that issuing laws will not help if the people are
not educated first. He is also a talented composer, singer and guitar
player. Thus, much of his 'talk' actually consists of songs about
the environment sung in Arabic, English and French. The songs are
available on audio cassette.
With the help of UNDP (United Nations Development Project)
and its LIFE (Local Initiative Facility for Urban Environment), he has
also launched a project to encourage recycling in villages where
people are talked to and given special cardboard boxes for the
recyclables. His van also includes a library-on-wheels stocked with
environmental literature videos, and scientific measuring
instruments.
Thanks to the power of the Internet, I was introduced to
Paul by a professor at Lebanese American University, Dr. Mark Perry,
who had e-mailed me after reading LebEnv. I visited him at his house
in Ba'abda, where I had the honor of being the first to hear a new
song he had just finished composing. We then walked a short distance
to Ba'abda forest.
Ba'abda forest is an area on the southern fringes of the
town, not far from Wadi Shahrour. So close to Beirut, it remains free
of development for the most ironic of reasons. The Arab Boulevard was
slated to pass through it. Despite the threat, Paul, with the
cooperation of the owners of the forest, the Antoniyyeh convent, made
it into a preserve with the idea of raising peoples' awareness of
their environment. Now that the Arab Boulevard has been canceled, the
future of the forest looks bright. Still, there are reminders of the
forces ravaging Lebanon's landscape. A new road slashes through the
forested hillside on the other side of the valley just outside the
preserve, and ugly buildings peek over ridges.
The 100,000-square-meter forest lies in an east-west
valley. During some phases of the war, it was on the front lines. Much
of the forest was burned as a result, and some of the old
fortifications can still be seen just outside it. Now, the land is
healing and a new generation of trees of all kinds is growing among
the old survivors. We walked on a trail that had been newly built. We
bumped into Zahi Bustani, a young part-time ranger looking after the
forest. He accompanied us, pointing out various plants, some with
medicinal value. Despite being so close to Beirut, there are jackals,
as evidenced by holes among the rocks with bones at their
entrances. The cores of pine cones littered the ground; it was found
that a certain kind of mouse stripped them of the scales to get at the
seeds. In an open area were the remains of a very old house; a
drainage system leading into a covered reservoir was found.
A flat area at the bottom of the valley, defined by old
terraces, is being converted into a small playing field. The idea is
to eventually have camps for local children and a place for them to
play in a natural setting. One area is devoted to separating
recyclable plastics and paper. At the present, the trail, which forms
a loop on the side of the mountain and the bottom of the drainage, is
used by school children on educational nature hikes.
We met two friends of Paul. Back at the house, Paul, Zahi
and the two other friends feverishly discussed upcoming plans for the
forest. I left, feeling a little more optimistic about the future of
Lebanon's natural heritage. I felt that a 'little' person like Paul
was worth a thousand 'big' Joseph Khourys busy burying the sea (with
the product of rock quarries) to create more real estate for
profit.
T.E.R.R.E. can be reached at The Environmental Visitors
Center Social Saint Vincent, Ashrafieh-Sassine in Beirut. Tel/Fax:
01-324495 (from within Lebanon).
Fareed Abou-Haidar
Fareed's Home Page (with articles and photos on the environment in Lebanon) at
http://members.aol.com/fdadlion/
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