Breadcrumb
Tourists arrive in hordes each year to Lebanonâs city of Baalbek, eager to see its ancient Roman temples.
But today, another attraction is drawing in hundreds more - an extensive display of Hezbollah tanks, drones, and rockets, part of the militant group's newly-opened 'Jihad' Museum.Ìę
As the road to the museum winds up from the well-known Temple of Bacchus, the yellow and green flag of Hezbollah crops up at every turn. Eventually, the road reaches the hillâs summit and the museum comes into view, marking the same place where the group carried out its first military in 1982.Ìę
Visitors can then proceed down a canon-lined promenade to an arsenal of nearly 100 weapons, a collection the group acquired during Israelâs occupation of Lebanon and through its military involvement in Syria, and some even manufactured in Lebanon.
"An extensive display of Hezbollah tanks, drones, and rockets form part of the militant group's newly-opened 'Jihad' Museum in Baalbek"
With an estimated stockpile of 130,000 rockets and missiles, and some 20,000 active fighters and 20,000, the Iran-backed Shia group has risen to the worldâs most heavily armed non-state actor.
The weapons have elicited controversy among Hezbollahâs adversaries, the party the only faction allowed to keep them after the end of the countryâs 1975-1990 civil war.
A recent gunfight between Christian inhabitants of Kahaleh and Hezbollah members in August after a truck carrying weapons for the group overturned in the village further added to calls for their disarmament.
The museum spans 10,452 square meters, symbolising the area of Lebanon (10,452 square kilometres). âHere is the dignity of Lebanon,â Jawad Fadel Tlais, one of the museumâs managers, said with his arms outstretched wide.Ìę
The Jihad Museum is Hezbollahâs second, highlighting the groupâs âresistanceâ against Israel, but also showcasing Hezbollahâs military role in Syria.Ìę
âThe museum is a curation of linkages between totally unlinked conflicts,â Mohanad Hage Ali, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Middle East Center, told °źÂț”ș. The group declares the expulsion of Islamic State (IS) militants from Lebanon in 2017 as the âsecond liberationâ, in addition to the âfirst liberationâ of the country from the Israelis in 2000.
âConnecting the Syrian conflict with the one in the south [against Israel] helps the organisation later on as it seeks to justify interventions in other places,â Hage Ali stated.Ìę
Meanwhile, at the museum, local children from Baalbek come to see the weapons. They pretend to drive the tanks, practice shooting the rapid-fire machine guns, and take selfies with the nine Lebanon-made drones mounted in the air.
Tlais noted Hezbollahâs aim to break down the âboundaries of fearâ. âThe children can have fun with the weapons,â he said. âItâs like a playground for free.â
A young Palestinian who lives in Baalbek told TNA while playing with the weapons: âI feel that weâve won [against Israel]â.Ìę
'Balancing act'
The plans for the 'Jihad' Museum are extensive, Tlais said, noting that by next summer visitors will be able to purchase Hezbollah merchandise at a gift shop and eat at a restaurant overlooking the farms of the Bekaa Valley. Plans are even in the works to build a cable car, offering tourists an in-the-air ride from the Roman ruins.Ìę
Meanwhile, Lebanonâs national museum in the capital, Beirut, is to keep the lights on â the state coffers drained from three years of an unprecedented economic crisis.
âThe opening of the [Jihad] Museum is representative of the current landscape in Lebanon,â Hage Ali said. âThe Lebanese government is failing to maintain the national museum - a resemblance of the countryâs common identity - while there is a party [Hezbollah] that is opening a new museum and maintaining multiple other culture projects,â he said.Ìę
"Hezbollah has dedicated immense resources to sites of cultural production"
âHezbollah is defining how Lebanese Shia view themselves and their role in the region, at the expense of the Lebanese national project, or whatâs left of it,â Hage Ali added.Ìę
Hezbollah began as a movement of armed resistance to the Israeli occupation but has developed into one of the countryâs strongest political parties and has dedicated immense resources to âsites of cultural productionâ, like the museum, Mona Harb, a professor of politics and urban studies, writes in a co-authored published in the Arab Studies Journal.Ìę
But most of the partyâs investments have been concentrated in the countryâs southern regions, while the Shia populations of Baalbek and in the surrounding Bekaa valley have been historically marginalised.
âThe opening of the Jihadi Museum is a kind of balancing act within the Shia community,â Hage Ali commented, indicating Hezbollahâs intent to put more resources into the Bekaa.Ìę
The partyâs representation has also thus far been âmonopolisedâ by the southern Shias, Hage Ali added. For instance, Hezbollah party leader Hassan Nasrallah and his deputy Naim Qassim are both from the south, as well as Lebanonâs speaker of parliament Nabih Berri, who has been in office now for thirty years and counting.Ìę
âThis exacerbates the feelings of marginalisation [in the Bekaa],â he said, whose residents already face higher poverty and more developmental setbacks than their southern counterparts.
Syria interventionÌę
Inside a camouflaged-covered simulation of a military hideout, museum visitors can stroll through a timeline of Hezbollahâs war triumphs. Mixed into the events depicting Hezbollahâs civil war victories and battles against Israeli incursions are markers of the groupâs operations in Syria.Ìę
For instance, highlighted is the 2013 Battle of Qusair, a victory for the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad and its Hezbollah allies, which stimulated the groupâs commitment to an offensive military campaign in Syria.
From a military standpoint, Hezbollah has been significantly strengthened by the intervention in Syria - a role the group would like to maintain. The war has allowed the party to significantly increase recruitment and expand its proxy base, as well as learn from the military techniques and strategies of the Russian army, according to a by the Foundation for Research Strategy (FRS).Ìę
"The museum is a curation of linkages between totally unlinked conflicts"
âTheir presence in Syria, and then Iraq, turned them into a de facto leader in the region,â Souhayb Jawhar, a Lebanese researcher of Islamist political movements, told TNA.
Iran has also used the war to increase Hezbollahâs weapons stockpiles, bolstering the groupâs regional clout and facilitating their operations in not just Syria, but also Iraq and Yemen.Ìę
âToday, they are the most prominent field and political force in Syria,â Jawhar stated, where âthe battles have not endedâ.Ìę
'Jihad'
However, Hezbollahâs intervention in Syria has not gone without casualties. Hezbollahâs death toll in the Syria war is higher than in their fight against Israel, estimated to surpass 2,000 to 2,500 in 2017, according to the FRS report.Ìę
Along the windy road to the Jihad Museum is a graveyard for fallen Hezbollah soldiers, where their family members mourn the deceased âmartyrsâ. Hezbollah leader Nasrallah at the start of the Syrian intervention in 2014 reportedly made a trip to the Bekaa to pay tribute to some of the families who had lost their loved ones, and to calm their anger, to a Washington Post article at the time.Ìę
The museum is also a way to honour the âsacrifices and investments of the Beqaa and Baalbek populationsâ, Harb said. âItâs a way to show gratitude for the loyalty and the mutual respect for the people in the ranksâ. She added, âThere wouldnât be a jihad if there werenât jihadisâ.
âTheyâre [Hezbollah] looking towards Syria as a place where their strategic interests lie,â Hage Ali stated. âAnd they want to show itâs worth sacrificing for,â he added. Thus the group has played on the concept of âjihadâ (an exertion or struggle as an obligation for all Muslims) in the fight against Zionism and the protection of Shia shrines and heritage in Syria and elsewhere.ÌęÌę
âThey are coming up with a similar narrative in which they define their conflict as one,â Hage Ali added. âBut commemorating that and making it sort of a holy war, it helps to understand the organisationâs trajectory,â he added, noting their calls for engagement outside the Israel-Palestine conflict, in countries like Yemen and Iraq.Ìę
"Hezbollah is defining how Lebanese Shia view themselves and their role in the region, at the expense of the Lebanese national project, or what's left of it"
Back at the museum, its manager, Tlais, stands next to the row of Hezbollah flags, which billow in the breeze. âHezbollah is protecting the people,â he said, âIf it werenât for Hezbollah, Daesh [IS] and Israel would be here.â
âImagine someone comes to your house to kill you. Then, someone comes to stop him and save you - he is Hezbollah. For me and for the people of Lebanon,â he stated. âHow can you not like this man?âÌę
Hanna Davis is a freelance journalist reporting on politics, foreign policy, and humanitarian affairs.
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