Ain Ebel Explained

Ain Ebel
Native Name:Arabic: عين إبل, Classical Syriac: ܥܝܢ ܐܒܠ
Settlement Type:Village
Pushpin Map:Lebanon
Pushpin Map Alt:Map showing the location of Ain Ebel within Lebanon
Pushpin Map Caption:Location within Lebanon
Coordinates:33.1097°N 35.4028°W
Grid Position:187/279 PAL
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:
Subdivision Type1:Governorate
Subdivision Name1:Nabatieh Governorate
Subdivision Type2:District
Subdivision Name2:Bint Jbeil District
Established Date:1400s
Founder:Unknown
Area Total Km2:13.60
Elevation Min M:750
Elevation Max M:850
Population Total:1500-2000; 3500+ Summer Period
Population Density Km2:auto
Timezone1:EET
Utc Offset1:+2
Timezone1 Dst:EEST
Utc Offset1 Dst:+3
Area Code Type:Dialing code
Area Code:+961
Government Type:15 Member Municipal Council
Governing Body:Municipal Council
Leader Party:Party Unknown
Leader Title:Mayor
Leader Name:Imad Lallous
Blank Name Sec1:Patron Saint
Blank Info Sec1:St. Mary

Ain Ebel (Arabic: عين إبل; Syriac: Classical Syriac: ܥܝܢ ܐܒܠ) is a village located in the Lebanese Upper Galilee[1] in the Caza of Bint Jbeil in the Nabatieh/Nabatiye Governorate in Lebanon, about 90 kilometers (56 miles) south of Beirut. Its inhabitants are predominantly Christian.[2]

Since October 2023, Hezbollah, an Islamist Shiite militant group, has been using the area as a launching point for attacks on Israel. This prompted many Christian villagers, particularly women and children, to flee the area and seek safety in Beirut.

Etymology

Historian Taissier Khalaf writes that the name of the town means "Spring of the Monk" because in Aramaic Ain means spring and Ebel means the hermit, who wears a monk's garb.[3] While Anis Freiha and Friar Youakim Moubarak believe that Ebel is a corruption of the word Baal, in reference to the Semitic god associated with storms and thus irrigation,[4] and combined with Ain then the name may mean the "Spring of Irrigation".[5] Edward Henry Palmer, in 1881, wrote that it meant "The Spring of Camels" taking a literal translation for the name from classical Arabic.[6]

Variation of spelling

Due to the different standards in the Romanization of Arabic, the spelling of the name of the village has sometimes varied, such as Ainebel, Aïn Ebel, Ain Ebl, Ain Ibl, Ayn Ibil, Ain Ibil, Aïn Ibel, and Ain Ibel.

History

Ain Ebel is a historic village with numerous archaeological sites.

Prehistory

Lower Paleolithic implements were found in Ain Ebel, and historian believe that prehistoric man lived and hunted in the area from the most ancient times.[7] A Heavy Neolithic site of the Qaraoun culture was discovered by Henri Fleisch west of Ain Ebel in the Wadi Koura, with tools found suggested to be part of a forest dweller's toolkit at the start of the Neolithic Revolution.[8] The region stretching from the north of Ain Ebel to south near Yaroun is rich in flint instruments, and the whole surrounding region as far as Jish contains megalithic ruins, perhaps pre-Canaanites.[9]

Ancient history

In the Babylonian Talmud, Ain Ebel is referred to as En Bol, and identified as a village northwest of Safed, where minorities practiced a form of niddah in which female infants were made to undergo the ritual immersion before their mothers.[10]

Historian John T. Durward argues that Ain Ebel, located west of Kedesh of Naphtali (an ancient town documented in Judges 4:6, 10), is probably the biblical town of Abel Beth Ma'acah, and was the spiritual retreat of the clergy from Tyre and Acre.[11]

On the outskirts of the village is an area called Chalaboune where Ernest Renan, a French historian and philosopher who was sent by Emperor Napoleon III to Lebanon, found ancient graves. According to Renan, Ain-Ebel had beautiful underground passages and large buildings in colossal stones and admirable carved sarcophagi in two remarkable places, Douair and Chalaboune, which he believed was the Biblical town of Shaalabbin of the Tribe of Dan.[12] On one of the graves, Renan discovered a bas-relief of Apollo and Artemis. The relief was transported to France where it remains today at the Louvre.[13] In 2011 and after months of negotiation, the Musée du Louvre agreed to make an exact replica of the bas-relief, which was delivered to the municipality of Ain Ebel in November.

Middle Ages and early Modern period

It is believed that the village has been continuously inhabited at least since the 15th century when Christians from the north of Lebanon migrated to lower elevations in the south to cultivate feudal lands.[14]

In his book, Salut Jerusalem: Les memoires d'un chretien de Tyr a l'epoque des Croisades, the Lebanese historian, Bechara Menassa, wrote that the people of Ain Ebel were in touch with the Crusaders in Toron, modern Tebnine. Menassa described how a Frankish monk killed a wild animal in Ain Ebel.

Late Ottoman period

In January 1837, Ain Ebel was hit by the Galilee earthquake, which devastated the South all the way to Safad and Tiberias.[15]

By the mid-nineteenth century, Ain Ebel had become the principal village of Christianity in the Upper Galilee, and in 1861 it was chosen for the first religious retreat organized in the Holy Land where 55 priests from the archdioceses of Tyre and Acre gathered for a reunion.[16]

Ain Ebel is mentioned in a Christian anthology, containing contributions from ministers and members of various evangelical denominations published in the United Kingdom in 1866:

In 1875 Victor Guérin visited, and noted 800 Maronite and 200 Greek Orthodox villagers.

In 1881, the PEF's Survey of Western Palestine (SWP) described 'Ain Ibl as a: "Well-built modern village, with a Christian chapel ; contains about 1,000 Christians (800 Maronites and 200 United Greeks). It has vineyards on the slope of the hill on which the village is placed, and olives in the valley below. Good water supply from springs in the valley."[17]

P. Engbert writes that the inhabitants of Ain Ebel offered the Jesuits in 1888 a fairly large lot of land after almost all the inhabitants signed the petition which was presented to R. P. Lefebvre.[18]

In 1889, the village harvest was bad and an epidemic spread among the townspeople, lasting all winter and killing more than fifty people.[19]

French Mandate

The village celebrated the arrival of High Commissioner Gouraud to Lebanon by flying the flag of France and playing the French anthem.[20] By 1920, Ain Ebel had a population of 1,500, living in about 300 houses.[21]

Massacre of 1920

While delegates from the Shia Conference of El-Hujair were in Damascus swearing allegiance to King Faisal, an act the Maronites of Jabal Amel considered threatening, a Shia gang led by Mahmoud Bazzi, which "proceeded from brigandage to confronting France and its Christian friends in the south",[22] attacked Ain Ebel on May 5, 1920, pillaging and killing more than 50 people.[23] It appears that the gangs responded to a call for jihad.[24] The people of Ain Ebel defended the town from sunrise to sunset until they ran out of ammunition.[25]

A contemporary Franciscan document chronicling the event states that attackers abandoned themselves in the violence, massacring children in the arms of their parents before killing them, raping young women and then killing them, and burning people who were still alive. The survivors fled south to Haifa until French ships took them back to Tyre where General Gouraud promised the Maronite Patriarch to punish those who had caused the massacres and destruction. The town was completely destroyed, and the damage done to the two churches, school and convent, were evidence of sectarian malice.[26] The neighboring villages of Debel and Rmaich were also attacked so after 12 days of plundering and massacres,[27] the French arrived and suppressed all activities in Jabal Amil region.

While awaiting to return to their village, it was reported that a soldier, in the service of the English, offered the villagers to sell their properties to the Zionists because they were not guaranteed a return to Ain Ebel, but they all refused. This was yet another example of how the Christians of the Tyre district were under a lot of pressure to abandon their land and emigrate out of the area. The massacres hardened Maronite opinion in favor of Jabal Amil being part of Greater Lebanon, which borders were cemented at the San Remo conference in 1920.

Later French rule

During the French Mandate, the network of paved road expanded, coinciding with the introduction of automobiles in Lebanon. The arrival of the first car in a village became a celebratory event, and this was true in Ain Ebel, where the inhabitants, dressed in their Sunday best, gathered in the church square to welcome the first car to drive through the village.[28] The French planned to build an automobile road to connect the southern villages with those of Mandatory Palestine. The original plan was to build the road from Bint Jbeil via Yaroun and Rmaich, but the people of Ain Ebel protested, knowing the significance of such a road for the development of their town, and in the end, they were able to convince the French government to change the plan and have the road run through the village.[29]

During World War II, the Vichy French had a line of widely spaced blockhouses that stretched from the coast to the inland heights, reaching Ain Ebel. During the Syria–Lebanon Campaign to liberate Lebanon and Syria from the Vichy, Australian Captain Douglas George Horley was ordered to clear Ain Ebel. Australian Brigadier J. E. S. Stevens decided that he would seize Aitaroun, Bint Jbel, Ain Ebel, Yaroun, Rmaich, Ayta ash Shab, Ramié, Jereine, Aalma ech Chaab and Labouna to cut a road from Al-Malkiyya to the French frontier road so as to make a second gateway into the coastal zone. The Australian squad, guided by Meir Davidson's squad, finally captured the town of Bint Jbeil and the villages of Aitaroun and Ain Ebel.[30] After taking Yaroun and Bint Jbeil, Ain Ebel was found to have been abandoned by the Vichy.

Contemporary history

In October 1948, during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, Ain Ebel received Palestinian refugees, especially from the village of Eilabun via Meiron, who stayed in the church for three days before being relocated to the Mieh Mieh refugee camp.[31]

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the village was often caught in the skirmishes between the Palestine Liberation Organization and the Israel Defense Force.[32] Israel imposed a food and fuel blockade on Christian villages, such as Ain Ebel and Qlaiaa, forcing the inhabitants to deal with Israel.[33] Christian militia arrived in Ain Ebel and neighboring Christian villages in August 1976[34] to open a new line of confrontation against the PLO strongholds in neighboring villages.

Ain-Ebel native, Monsignor Albert Khreish was abducted from his home on April 24, 1988.[35] A week later on May 1, 1988, Monsignor Albert Khreish, who was head of the Maronite Spiritual Affairs Court, and nephew of Cardinal Anthony Peter Khoraish, was found dead in the pine forest outside of Ghazir.[36] Khreish, who was shot 30 times, was an authority on international law and had served on the Maronite religious tribunal and lectured at the Government-run Lebanese University.[37] His death was believed to be politically motivated, but the case was unsolved.[38]

2006 Lebanon War

In July 2006, Ain Ebel, like other villages that string Lebanon's southern border, such as Debel, Qaouzah, Rmaich, and Yaroun, was caught in the 2006 Lebanon War between Lebanon and Israel. The village and its surrounding valleys were attacked by Israël .[39] During the conflict, the village witnessed ferocious battles with missiles destroying many houses and orchards and leaving the townspeople besieged and without bread for three weeks.[40]

After allegations that Hezbollah was using humans as shields, the Human Rights Watch visited Ain Ebel on several occasions, and their "investigations revealed that this was wrong, because Hezbollah was defending Lebanon from Israeli attacks that were endangering civilians" when they launched rockets from or near civilian homes, adding that on July 24, around 9:30 am, a convoy of 17 vehicles, fleeing Ain Ebel also were attacked by Israël, and put civilians under attack.[41] [42] Residents of Ein Abel informed Human Rights Watch investigators that Hezbollah had declared several fields "off limits" to the locals following the Israeli withdrawal in 2000, later using these areas to construct military installations.[43]

Death of Elias Hasrouni

Elias Hasrouni, a veteran Lebanese Forces official, was first thought to have died in a car crash on Sunday, August 6, 2023, but an autopsy later revealed that he was killed and many, including Samir Geagea, believed the murder was politically motivated.[44] Samir Geagea declared Hasrouni's death an assassination, pointing the finger at Hezbollah as the crime occurred deep within areas controlled by them but that accusation was never proven .[45] Politician Samy Gemayel also hinted that Hezbollah might have been behind the killing.[46] The residents of Ain Ebel, one of the few Christian villages in the predominately Shiite province, one of Hezbollah's main power bases, are mostly supportive of Hezbollah's largest political ennemy, the Lebanese Forces, and the murder of Hasrouni created sectarian tentions.[47] Two months later, Hasrouni's wife, Yvette Sleiman died in a car accident, but it was unclear whether her death was also politically motivated.[48]

2023 Lebanon-Israel border conflict (8 October 2023 - present)

Ain Ebel, about 7.5 km (4.7 mi) from the border with Israel, was caught in the crossfire during the 2023 Lebanon-Israel border conflict. While the village, like other neighboring Christian villages, was not aligned to Hezbollah, Israeli attacks led some villagers, especially the women and children, to evacuate to Beirut.[49] Only 40% of the population, mostly adult men, remained in the village.[50] The Saint-Joseph and Saints-Cœurs Schools closed amid the war after three of their students were killed on November 5 on the road between Aitaroun and Ain Ebel by an Israeli strike.[51] [52] [53] On November 23, 2023, several rockets hit Ain Ebel as a result of the Iron Dome intercepting 48 missiles launched by Hezbollah.[54] As residents prepared for a subdued Christmas under the shadow of the ongoing conflict, United Nations peacekeeping handed out toys on Saturday, December 23 to some 250 children whose families had remained in Ain Ebel and in the nearby villages of Rmaich and Debel.[55]

Geography

Located in the mountainous region of southern Lebanon, known as Belad Bechara[56] in Jabal Amel, or the Lebanese Upper Galilee, Ain Ebel occupies several hills with elevation ranging from 750 to 850 meters above sea level. There are three natural springs in Ain Ebel, including Tarabnine, Tahta and Hourrié, and in the valley between Ain Ebel and Hanine is Ain Hanine.[9]

Climate

The village has a Mediterranean climate [57] and enjoys four seasons with autumn and spring being mild but rainy, winter being cold and sometimes snowy and summer being dry and very pleasant with average temperatures between 25C27C.[58]

Geology

Deposits of bitumen, a black mixture of hydrocarbons obtained naturally, is found in Ain Ebel.[59] [60] Flint is also found; it was excavated and used to build tools by ancient dwellers of the region.[9]

Vegetation

The main agricultural products are olives, almonds, chestnuts, pecans, grapes, figs, pomegranates, and apples. Oak and pine woods can be found on the outskirts of the village.

In January 2023, perennial oak trees were illegally cut down in the western woods of the town, and while the culprit, a resident of Ayta ash Shab, was arrested, he was believed to be close to Hezbollah and was eventually released by a decision from the Nabatieh Public Prosecutor.[61]

During the 2023-2024 Lebanon-Israel border conflict, the Israeli army conducted airstrikes on the forest areas between Ain Ebel and Bint Jbeil.[62] Additionally, Israel's use of white phosphorus and other incendiary weapons burned tens of thousands of olive trees and other crops in the border area.[63]

Demographics

The people of Ain Ebel are mainly Maronite Catholics, Greek Catholics and Armenian Catholics.[64] In 2009, there were 410 members of the Saint-Élie parish of the Melkite Church in the village.[65]

Education

There are three schools in the village: two private schools (Saints-Cœurs and Saint Joseph) and one public school. Of the three, the oldest is Saints-Cœurs, which was established by the Jesuits in 1881.[66] Within a decade, Ain Ebel had two schools, and Missionary Père Angelil requested the aid of the nuns of Ain Ebel in 1890 to teach for eight days the inhabitants in neighboring Mi'ilya after which two nuns remained there to manage the new school.[67]

Arts, culture, sports

Architecture

There are three historic churches, built in the eighteenth and nineteenth century, and a convent that was built in 1857.[68]

A shrine, consisting of a 200-foot tower to be topped by a 45-foot statue of the Virgin Mary, is being built in Ain Ebel at the north entrance of the village, funded primarily by expatriates.[50]

Religious structures

Chapels

Churches

Convents

Shrines

Festivals

Each summer, a grand festival is organized in honor of the Blessed Virgin Mary. The festival culminates on the Assumption of Mary on August 15. Outdoor events and open-air concerts are held in the village's square. The festivities peak with a procession of the Virgin Mary icon.

Hiking

Funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), in partnership with the Community Support Program (CSP), Ain Ebel's western slopes, which are covered with olive and oak trees, became connected in 2022 to the Lebanon Mountain Trail, a long-distance hiking trail that crosses Lebanon from north to south.[70]

Notable figures from Ain Ebel

Academia

Arts

Business

Clergy

Diplomacy

Journalism

Politics

Military

In literature

"The Kazzy family, in the early 1920s, were small landholders in the village of Ain Ebel, in Southern Lebanon

In media

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Piveteau, Jean . La Préhistoire: Problèmes et Tendances . Ed. du Centre national de la recherche scientifique . Paris . 1968 . 113.
  2. Web site: 2023-12-23 . Christians in Lebanon's tense border area prepare to celebrate a subdued Christmas . 2024-06-03 . AP News . en . https://web.archive.org/web/20240603090816/https://apnews.com/article/lebanon-south-border-clashes-christmas-christians-efdc6c91556fa22d9aebe7fe6791bc54 . 2024-06-03.
  3. Book: Khalaf, Taissier . 2006 . al-Masīḥ fī al-Jūlān : Tārīkh wa-Athār . Christ in the Golan: History and Traces . ar . Dār Kanʻān.
  4. Freedman . David Noel . 1992 . The Anchor Yale Bible Dictionary . 1 . New York . Doubleday.
  5. Web site: Ain-Ebel . 2008-10-13 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20031202150146/http://www.ain-ebel.org/History.htm . 2003-12-02.
  6. From A Personal name, according to Palmer, 1881, p. 62
  7. Book: Field, Henry . Ancient and Modern Man in Southwestern Asia . 1 . University of Miami Press . 1956 . 44.
  8. Book: L. . Copeland. P. . Wescombe. Inventory of Stone-Age Sites in Lebanon: North, South and East-Central Lebanon . 88. 3 March 2011. 1966. Impr. Catholique.
  9. Hulot & Rabot, "Actes de la societé géographie," Seance du 6 décembre 1907, La Géographie, Volume 17, Paris, 1908, page 78
  10. Book: The Talmud Babylonian: Seder Tomoroth, "Tractate Niddah," Folio 32a . Halakah . 1935 . Epstein . I. . 3 May 2019.
  11. Book: Durward, John T. . Holy Land and Holy Writ . Pilgrimage Publishing Company . Baraboo, WI . 1913 . 668.
  12. Minervini, Giulio. Bulletino archeologico italiano, Volumes 1–2, "Antichità Oritentali", Naples, Italy, 1862 pages 150–151
  13. Book: Conder . C. R. . Kitchener . H. H. . 1881 . The Survey of Western Palestine: Memoirs of the Topography, Orography, Hydrography, and Archaeology . 1 . London . Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund . 236 .
  14. Book: Jalabert . Henri . Joseph . Goudard . Lebanon, the Land and the Lady . 1st . Eugene P. . Burns . Catholic Press . Beirut . 1966 . 24.
  15. Book: Khalaf, Samir . Protestant Missionaries in the Levant: Ungodly Puritans, 1820–1860 . Routledge . 1st . 2012 . 211.
  16. Ramière, du R. P. H. Le Messager du Sacré-Cœur de Jésus, Croire aujourd'hui, "La Première Retraite Ecclésiastique En Terre Sainte," par Fenech, Aloisius, Sidon, 29 June 1861, Paris, Maison Périsse, Régis Ruffet Success, 1863, page 211
  17. Conder and Kitchener, 1881, SWP I, p. 200
  18. Relations D'Orient. "Missions Dans La Haute-Galilée" par P. Engbert, 22 August 1988, Imprimerie Polleunis, Ceuterick et de Smet, Brussels, 1889, page 28
  19. Relations d'Orient: Liban, Syrie, Egypte, Arménie, "Travaux et Missions Dans Le Belad-Bechara et le District de Saphad: Extrait de Lettres du P. Angelil au P. Supérieur de la Mission," Imprimerie Polleunis et Ceuterick, Bruxelles, Janvier 1891, page 35
  20. Book: Chalabi, Tamara . The Shi'is of Jabal 'Amil and the new Lebanon: community and nation sate, 1918-1943 . 2006 . Palgrave Macmillan . 978-1-4039-7028-2 . 1st . New York . 73 . ocm60839434.
  21. The New Near East, Volumes 6–8. The Near East Relief, New York, NY, June 1921, page 12
  22. Book: Harris, William H. . Lebanon: A History, 600 – 2011 . Oxford University Press . 2012 . 177.
  23. Book: Chalabi, Tamara . The Shi'is of Jabal 'Amin and the New Lebanon: Community and Nation-State, 1918–1943 . Palgrave Macmillan . New York . 2006 . 79.
  24. Book: Chalabi, Tamara . The Shi'is of Jabal 'Amil and the new Lebanon: community and nation sate, 1918-1943 . 2006 . Palgrave Macmillan . 978-1-4039-7028-2 . 1st . New York . 81 . ocm60839434.
  25. The New Near East, Volumes 6–8. The Near East Relief, New York, NY, June 1921, page 12.
  26. Book: The Times History of the War . 21 . The New York Times . 1920 . 449.
  27. Villeneuve de, Armand, Catholic Missions: Annals of the Propagation of the Faith, Volume 1, "A Poor Mission of Syria," Society of the Propagation of the Faith, NY, MY 1924, page 91.
  28. Book: Abou Houdeib, Toufoul . The Routledge Handbook of the History of the Middle East Mandates . Routledge Taylor & Francis . 2015 . Schayegh . Cyrus . New York . 387 . Sanctity Across the Border: Pilgrimage Routes and State Control in Mandate Lebanon and Palestine . Arsan . Andrew.
  29. Book: Ajaka, Elias . From the Caches of Memory . Dar Alfarabi . 2015 . Beirut.
  30. Book: Bauer, Yehuda . From Diplomacy to Resistance . Difficulties of the First Year . Varda Books . Skokie, IL . 2001 . 159.
  31. Book: Abdo . Nahla . Masalha . Nur . An Oral History of the Palestinian Nakba . The Sons and Daughters of Eilaboun . Bloomsbury Publishing . 2016 . 235.
  32. Book: Totten, Michael J. . The Road to Fatima Gate: The Beirut Spring, the Rise of Hezbollah, and the Iranian War Against Israel . Encounter Books . New York . 2011 . 187.
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  36. News: 12 Die in Lebanese Camp Fighting; Priest Murdered . 9 October 2023 . Associated Press . The Los Angeles Times . 2 May 1988.
  37. News: Hijazi . Ihsan A. . Maronite Priest Killed in Lebanon . 9 October 2023 . The New York Times . May 3, 1988.
  38. News: Hourany . Youssef . Sfeir: UN presence reassuring; let's think about rebuilding together . 9 October 2023 . Asia News . 11 September 2006.
  39. Totten, Michael J. The Road to Fatima Gate: The Beirut Spring, the Rise of Hezbollah, and the Iranian War Against Israel, Encounter Books, New York, 2011, page 195
  40. News: Tavernise. Sabrina. "Hilltop Village in Lebanon Feels Stuck in the Middle". The New York Times. 2006-08-02.
  41. Bouckaer, Peter. Why They Died: Civilian Casualties in Lebanon During the 2006 War, Volume 19. The Human Rights Watch, pages 54–55
  42. Bouckaert, Peter. Fatal Strikes: Israel's Indiscriminate Attacks Against Civilians in Lebanon, Volume 18, The Human Rights Watch, page 15
  43. Book: Arsan, Andrew . Lebanon: a country in fragments . 2018 . Hurst & Company . 978-1-84904-700-5 . First published in the United Kingdom . London . 82.
  44. News: Prentis . Jamie . Murder claims after suspicious death of Lebanese Forces official in south Lebanon . 4 October 2023 . The National . 11 August 2023.
  45. News: Samir Geagea: Our companion Elias Hasrouni was assassinated, not killed in a car accident . LBCI News . 20 August 2023.
  46. News: Gemayel hints Hezbollah behind Ain Ebel and US embassy incidents . 15 January 2024 . 21 September 2023 . Naharnet.
  47. News: Jamie Prentis & . Nada Maucourant Atallah . 'This was the safest place in Lebanon': A tense Christian town empties . 24 December 2023 . The National . 22 October 2023.
  48. News: 2 months after Hasrouni's murder, his wife dies in car crash . 4 October 2023 . Naharnet . 3 October 2023.
  49. Web site: 2023-10-22 . Hezbollah's threats to Israel harm Christian Lebanese villages analysis . 2023-10-30 . The Jerusalem Post JPost.com.
  50. News: Matt Bradley and . Ziad Jaber . Emptied by worries of war, a tiny Christian town clings to Lebanon's edge . 24 December 2023 . NBC News . 2 November 2023.
  51. News: Haddad . Emmanuel . In southern Lebanon, children bear the brunt of horror . 24 December 2023 . L'Orient Le Jour . 7 November 2023.
  52. News: Abby Sewell and . Bassam Hatoum . A woman and 3 children are killed by an Israeli airstrike in south Lebanon, local officials say . 24 December 2023 . Associated Press . 6 November 2023.
  53. News: Zaatari . Mohammed . Christians in Lebanon's tense border area prepare to celebrate a subdued Christmas . 24 December 2023 . ABC News . 23 December 2023.
  54. News: Missiles from Inside Lebanon Hit Ain Ebel and Struck Houses . 24 December 2023 . Al-Kataeb . 23 November 2023.
  55. News: Christians in Lebanon's tense border area prepare to celebrate a subdued Christmas . 24 December 2023 . Slight Magazine . 24 December 2023.
  56. Ledochowski, Wladmir. Lettres de Jersey, Volume 2, "II-Au Belad-Bechara," Jules de Meester & Fils, 25 December 1924, page 391
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  58. Web site: Climate Aïn Ebel and best time to visit . Best Travel Months . 8 October 2023.
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  61. News: In pictures - Cutting down old oak trees in the southern town of Ain Abel... and this is what the mayor revealed . 24 December 2023 . Aljadeed News . 5 January 2023.
  62. News: The Israeli Army Strikes Forests . 24 December 2023 . MTV News . 20 December 2023.
  63. News: Chehayeb . Kareem . Lebanon's Christians feel the heat of climate change in its sacred forest and valley . 24 December 2023 . Earthbeat, National Catholic Reporter . 8 December 2023.
  64. Santoro, Nicholas Joseph. Mary in Our Life: Atlas of the Names and Titles of Mary, the Mother of Jesus,, Bloomington, (August 5, 2011)page 150
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  70. Web site: 2023-03-15 . Ain Ebel trail becomes Lebanon's first LMT Network Trail. 2023-04-15 . LBC International .
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