List of massacres in Lebanon explained

The following is a list of massacres that have occurred in Lebanon (numbers may be approximate):

NameDateLocationDeathsVictimsPerpetratorsNotes
Siege of Tyre (332 BC)332 BCTyre2,000TyriansAncient Macedonian army2,000 Tyrians crucified on the beach by Alexander the Great's army
1860 Mount Lebanon civil warBeirut and Damascus, Syria7,000–25,000Christians DruzeLarge massacres of Christians at Deir al-Qamar, Hasbaya, and Rashaya took place in Mount Lebanon. Many fled to Damascus, where Druze and Muslim mobs with the help of rogue Ottoman troops massacred several thousand Christian civilians; 326 villages, 560 churches, 28 colleges, 42 convents, and 9 other religious establishments were completely destroyed.
Execution of Arab nationalistsMay 6, 1916Beirut and Damascus, Syria23Arab Nationalists Ottoman Empire (Djemal Pasha)On May 6, 1916, Jamal Pasha publicly executed simultaneously seven Arabs in Damascus and fourteen in Beirut for alleged anti-Turkish activities. The date, May 6, is commemorated annually in both countries as Martyrs' Day, and the site in Beirut has come to be known as Martyrs' Square.
Ain Ebel massacreAin Ebel50–100ChristiansShia Muslims and pro-Faisal gangMahmoud Bazzi's gang, which "proceeded from brigandage to confronting France and its Christian friends in the south," attacked Ain Ebel on May 5, 1920, pillaging and killing more than 50 people. The people of Ain Ebel defended the town from sunrise to sunset until they ran out of ammunition. The town was completely destroyed, and the damage done to the two churches, school and convent, was evidence of sectarian malice.
Rashaya revolt massacreNovember 1925RashayahundredsChristians DruzeThe anti-French revolt's expansion into Lebanon and stories of massacres targeting local Christians sparked worry among the Christians of southern Lebanon.[1] Around 400 Christian homes in Rashaya were either damaged or destroyed in the fighting.
Tripoli student massacreNovember 13, 1943Tripoli14Student protestersFrench-Senegalese soldiersThe students were struck by French tanks driven by Senegalese soldiers while participating in a peaceful march through the streets. During the demonstration, the students were fervently advocating for an end to the occupation.[2] [3] [4] [5] All the victims were under the age of 15.
Hula massacreHula35–58Lebanese Carmeli Brigade, Israel Defense ForcesHula, located in Lebanon, was captured on October 24 by the Carmeli Brigade of the Israel Defense Forces without any resistance. The women and children were expelled, most of the men aged between 15 and 60 were shot. In total between 35 and 58 men were executed in a house which was later blown up on top of them.[6]
Miziara massacreJune 16, 1957Miziara30Douaihy clanFrangieh clanSleiman Frangieh and his followers killed 30 loyalist to the Douaihy family in a church in Miziara. Victims included nuns, priests, women and children.[7]
Bus massacreBeirut27 PLO Kataeb Party (Lebanese Christians) On the morning of 13 April 1975, PLO gunmen in a speeding car fired on a church in the Christian East Beirut suburb of Ain el-Rummaneh, killing four people, including two Maronite Phalangists. Hours later, 27 Palestinian civilians traveling in a bus through one of the Ain el Rummaneh neighborhoods of Beirut were attacked and killed by Christian Phalangists. Many more people were killed in subsequent fighting in other areas of the city later that day. Together, these incidents have been identified by several historians as the starting point of the Lebanese Civil War.
Black ThursdayMay 30, 1975Bashoura, Beirut30–50Christians PalestiniansThe bodies were abandoned in a Muslim cemetery, with possible intention of provoking a sectarian message, close to the Green Line separating East and West Beirut, all with their genitals mutilated off.
Beit Mellat MassacreSeptember 10, 1975Beit Mellat, Akkar15–25ChristiansBetween five and eightcivilians were killed, and ten has disappeared. Also, the militiamen burned down homes andthe church, and stole several cars.[8]
Beirut 300–350Muslims, Druze Kataeb Regulatory ForcesFour young Christian Phalangists were assassinated on the Fanar (Matn) road in Beirut. In retaliation, Phalangists murdered hundreds of non-Christians. It is estimated that more than 300 civilians were murdered in what was the first ethnic cleansing of the Lebanese Civil War.
Karantina massacreBeirut300–1,500Palestinians and Lebanese Muslims Kataeb Regulatory ForcesKarantina was an impoverished predominantly Muslim district housing Lebanese and Palestine refugees, as well as others in northeastern Beirut, and was overrun by the Lebanese Christian militias.
Damour massacreDamour582[9] ChristiansPLO and LNM units attacked a Christian town, purportedly as revenge for the earlier Karantina Massacre by Christian militias. Among those killed were Phalangist militiamen and family members of Christian militia leader Elie Hobeika, and his fiancée. Hobeika later led the Phalangists in the Sabra and Shatila massacre.
Chekka massacreJuly 5, 1976Chekka and Hamat200ChristiansLebanese National MovementThe attack was launched from Tripoli by Palestinian militants and members of a left-wing group called Jund Allah. The group stormed the Christian pro-Syrian Social Nationalist Party settlement of Chekka as well as Hamat. An estimated 200 people were killed in the ensuing 24 hours. Residents tried to flee through a tunnel to Batroun but the attackers blocked the exit. Many were killed as their cars caught fire, and they suffocated to death.[10]
Tel al-Zaatar massacreBeirut1,500–5,000Palestinians Kataeb Regulatory ForcesChristian Phalangists and other rightwing Christian militias besieged Tel Al-Zaatar with help from Syrian Army units; after heavy fighting, they killed Palestinian civilian refugees and PLO fedayeen or fighters. 4,000 injured.
Aishiyeh massacreOctober 19–21, 1976Aishiyeh60–80Christians Fatah, As-Sa'iqaFatah and As-Sa'iqa massacred the predominantly Christian village, including seven under 16yo, although the killings were overshadowed by the massacres of Tel al-Zaatar and Damour earlier the same year.
Salima massacreSeptember 28–30, 1976Salima29 Druze Kataeb Regulatory ForcesChristian fighters from Damour killed 29 Druze civilians in Salima.[11]
Maasser Beit Eddine executionsOctober 28, 1976Maasser Beit Eddine16Christians16 Christian civilians, including a family of eight, were killed by PSP members in Maasser Beit ed-Dine.[12]
Chouf massacres (1977)1977Chouf135+ChristiansSeries of massacres and forced displacements on Christian civilians following Kamal Jumblatt's death.[13]
St George's Church attackAugust 21, 1977Brih, Chouf13Christians DruzeDruze leftist gunmen attacked St George's Church during prayers on Sunday with automatic gunfire inside and around the church killing 13 people.[14]
Ehden massacreEhden40Marada Movement Kataeb Regulatory ForcesIt was an inter-Christian attack that occurred between the Maronite clans.[15] [16] A Phalangist squad attacked the mansion of Frangieh family in an attempt to capture Ehden, killing nearly 40 people including Tony Frangieh, his spouse and his three-year-old daughter, Jihane.[17] [18] After the massacre, the power of the Frangiehs is reported to have declined.[19]
Qaa massacreJune 28, 1978Qaa26 Kataeb Regulatory ForcesMarada MovementSaid to be revenge after the death of Marada leader Tony Frangieh in the Ehden massacre.
Safra massacreSafra83 National Liberal Party (Lebanon) Kataeb Regulatory Forces
Dahr al-Wahsh massacreOctober 1990Dahr al-Wahsh, Aley75–80Lebanese Syrian Armed ForcesDahr al-Wahsh has received attention as the site of an October, 1990 conflict termed the "Dahr al-Wahsh massacre" by Middle-East studies professor Mordechai Nisan.[20] Interpretation and description of the event varies according to source.
Sabra and Shatila massacreWest Beirut460–3,500Palestinians and Lebanese Shiites Lebanese Forces (attack)
Israel Defense Forces (support)
Sabra and Shatila were Palestinian refugee camps housing both Sunni and Christian Palestinian refugees, as well as some poor Lebanese and Kurds. The Phalanges attacked the camp in retaliation for the assassination of President Bachir Gemayel.
Mountain war massacresSouth Mount Lebanon1,500 - 3,500Christians DruzeDruze forces massacred hundreds of Christian civilians, ethnically cleansing South Mount Lebanon from Christian presence.
1983 United States embassy bombingBeirut63Lebanese and AmericansIslamic Jihad OrganizationIslamic militants bombed United States embassy
1983 Beirut barracks bombingBeirut307Americans, French and LebaneseIslamic Jihad OrganizationVictims were mostly American Marines.
1984 Sohmor massacreSohmor13Lebanese Israel Defence Forces, and South Lebanon Army
War of the CampsWest Beirut3,781PalestiniansShi'ite militias, Syrian Armed ForcesSabra, Shatila and Burj el-Barajneh Palestinian refugee camps were besieged and bombed by the Shi'ite Amal militia, with Syrian Army support. 6,787 injured. Some activity occurred after May 1985
October 13 massacreBeirut740–940Lebanese Syrian Armed Forces2000 injured; Maronite Lebanese soldiers and civilians were killed by Syrian forces after surrender.
Mansouri attackApril 13, 1996Mansouri6Lebanese
Nabatieh Fawka attackApril 16, 1996Nabatieh Fawka9Lebanese
First Qana MassacreApril 18, 1996Qana106LebaneseThe Israel Defense Forces fired artillery shells at a United Nations compound, which had given refuge to 800 Lebanese civilians. 116 injured in addition to 106 deaths.
Second Qana MassacreJuly 30, 2006Qana28Lebanese
Marjayoun Convoy InicidentAugust 11, 2006Kefraya7Lebanese + Red Cross Israel Air ForceThe IDF bombed a 359 vehicles convoy which was granted right of safe passage from the IDF, mediated through the UNIFIL. A reporter confirmed that the Red cross and Civil defense coming to aid the convoy were also bombed, which resulted in the death of a Red Cross volunteer

Notes and References

  1. Khoury, p. 181.
  2. Web site: مجزرة طرابلس في 13 تشرين الثاني 1943ساهمت في تسريع إعلان إستقلال لبنان!... 22 December 2023.
  3. Web site: حين استشهد 14 طالبًا في طرابلس تحت دبابات الفرنسيين... جودي. الأسمر. almodon. 22 December 2023.
  4. Web site: مقاربة استقلالية... طرابلس تعيد انتاج وطنيتها بعد 17 تشرين. annahar.com. 22 December 2023.
  5. Web site: شهداء مجزرة الاستقلال في طرابلس… من ينصفهم ومن يخلّد ذكراهم؟ - تراث طرابلس. 17 September 2011. 22 December 2023.
  6. [Odd Karsten Tveit|Tveit, Odd Karsten]
  7. Web site: Lebanese warlord Franjieh wields power like Mafia don .
  8. Web site: Lebanon's legacy of political violence . ictj.org.
  9. Nisan, 2003
  10. Web site: ictj . 2014-07-29 . Attack on Chekka and Hamat . 2022-05-08 . Civil Society Knowledge Centre . en.
  11. https://www.ictj.org/sites/default/files/ICTJ-Report-Lebanon-Mapping-2013-EN_0.pdf
  12. Web site: ictj . 2014-07-29 . Christian civilians killed and displaced in Chouf . 2024-02-04 . Civil Society Knowledge Centre . en.
  13. Web site: ictj . 2014-07-30 . Christian massacres in Chouf and in West Beirut . 2024-02-04 . Civil Society Knowledge Centre . en.
  14. Web site: ictj . 2014-07-30 . Massacre of St. George Church in Brih . 2022-06-12 . Civil Society Knowledge Centre . en.
  15. Sune Haugbolle . 25 October 2011 . The historiography and the memory of the Lebanese civil war . Mass Violence.
  16. N. Kliot . January 1987 . The Collapse of the Lebanese State . Middle Eastern Studies . 23 . 1 . 54–74 . 10.1080/00263208708700688 . 4283154.
  17. News: 2 June 1987 . Six major leaders killed in Lebanon since 1943 . The Telegraph . 6 November 2012.
  18. Muhamad Mugraby . July 2008 . The syndrome of one-time exceptions and the drive to establish the proposed Hariri court . Mediterranean Politics . 13 . 2 . 171–194 . 10.1080/13629390802127513 . 153915546. Pdf.
  19. Web site: Suleiman Franjiyah . 5 July 2012 . Wars of Lebanon.
  20. Book: Nisan, Mordechai . The Conscience of Lebanon: A Political Biography of Etienne Sakr (Abu-Arz) . Routledge . 2003 . 0-7146-5392-6 . 94–95.