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Patriarch Rai meets with President Obama in DC

Rai-Obama(WASHINGTON, DC) — Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai said he discussed issues of the presidency and supporting the Lebanese army with President Barack Obama on Thursday, as the American leader stressed the importance of deterring the terrorist threat against Lebanon.

In remarks to LBCI television after he met Obama along with the patriarchs of the Orient, Rai said the U.S. president promised him to “protect Lebanon from the repercussions of everything that is happening in the region,” revealing that talks tackled the stalled presidential vote and military support for the Lebanese army.

The patriarch said he sensed that Obama has Lebanon among his concerns and that he realizes how much the ruthless Islamic State group is a threat to the region.

Meanwhile, Lebanon’s National News Agency said the meeting with Obama lasted 35 minutes.

It said the American leader underlined to the delegation the importance of supporting the army so that it can “rein in terrorism and prevent it from infiltrating Lebanon.”

Obama also called on the Lebanese to reach an agreement over a new president, according to Lebanese National News Agency.

Earlier on Thursday, the patriarchs of the Orient discussed with U.S. congressmen the condition of Middle East Christians and their displacement at the hands of terrorist organizations.

“The persecution of Christians is a reality,” Rai said during the meeting.

He pointed out that “the painful situation is mired by the silence of the world.”

Rai, who is currently in the U.S. capital Washington to attend a three-day conference organized by the In Defense of Christians organization, called on the international community to facilitate the return of those who were displaced to their hometowns.

On Wednesday, Rai called on the U.S. to take a more prominent stance and further steps to safeguard Christians, who are being “assaulted” and “displaced” by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant and other terrorist organizations.

Rai stressed that the “orient is the land of Christians, who are being threatened with extinction.”

“No one has the right to leave humans suffer as if we’re back to the stone age,” the Patriarch said.

“Can no one stop this crawling monster that is intimidating people?” Rai wondered.

He pointed out that the “Arab and Muslim communities and the international community should understand that Christians are not minorities.”

“The world is responsible for preventing terrorist organizations and returning those who were displaced to their regions and protecting them,” Rai said.

The conference aims at discussing the situation in the Middle East and the conditions of Christians. It gathered Orthodox Christians, evangelicals, Roman Catholics and others.

Andrew Doran, executive director of In Defense of Christians, said: “If Christian voices are able to ring out as one from Egypt to Syria to Iraq, Lebanon and Jordan, then we really do believe it will be possible for Middle Eastern Christians to survive.”

Senator Ted Cruz booed offstage at “In Defense of Christians” summit

(WASHINGTON, DC) — United States Senator Ted Cruz was booed offstage at the “In Defense of Christians” Summit Wednesday night after saying that “Christians have no greater ally than Israel.”

Cruz, the keynote speaker at the sold-out D.C. dinner gala, began by saying that “tonight, we are all united in defense of Christians. Tonight, we are all united in defense of Jews. Tonight, we are all united in defense of people of good faith, who are standing together against those who would persecute and murder those who dare disagree with their religious teachings.”

Cruz was not reading from a teleprompter, nor did he appear to be reading from notes.

“Religious bigotry is a cancer with many manifestations,” he continued. “ISIS, al-Qaida, Hezbollah, Hamas, state sponsors like Syria and Iran, are all engaged in a vicious genocidal campaign to destroy religious minorities in the Middle East. Sometimes we are told not to loop these groups together, that we have to understand their so called nuances and differences. But we shouldn’t try to parse different manifestations of evil that are on a murderous rampage through the region. Hate is hate, and murder is murder. Our purpose here tonight is to highlight a terrible injustice, a humanitarian crisis.”

“Christians have no greater ally than Israel,” he said, at which point members of the crowd began to yell “stop it” and booed him.

Cruz went on to say, ““Those who hate Jews hate Christians. If those in this room will not recognize that, then my heart weeps. If you hate the Jewish people you are not reflecting the teachings of Christ.”

Cruz exited the stage in dramatic fashion saying, “If you will not stand with Israel and the Jews, then I will not stand with you. Good night, and God bless.”

In Defense of Christians’ president, Toufic Baaklini, blamed a “few politically motivated opportunists” for the furor and said they were “made no longer welcome,” according to Politico.

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Lebanese Drift champion dies in apparent suicide, says friend

Winner Jad Himo poses for a portrait during Red Bull Car Park Drift Regional Final at World Trade Center in Dubai , United Arab Emirates on November 8th, 2013(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Jad Hilmo, the 21-year-old champion of the 2014 Lebanese Drifting Champion, has reportedly taken his own life, according to his close friend on Thursday.

The friend says the coroner’s report alleged Himo shot himself with a single bullet to the chest.

They added that Himo’s friend, Johnny Nader, had handed himself in to police in Brummana following the 10 p.m. incident Wednesday evening.

According to Nader’s affidavit, Himo was in his company as they drove along the Metn highway.

Himo then asked him to pull over without warning, snatched his handgun and ran less than 100 meter away to kill himself.

Himo won the 2014 Lebanese Drifting Championship and the 2013 Red Bull Car Park Drift Champion.

The security forces are carrying out further investigations into the incident.

Arab Film Festival sponsors House of Lebanon “Beyond Borders” film screenings

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(LOS ANGELES, CA) — “Arab Films provide a sense of empowerment to the Arab community, especially to our youth…They help generate a sense of pride of who we are and invite us to embrace our cultural identity.” Serge Bakalian, Arab Film Festival Executive Director.

The Arab American Film Festival is sponsoring House of Lebanon “Beyond Borders” Film Screenings, to be featured during our 2014 “Beyond Borders” Art Exhibition Opening Reception weekend (Saturday, October 18, 5:00pm – 9:00pm and Sunday, October 19, 9:30am – 5:00pm).

1“Screening Lebanese and Arab films is one of “Beyond Borders” Art Exhibition highlights,” said Karen Srour, House of Lebanon Executive Director. “House of Lebanon realizes the power of films in depicting Lebanon’s culture and telling its unique story.” From here stems the partnership with the Arab Film Festival who will present a selection of Lebanese shorts during “Beyond Borders” Art Exhibition Opening Reception weekend. “We thank the Arab Film Festival for their sponsorship.”

“It is a great opportunity to be able to partner with the House of Lebanon,” said Serge Bakalian, Executive Director of Arab Film Festival. “Lebanese modern films are part of a larger emerging talents of the Arab film industry and are a powerful tool in promoting Lebanon’s culture. House of Lebanon is the first Lebanese American Cultural center of its kind in the USA. We are happy to support its mission of preserving the Lebanese culture. Featuring Lebanese films will enhance the guests’ cultural experience.”

With an international standing, the Arab Film Festival is considered one of the most important showcases of Arab cinema outside the Arab world.”Our mission is to present an alternative perspective of Arabs and to show the beauty and diversity of the Arab world. Arab films give Arabs a strong voice to tell their own story and present their reality as they see it through their own lenses,” said Bakalian. “In their different genres,” he added, “Arab films are a powerful and accessible egalitarian medium that can reach a broader audience and make an impact.”

In addition, featuring Arab films “serves dual purpose,” said Bakalian. On one hand, “they introduce and educate the non-Arab audience about the diversity of the Arab world cultures, which are lumped together and presented as one in the American mainstream media. Exposing non-Arab audience to messages and stories featured in Arab films helps influence and reshapes mainstream American culture’s misconceptions of Arabs and deconstructs negative stereotypes.” On the other hand, “Arab films introduce the diverse Arab audience to each other. Arab people have different cultures, religions, customs, food, and dialect depending on their country of origin. Through Arab films, they get introduced to each other’s cultures and customs.”

Moreover, “Arab films provide a sense of empowerment to the Arab American community, especially to our youth.” Bakalian used his own personal story to elaborate his point. “I was born and raised in Lebanon. I came to the USA at the age of ten. Growing up, I was shocked at how the American media represents and portrays Lebanon and the Arab world through the issues it focuses on. It was all about violence, war, and conflict. I didn’t see the beauty of our culture being represented, which made me, as a youth, disassociate myself from my Lebanese origin and upbringing. It wasn’t until my college years, after I saw the Lebanese film “West Beirut”, that I was re-connected with my roots. The film empowered me and helped me embrace my Lebanese identity. I related to the story, the neighborhood, and the characters. That’s the power of films. They help generate a sense of pride of who we are and invite us to embrace our cultural identity.”

Ultimately, films may open up a dialogue and pave a path to intercultural communications and understanding. “They connect viewers on a different level by helping them transcend cultural barriers and encourage us to overcome our differences and see our commonalties as human beings,” concluded Bakalian.

PHOTOS: Defense of Christians Summit opens in Washington

idc6(WASHINGTON, DC) — A three day conference dedicated to aiding the Christians in the Middle East opened yesterday in Washington, DC. The “In Defense of Christians” Summit (IDC) will bring together lawmakers, Eastern and Western churches, community leaders and various Christian groups to address the issues that concern Middle Eastern Christians.

Lebanese Patriarch Beshara Rai is participating in the conference.

Patriarchs praying at the In Defense of Christians conference in Washington, DC.
Patriarchs praying at the In Defense of Christians conference in Washington, DC.
Andrew Doran, the executive director of In Defense of Christians.
Andrew Doran, the executive director of In Defense of Christians.

“Christian institutions provide social service, health care and education for millions throughout the region. Christians are not only the lawyers, doctors and businessmen in their communities, they are also the servants…their very presence is the source of pluralism that has a moderating influence throughout the region,” said Doran.

Toufic Baaklini, the president of In Defense of Christians.
Toufic Baaklini, the president of In Defense of Christians.

“Our brothers and sisters are suffering terribly,” Baaklini said. “Our duty, the moral duty of the hundreds of you that are here today from all over the world, is to stand together under the banner of our common cause, the cause of faith, existence and tranquility.”

John Ashcroft, former U.S. Attorney General
John Ashcroft, former U.S. Attorney General

“We are here because there are those who are the victims of individuals around the world, who are victimized because people seek to impose on them their idea of some construct of God, some construct of morality, some construct of human existence,” Ashcroft said.

Cardinal Leonardo Sandri
Cardinal Leonardo Sandri

“It is very significant that the meeting is taking place between people of different Christian denominations and people of religion who believe as Christ the value of the freedom of the human person,” the Cardinal said.

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Lebanese Patriarch speaks at DC Christian conference

(WASHINGTON, DC) — Eastern patriarchs said the international community must work to protect Christians by taking firm measures against extremism during a Christian solidarity summit in Washington, DC on Wednesday.

Speaking at the opening ceremony Tuesday, Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai called on the United States and the United Nations Security Council to “take a clear stance and more aggressive steps to protect the Christians who are being slaughtered and displaced at the hands of ISIS and terrorist organizations.”

“We came to Washington, the hub of international decision, to say that it is not right to let down humankind as if we were thrown back into the Stone Age,” Rai said in reference to the flight of Christians in the face of advancing ISIS militants in Mosul and north Iraq.

“The Orient is home for Christians who have been there for more than 2,000 years. Today Christians are threatened with extermination, and no power in the Arab or Western world has moved a finger,” Rai lamented. “How is it possible that no one could stop the advancing monster?”

The Maronite prelate stressed that world powers should assume their responsibility in curbing extremist organizations and ensuring the safe return of displaced Christians to their homes in Iraq and Syria.

“The Muslim, Arab and international communities have no right to idly watch violations of human rights being committed. Either we have justice in this world, or we are living under the law of the jungle,” Rai said.

“We came here to say that we are humiliated not only as Christians, but as human beings. We say all the displaced should return to their homes and live in security and dignity.”

The conference, which opened in U.S. capital Tuesday, was held upon the initiative of the Washington-based Association for the Defense of Christians in the Orient.

The patriarchs of Oriental churches sounded the alarm last month over the persecution of Christians at the hands of ISIS, who have captured large swaths of land in north Iraq and Syria and forced non-Muslims to convert or face persecution and death.

The patriarchs called on the international community to intervene militarily in Iraq and Syria to curb the militants and protect Christians who had fled their homes in the face of rampant ISIS violence.

Gebran Bassil to meet with John Kerry in Saudi Arabia

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Lebanese Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil is scheduled to travel to Jeddah, Saudi Arabia to attend talks on joint action against the Islamic State (IS) group, a cabinet minister said.

The minister, who remained unidentified, told al-Liwaa newspaper in remarks published Wednesday that Bassil will attend a meeting between U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and nine Arab states in addition to Turkey.

Kerry is seeking to build a broad coalition against jihadists in Iraq and Syria that has already won support from Arab nations.

The talks coincide with a much-touted address from President Barack Obama at the White House, where he will outline a strategy to confront IS and address criticism that he has been slow to respond to a wave of atrocities that has shocked the world.

Islamic extremists overran the Lebanese border town of Arsal last month, killing and capturing a number of soldiers and police officers.

The fighting between Lebanese troops and the militants was the most serious spillover yet of Syria’s conflict into the neighboring country.

Colombian impostor poses as Lebanese diplomat

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(BOGOTA, COLUMBIA) — A Colombian man is being investigated for posing as a Lebanese diplomat after giving lectures on the Middle East and advising the Colombian military under a false identity, local media reported.

Jeyson Puello, a resident of the northeast city of Valledupar, was using diplomatic papers with a UN seal to pass himself off as Jason Ali Hakim Abdullaziz Al Nayb, supposedly a high-ranking diplomat and former Lebanese foreign minister, news reports said.

Authorities say Puello posed as the ambassador for several months. He spoke to local universities on Middle Eastern affairs, sent news releases and sponsored a charity event for firefighters. He carried fake IDs from the United Nations and Colombia’s foreign ministry.

Puello denies committing any crime. He tells the local newspaper Vanguardia that as a Muslim with Lebanese roots, he’s qualified to talk on the Middle East and calls the impersonation a joke.

Despite his perfect Spanish and ordinary clothing, Puello managed to get into official meetings and establish a network of army contacts under the assumed identity.

But a curious colonel who noticed the “diplomat” always arrived at meetings on foot contacted the Lebanese embassy in Bogota.

“There’s no person by that name,” he was told in a letter printed in newsweekly Semana.

The letter called on Colombian authorities to investigate and try the “imposter.”

Police caught Puello by sending a fake invitation to “the honorable ambassador.”

He was briefly detained but has been released pending further investigation.

Puello had two diplomatic accreditations, one from the Colombian foreign ministry and another identifying him as the Lebanese ambassador, said daily newspaper El Tiempo.

The Colombian foreign ministry declined to comment.

North Carolina museum to open Lebanese immigrant exhibition

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(NEW BERN, NC) — An exhibition to commemorate the history of Lebanese immigrants who have made North Carolina their home since the 1880s will open Friday at the North Carolina History Center in New Bern.

“Cedars in the Pines: The Lebanese in North Carolina: 130 Years of History” is the latest free exhibit hosted in Tryon Palace’s Duffy Gallery, located inside the North Carolina History Center.

Researched and developed by the Khayrallah Program for Lebanese-American Studies at N.C. State University, the multimedia exhibit features personal stories, family photographs, home movies, letters, artifacts and audio recordings that bring to life the story of Lebanese immigration in North Carolina.

ncComputer games, Arabic music, a dance floor to learn steps of the dabke, and other interactive components will further immerse museum visitors in the Lebanese immigration experience.

“Cedars in the Pines recounts the hard work, challenges and contributions of three generations of Lebanese immigrants who have adapted to life in North Carolina while struggling to maintain their cultural heritage,” said Akram Khater, director of the Khayrallah Program for Lebanese-American Studies at N.C. State University. “Lebanese-Americans have left a lasting impression on the state’s civic, social, political, religious and cultural life.”

The exhibit follows the experiences of Lebanese immigrants from two waves of immigrations. The first wave arrived between the 1880s and the 1920s, when economic decline, famine and war encouraged the Lebanese to leave for the Americas and Africa.

Some found their way to North Carolina. Another wave of Lebanese immigrants began to arrive in 1975, when a civil war broke out in Lebanon. This internal conflict and continuing regional tensions have led more Lebanese to emigrate.

Cedars in the Pines brings together their remarkable stories in three exhibit sections.

A brief description of each follows: “Journeys” explores the many choices associated with immigration. The section includes the history of Lebanon, the reasons the emigrants left home, and the hardships of their long journeys. In the 1880s, thousands boarded steamships for America, where new arrivals faced more challenges in a foreign country. Exhibit items, such as an Arabic Bible that belonged to Side Mack, who immigrated at age 17, help tell these important stories.

“Belonging” focuses on the challenges and opportunities of Lebanese immigrants who moved to North Carolina. Khater notes that the newcomers experienced culture shock, struggled against challenges and discrimination, and earned acceptance and success. The section highlights work, school and those who have given back to their communities. Visitors will see an elementary reader printed in Arabic, a Lebanese passport, items from Parker’s Restaurant, a family-run business in Rocky Mount, and other artifacts that recount these experiences.

“Being” explores what it means to be Lebanese in North Carolina, centering on home, religion and community. In this section, Khater explains that cultural practices like marriage traditions and food, music and religion, along with community organizations, played key roles in their efforts. Some traditions were changed to adapt to American culture, but others were strongly maintained.

DC summit to spotlight plight of Christians in the Middle East

omni-hotel-washington-dc(WASHINGTON, DC) — The deteriorating situation facing millions of Christians and other religious minorities in the Middle East will be the focus of a bipartisan and ecumenical conference in the nation’s capital this week.

The global summit will take place from September 9 to September 11 in Washington, D.C.

The three-day event sponsored by In Defense of Christians (IDC) will feature speakers from all over the globe. The IDC Summit for Middle East Christians, whose theme is “Protecting and Preserving Christianity, Where It All Began”, will be the first occasion in history where six Christian Patriarchs from the Middle East will gather together in the United States.

“For too long, Westerners have stood by, silent or unaware, while Christians and other groups in the Middle East have endured discrimination, persecution, and religious cleansing,” said Toufic Baaklini, the president of IDC.

“Today, as the Islamic State continues its genocidal campaign against Christians in Iraq and Syria, the globe is finally awakening to their plight. IDC exists to give voice to these voiceless people. In this hour of their greatest peril, they are in desperate need of support. We must act now.”

Summit attendees will have the opportunity to meet with Members of Congress and their staff, policy makers, diplomats, human rights activists, and religious leaders.

“This summit will empower the Middle Eastern Christian Diaspora and energize the American people to stand in solidarity the ancient Christian communities of the Middle East. Their survival is vital to stability in the region, and their ability to flourish in their countries of origin has national security implications for the United States,” Baaklini said.

Speakers include: Maronite Patriarch Cardinal Rai; Syriac Patriarch Ignatius Aphrem II; Archbishop of Washington Donald Cardinal Wuerl; Leonardo Cardinal Sandri of the Vatican’s Prefect of the Congregation for Oriental Churches; Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX); Congresswoman Anna Eshoo (D-CA), Congressman Ted Deutch (D-FL); Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL); Dr. James Zogby; and Nina Shea, Director of the Hudson Institute’s Center for Religious Freedom.

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