George Clooney: “We’re going to go to Beirut”

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — First Salma Hayek, now George Clooney? Will one of the world’s most recognized couples really come to Beirut?

On Tuesday, George Clooney announced that he and his wife Amal Alamuddin were planning to visit Beirut in the “near future” to meet his Lebanese in-laws.

“We’re going to go to Beirut and I’m really excited to do that but I didn’t know much about the Lebanese culture including how many family members I now have in Lebanon, which is a thousand I think,” he said.

Clooney explained how his marriage to Alamuddin, who was born in Lebanon, has taught him about the country’s culture.

“What I have learned from Amal is about Lebanese culture and (it’s) absolutely fascinating to me,” he said.

Alamuddin’s family hails from Baakline, a well-known Druze town and seat of the sect’s religious leader in the Chouf district of the country.

Alamuddin’s father, Ramzi, is a retired professor at the American University of Beirut, while her mother, Baria, is a well-known former beauty-queen turned journalist with the newspaper Al-Hayat.

The family left Lebanon in the 1980s at the height of Lebanon’s civil war. They settled in London, with Amal going on to earn a law degree from the prestigious Oxford University and later a Master’s degree from New York University.

Clooney spoke of the couple’s vested interest in politics and his freedom to talk more openly about his beliefs than his wife, who may deal with different countries in her line of work.

“Well she’s not involved in politics, she’s active on the international stage. I would argue that both of us are equally involved politically. I’m in a much better place and able to do a lot more by not having to compromise,” he added.

The news comes just one day after Clooney called the conflict in Syria “incredibly complex.” He also explained how Amal has given him a “new perspective” on the country.

Clooney also told the BBC that he intends to do more to help the people of Syria without being formally involved in politics.

Alamuddin named one of the most “powerful” people in London

(LONDON, ENGLAND) — Human rights attorney Amal Alamuddin was recently featured in a UK newspaper’s list of the most powerful and influential people in London.

Alamuddin is the highest-placed female on the Evening Standard newspaper’s annual power ranking list.

This list, officially called ‘The 1000 most influential Londoners 2014’ features 1,000 people and at the fourth spot, she was placed higher than Kate Middleton, Victoria Beckham, Prince Harry and Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai.

Alamuddin is featured behind the Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne, the Mayor of London Boris Johnson and technology entrepreneur Demis Hassabis.

Prince Harry, who is currently fourth in line to the U.K. throne, claims the seventh spot.

Meanwhile, Amal has also been criticized for changing her last name from Alamuddin to Clooney after she got married in Venice last month.

The name change was first noticed on her law firm’s website on the day that she headed back to work in Athens on Monday to discuss how Greece can get back the Parthenon marbles from the British Museum.

Many critics are saying that the name change is “anti-feminist” and “backwards and subservient” to tradition while others are saying that Amal is “giving the impression that her name isn’t as valuable as his.”

Amal has yet to make any public comments about the name change to the media.

Three Lebanese politicians to attend Clooney and Alamuddin’s London ceremony

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — A London ceremony celebrating the wedding of Amal Alamuddin and George Clooney will welcome three Lebanese politicians on October 23.

Progressive Socialist Party Leader Walid Jumblatt, Environment Minister Mohammad Machnouk, and MP Marwan Hamade will fly to England for a dinner hosted by Alamuddin’s father Ramzi.

Previously, Jumblatt voiced positive opinions of Alamuddin and Clooney’s marriage, expressing hope they would set an example of openness for the Druze community.

“Tell me when George Clooney will be coming to Lebanon so I can greet him in Moukhtara,” he wrote, referring to his ancestral home in the Chouf mountains. “I will bring a delegation of Druze sheikhs.”

Ramzi Alamuddin is a retired professor of business studies at the American University of Beirut and comes from a prominent Lebanese Druze family. Amal’s mother, Bariaa Alamuddin, is the foreign editor of the Pan-Arab newspaper al-Hayat.

During the 1980s, when the Lebanese Civil War was in full scale, Alamuddin’s family left Lebanon for London and settled in Buckinghamshire, England.

Amal Alamuddin is a graduate of the University of Oxford and the New York University School of Law.

The Lebanese-British human rights lawyer Alamuddin, 36, and Hollywood actor Clooney, 53, dominated world headlines last weekend in a lavish Venice affair that included a wedding ceremony at one of the famed city’s luxurious hotels, the Aman Canal Grande.

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