Posted on 05/30/2026 7:34:32 AM PDT by Uncle Miltie
‘G ‘ was born into a Maronite Christian family in southern Lebanon, part of a community that traces its roots to the ancient Phoenicians. His early childhood unfolded in a quiet Christian village just 15 kilometers from the Israeli border, surrounded by rolling hills, farmland, and deeply rooted family traditions. Like many Lebanese Christians in southern Lebanon, his family lived modestly, valuing faith, community, and inner peace in a region increasingly consumed by conflict.
While Lebanon was embattled in a civil war from 1975-1990, and the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982 to drive out the PLO had left its scars, “G” remembers a childhood centered around family. There were visits to grandparents, swimming in the Litani River, and helping his grandfather work the land. His memories are not political at first; they are human. Lebanon, in his mind, was once a place of warmth and beauty – a country his family deeply loved and considered worth fighting for.
But southern Lebanon during “G’s” childhood was also shaped by external forces far beyond village life from before he was born.
Lebanon’s descent into chaos began after the arrival of Palestinian Arab terrorists expelled from Jordan following Black September in 1970. The country, once celebrated as the “Paris of the Middle East,” increasingly became a battleground. Militias formed, sectarian tensions exploded, and civil war engulfed Lebanon from 1975 onward.
For many Christians in southern Lebanon, the war was not ideological but existential. Their villages became trapped between PLO terrorists, regional powers, and the growing influence of armed Islamist groups. “G’s” community viewed itself as caught in a struggle it never chose.
Eventually, local Christian militias aligned with Israel in what became the South Lebanon Army (SLA), fighting alongside the Israeli military against militant organizations operating in the south. Then came Hezbollah.
Founded in the early 1980s with Iranian backing, Hezbollah emerged as one of the dominant armed forces in Lebanon. To many Lebanese Christians in the south, Hezbollah represented not liberation but another wave of control and intimidation. “G” grew up hearing how SLA fighters and Christian families became targets. Hezbollah’s rise fundamentally altered life in southern Lebanon, creating fear among those who opposed its ideology or cooperation with Israel.
Exile from a homeland in collapse
On May 24, 2000, when Israel abruptly withdrew from the Security Zone in southern Lebanon, everything changed overnight for “G’s” family.
He was only six years old when his father entered the house and told the family to pack immediately. Within moments, “G,” his four brothers, and his parents were in a car heading south with only a few bags and mattresses strapped to the roof. Confused and frightened, they joined thousands fleeing toward the border fence as Hezbollah forces rapidly advanced into former SLA-controlled areas.
The scene at the border remains etched in “G’s” memory: panic, uncertainty, and a feeling of abandonment. Despite SLA fighting alongside Israel, the hasty evacuation felt ill-planned and mired in bureaucracy that initially left the SLA families stuck between the advancing Shi’ite terrorists and the Israeli border they sought to cross.
Given the years of fighting terrorists side by side, it was not Israel’s finest moment as its SLA allies – who fought risking their lives for their country – feared for their lives by staying in the country. As Hezbollah pursued retreating families toward the border, for two days many waited before Israel finally allowed them entry under international pressure. In a single moment, they became refugees. But they were alive.
Arrival in Israel did not bring immediate belonging. “G’s” family, like thousands of others connected to the SLA, was first housed in military bases before being relocated to northern Israel. Their status was complicated. In Lebanon, they were labeled traitors for collaborating with Israel. Among some Arab Israelis, they were viewed with suspicion. Among many Israeli Jews, they were simply seen as Arabs with no awareness of being allies.
For a six-year-old child, those labels became wounds. “G” entered second grade in a Jewish school without understanding Hebrew. He sat through lessons staring silently at the walls, unable to follow the teacher. At recess, he hid his Lebanese identity. He was ashamed to take out the laffa with labaneh his mother packed for lunch because he feared ridicule. His struggle to fit in was more complicated than merely being an immigrant. Instead, he threw the sandwiches away.
Children in the neighborhood bullied him and called him “Arab,” a term he had come to associate with accusation and hostility. The irony was painful: His family had fled Lebanon because of Hezbollah and militant violence, yet in Israel he often felt reduced to the same stereotypes associated with the enemies his family had fought against.
The psychological toll ran deep. “G” remembers being embarrassed when his parents spoke Arabic in public. He felt caught between worlds – neither fully Lebanese anymore nor fully Israeli. Even as a child, he carried the burden of explaining a story nobody around him seemed to understand.
Yet, over time, survival transformed into adaptation. Social integration came slowly. “G” eventually connected with other marginalized children and learned how to build friendships despite cultural barriers. That ability to connect with people, he says, became one of the defining traits of his life. Gradually, he embraced both his Lebanese heritage and his new Israeli reality.
Religion presented another challenge. As a Christian in a predominantly Jewish environment, maintaining faith required effort and improvisation. There were few churches nearby and no stable clergy for the displaced community at first. Religious milestones were delayed, traditions fragmented. “G” underwent an important Christian coming-of-age ceremony years later than expected because there was no organized community structure initially in place.
Despite the hardships, “G’s” story is ultimately not one of victimhood but transformation. He slowly reclaimed pride in his identity. The food he once hid became a symbol of acceptance. He began researching the history of Lebanese Christians, the SLA, and the complex relationship between Lebanon and Israel. The shame he once carried evolved into purpose. Pride.
At the center of his journey lies a deeper understanding of displacement. Hezbollah’s rise had uprooted his family from Lebanon, but the shadow of that conflict followed them into Israel as well. Rockets from Lebanon, border tensions, and recurring wars constantly reminded northern Israeli communities – including displaced Lebanese Christians – that the conflict was never truly over.
“G” grew up living on both sides of that trauma: first as a child fleeing Hezbollah’s dominance in Lebanon, and later as a resident of northern Israel living under the continuing threat emanating from the Lebanese border.
Yet instead of embracing bitterness, he chose dialogue, resilience, and bridge-building. His childhood became a lesson in identity, perseverance, and the painful complexity of belonging between two nations still divided by war.■
This is part one of a two-part series.
BTW Miltie - still doing your gig with the IDF? I meant to ask, are you a dual citizen?
Serious question.
Israeli settlers step up aggressions against Christians in West Bank, Jerusalem bishop says.
As attacks on Christians become more frequent, a crisis looms for Israel.
Taybeh: West Bank Christian town under renewed settler incursion.
A strategy 'to make life intolerable': Israeli settlers are driving Christians out of West Bank.
Of course, those news reports make Israel "look bad," so they can't possibly be true.
Not even properly Jewish, so the Israeli government wouldn’t have me (see About Page). Not that I’m asking or need it. I’m a kinda Jewish American mutt.
Haven’t been in the IDF for 12 months now. Lots of other travel and priorities just now …
You’re always concerned about when Jews plausibly annoy Christians but not when muslims murder Christians by the tens of thousands.
Tells us all we need to know about you.
They're not "plausibly annoying" Christians.
They are definitely persecuting Christians.
Were Christians to treat Jews the way Jewish settlers treat Christians, you'd be crying "anti-Semitism!"
"Plausibly annoying"? Your weasel words "Tells us all we need to know about you."
Socalled Christians treated Jews that way for hundreds of years. It’s why ny family fled Europe to come here. Now, credit to the Catholic Church, they had a record of defending Jews from the pagans in Europe.
Actually, Jews began persecuting Christians in the first century. After that, it was always mutual.
Messianic Jews were being persecuted, along with Gentiles Christians. It began as a Jewish squabble. Then it became bigger when the Church moved away from its Jewish roots, which are now returning.
Muslims murder Christians all the time. I’ve posted over 20 articles in the last year.
You never showed up once.
Anti-Semite.
The only reason you ever cared about any Christian anywhere was so that you could blame a Jew.
You don’t give a rat’s ass about Christians. You have NEVER shown up to condemn their actual daily slaughter by muslims in Nigeria, Niger, Mali, Sudan, Pakistan, or any of the dozens of other posts I’ve made about it.
You’re no Christian. You just don’t care.
Unless you can blame a Jew.
You've already raised this complaint long ago. I answered it.
* No one praises those nations as having "the Most Moral Military in the World" (as Dennis Prager and others have called the IDF).
* No one praise them as "Sharing Our Values!"
* No one calls them America's "Best Friend and Greatest Ally!".
* Nor does we give those nations massive amounts of uncritical financial and military support, as we do with Israel.
So there is no need to correct the moral record of those nations (we know they're bad), or knock them off their moral pedestals.
But since you feel free to read my mind and guess my motives, I'll return the favor.
It's possible you don't "give a rat's ass about Christians" in those Muslims countries. You're just trying to deflect attention from Israel's misdeeds against Christians.
All Jew Hate, All The Time - Angelino97
And you play the race card.
Hitler wrote a book rationalizing his hatred of Jews.
The hate drips off you like putrefaction off a corpse.
Your lack of self-awareness, your intolerance for disagreement, your outrage and slander in response to factual news reports is astounding.
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