Lebanon and the Gulf have long shared political and economic ties – perhaps even predating the establishment of Greater Lebanon, more than a century ago. Certainly, Gulf nationals have been visiting Lebanon since the early 1920s.
In more recent decades, students have flocked to Lebanon to study at its schools and universities, such as Choueifat and the American University of Beirut.
But before that, in the 1930s, there was a thriving gold trade between the Gulf and Lebanon. Gulf merchants had to turn to gold after the natural pearl trade faltered due to artificial pearls coming out of Japan. The merchants would purchase gold from Beirut, and then export it to India.
From the 1940s onward, the wealthy Gulf elite started buying farms and houses to spend summers in Lebanon. They would vacation in their homes in Aley, Bhamdoun station and Bhamdoun village (Al-Mahatta and Al-Day’aa), Souk Al-Gharb, Dhuhur Al-Abadiyah, as well as Sawfar and Ruwaisat Sawfar.
Furthermore, Lebanon served as a banking centre for the Gulf when the Gulf’s own sector was still in its infancy. Several Gulf businessmen contributed capital to these banks, depositing their funds there.