The Shiite community in Lebanon is enduring a profound Nakba (catastrophe) from which it will take years, if not decades, to recover, and which, by extension, affects all Lebanese communities to varying degrees.
It stems from several factors, including Lebanese internal dynamics, regional and international influences, circumstantial events, and historical legacies. But one factor stands out above all else: Israel’s existence as a colonial power in Palestine, supported and legitimised by the West.
Israel was established on a Biblical promise to European Jews, conceived as a refuge from the persecution and discrimination they faced for centuries, culminating in the Holocaust, in which six million Jews were killed. This added grave urgency to the Zionist nationalist objective, which had its supporters in Europe and America.
Western support for Israel, combined with the instability and weakness of its Arab neighbours, transformed the concept into a state with immediate access to the most advanced military technology of its day—a ‘qualitative edge’ that Israel has maintained ever since, unleashing what many see as brutal and unrestrained force. Israel further destabilised an already fragile Arab political landscape and has done so ever since.