Thousands March for Secularism in Lebanon!
After months of incessant publicity (all of which started through social media and then moved into press coverage), the Lebanese Laique Pride, a march for secularism, finally took place this morning with thousands of people participating! Numbers are estimated at two to three thousand, but I am very sure that at least 5,000 people started the march. At one point, they filled up the width of the road from on top of the Expo Beirut tunnel all the way down and around the Phoenicia hotel. Everyone came together for a very simple, yet daring and bold, initiative by 5 friends: Nasri Sayegh, Yalda Younes, Said Chaitou, Alexandre Paulikevitch, and Kinda Hassan. Often, the best organizing for social change starts with an idea that a small group of friends have.
Many news agencies have reported that a maximum of 2,000 participants marched in today’s event, although many of us are sure we had way more than 2,000. Here is a photo by @funkyozzi that shows only a part of the march – clearly in the thousands.

View @funkyozzi‘s blog post about the event.
A Unified Stand Against Sectarianism
The march was not longer than a couple of kilometers – starting on the Corniche of Ain El Mraisse all the way up to Masaref Street of Downtown Beirut. Secularist organizations, student groups, women’s organizations (including the awesome Nasawiya), and a majority of unaffiliated citizens marched together with slogans, chants, drumbeats, whistles, led by a truck with blasting music and secularist slogans:
- “Ta2 Ta2 Ta2ifiyyi.. La2 La2 3ilmaniyyi..” (Sec Sec Sectarianism.. No, No, Secularism)
- “Shou tayiftak? Ma khassak!” (What’s your religion/sect? It’s none of your business!)
- “Al-3ilmaniyyi hiyyil 7al” (Secularism is the solution)
In a country so deeply divided along sectarian lines (in the personal status laws, in every aspect of the government, in people’s mindsets) which are manifested in civil wars and conflicts all the time, this march was totally awesome. Who would have thought so many people of all shapes and sizes would show up in such large numbers to support the idea of an anti-sectarian state in Lebanon? I had attended some of the organizational meetings of the event, where many people kept asking: what’s next? How is this going to help? What is it going to achieve? What is your political demand? How are we going to solve the issues posed by sectarianism, which seem like a total political deadlock? Etc. I personally think the organizers played it smart by saying that they weren’t trying to solve the entire sectarian crisis in Lebanon. They were, however, trying to bring people who believe in or work on secularism in Lebanon together on one day, for one march, to show first and foremost that there are many of us. The thousands who actually showed up stand for tens of thousands who were sitting at home. We also showed that we can put our differences in strategy and ideology aside for one day to come together and show solidarity for our cause. What happens afterward? We keep on fighting our battles, debating this system we live in, and maybe, perhaps, who knows, some of us might have been so inspired by the feeling and ambiance today that we step it up a notch in terms of working together and raising a stronger unified voice against the many ugly faces of sectarianism in Lebanon.
Social Media
Also, I want to give a big shout out to citizen journalism, which is alive and kicking in Beirut! It seemed like every other person had a photo or video camera, and I recognized many bloggers and tweeps taking part and snapping pictures. Of course there was the genius banner: “Sectarian #Epic #Fail” which only a handful of people understood but adored
The number of participants on the ground was also a big boost to all of us slactivists who use Facebook and social media as our major tool of organizing. They are becoming more effective tools every day.
Things I liked most: We didn’t have any sectarian infiltrators, though that probably means nobody was taking us seriously =) A woman led the march. There were lots of baby strollers and dogs! Everybody seemed really happy. I got to carry my “3omro ma yirja3 al-tawezon il ta2ifi” (To Hell with sectarian balance) for the second time. Things I didn’t like: singing the friggin national anthem when we got close to Parliament. #Boo. I can’t stand national anthems. There was no mention of Palestinians and a lot of mention of “Lebanese” “Lebanesedom” “Lebanese-ness” which also makes me feel nauseous.
But yeah, awesome march all in all =) Here’s a pic of my favorite people at the march: the feminists and the tweeps (and me, the feminist tweep).
And I had to include this photo of the secularist doggie!
| This entry was posted by Nadine on April 25, 2010 at 5:56 am, and is filed under Politics. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |
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about 1 year ago
Thanks Nadine for an awesome roundup.
Wish I had been there with you, but you and the rest of the tweeps, with your tweets, pics and blogs, got me as close as possible
about 1 year ago
Awsome. I am glad to read about all this here. Thank you for blogging about this I felt I was there, almost.
about 1 year ago
I really wanted to be there, thank you for sharing this.
about 1 year ago
http://eography.blogspot.com/2010/04/best-banners-from-todays-march.html
about 1 year ago
“There was no mention of Palestinians ”
isn’t off-topic to mention them ? ano shu khas ?
other than this , congrats for us lebanese
and for lebanese stuff like this gives hope
about 1 year ago
Bless you Nadz.. for all the work you’re doing on all the fronts!
about 1 year ago
I don’t think there’s anything wrong with nationalism in Lebanon right now, it’s 900 million times better than ‘ana sinni, ana dirzi, ana marouni, ana shi3i’. etc. Kilna lebneniyyi!! Otherwise great article, and that secular dog is my hero!
about 1 year ago
I really wanted to be there, thank you for sharing this.
about 1 year ago
Is the goal of this movement to seek equality for all in Lebanon – regardless of religion or ancestry – so that if, as in developed Western countries, one is living there for many years he/she receives citizenship and equal rights? If so, this movement will contribute to great growth and prosperity in Lebanon by ending ethnic divides and everyone joining together as a productive collective, regardless of what tragedies may have happened a long time ago.
about 1 year ago
Fran, how about worrying about “ethnic divides” and “joining together as a productive collective” in Israel first before pontificating on what we need to do in Lebanon?
about 6 months ago
Most people marching in these pics are already non seucular – this is seriously a joke
about 5 months ago
Well done, respect for what you are doing! hopefully we ll make some headway soon!
about 5 months ago
Also please visit
http://themofochronicles.blogspot.com/
thanks