- Krzysztof Kościelniak
- Destruction of cultural heritage during the Israeli invasion of the Gaza Strip
- Destruction of cultural heritage during the Israeli invasion of Lebanon
- Israeli invasion of Lebanon (2024–present)
- Israel–Hezbollah conflict (2023–2024)
- Attacks on religious sites during the Israeli invasion of Gaza
- Israeli invasion of Syria (2024–present)
- 2024 Israel–Lebanon ceasefire agreement
- Gaza war
- Israeli bombing of the Gaza Strip
- Israeli invasion of the Gaza Strip
destruction of cultural heritage during the israeli invasion of lebanon
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This page is subject to the extended confirmed restriction related to the Arab-Israeli conflict.
This page is subject to the extended confirmed restriction related to the Arab-Israeli conflict.
The 2024 Israeli invasion of Lebanon caused damage to or destroyed various cultural heritage sites, up to the scale of the destruction of entire historic villages.
Background
Lebanon's Directorate General of Antiquities is a branch of government supervised by the Ministry of Culture and it is responsible for the country's national heritage sites. Lebanon's cultural heritage includes World Heritage Sites and includes traces from a variety of cultures including Phoenician, Roman, and Ottoman. Conflicts in the region have threatened Lebanon's cultural heritage, including the 2006 Lebanon War between Hezbollah and Israel.
In October 2023, Hezbollah began firing into Israel, in support of Palestine during the Israeli invasion of the Gaza Strip. The Israel–Hezbollah conflict escalated to the point of Israel launching a ground invasion of southern Lebanon on 1 October 2024. Over a million people were displaced from Lebanon, and 60,000 from northern Israel. A ceasefire was agreed in November, by which point 3,500 Lebanese citizens had been killed.
Impact
Organisations such as Heritage for Peace have started documenting the destruction caused by the invasion, though Graham Philip of the Endangered Archaeology in the Middle East and North Africa project has said that the full extent of damage caused by the conflict was still unclear. Philip also contrasted the damaged caused with the destruction of cultural heritage by the Islamic State, saying that while the former was deliberate the impact to heritage sites in Lebanon was likely to not be intentional, however the greater scale of bombing made damage more likely.
Settlements in southern Lebanon sustained extensive damage: an analysis by Le Monde found that 38% of buildings in the region had been damaged or destroyed during the conflict. Entire villages, such as Mhaibib, were demolished by the Israel Defence Force (IDF) using explosives encompassing historic houses and recently built structures. Lebanon's Director General of Antiquities, Sarkis Khoury, said "The complete and systematic destruction of the historical memory of these villages is the most damaging thing." Biladi, a non-governmental heritage organisation, reported that between the beginning of the invasion in September and the ceasefire in November more than twenty heritage sites were damaged, including nine that were destroyed. In addition to direct damage to heritage sites, explosions may cause indirect damage and accelerate decay processes.
Early in the conflict, the IDF attacked Tibnin in southern Lebanon; the medieval castle sustained damage as a result and one of its walls collapsed. On 9 October, the 19th-century church of St George in Derdghaya was hit by an IDF airstrike; at least eight people sheltering in the church were killed when it was destroyed. On 12 October, airstrikes destroyed a souk (market) in Nabatieh that dated from the Ottoman period (1516–1918). The following day an 18th-century mosque in Kfar Tibnit was destroyed during an Israeli raid. It was one of three mosques damaged during the conflict. On 6 November, an Israeli airstrike damaged the Ottoman era Manshiyeh house and the 150-year-old Hotel Palmyra in Baalbek.
The city of Tyre was bombarded and while the UNESCO World Heritage Site was not directly hit other historic sites in the city were damaged including structures dating to the Byzantine and Ottoman periods.
Reaction
On 17 October the International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) issued a statement on the loss of life caused by conflict in the region and the damage to cultural heritage. UNESCO held an emergency session the following month where it granted 'enhanced protection' to 34 sites in Lebanon, making financial resources available to aid their preservation. According to NBC News "Israel said that it only targets Hezbollah, but accuses the group of embedding itself in and near civilian infrastructure, including heritage sites".
= List of heritage sites given 'enhanced protection' by UNESCO
=The 34 sites are:
Adlun archaeological site
Afqa archaeological site
Ain Herche temple and archaeological site
Anjar archaeological site
Baalbek archaeological sites
Beiteddine Palace
Byblos
Chama’ Citadel
Dakerman archaeological site
Dubieh Castle – Chakra
Hibarieh Temple
Hosn Niha temple
Jeb Jennine Roman Bridge
Jiyeh – Porphyreon archaeological site
Kaifun fort
Kharayeb archaeological sites
Majdel Anjar Temple
Nahlé Temple
Nahr el-Kalb archaeological site
Oum el‘Amed archaeological site
Qalaat Al-Chakif – Beaufort Castle
Qalaat Deir Kifa (Maron Castle)
Qalaat Tibnin (Toron Castle)
Qasarnaba Temple
Rachid Karami International Fair-Tripoli
Ras Al Ain Basins and Built Heritage
Sarepta archaeological site
Sidon's archaeological sites
Spring of Ain el Jobb archaeological site (Temnine el Faouqa)
Tell el-Burak archaeological site
The sanctuary of Eshmun
Tyre archaeological sites
National Museum of Beirut
Nicolas Ibrahim Sursock Museum
See also
Destruction of early Islamic heritage sites in Saudi Arabia
Destruction of cultural heritage by the Islamic State
Destruction of cultural heritage during the Israeli invasion of the Gaza Strip
List of destroyed heritage
List of World Heritage Sites in the Arab states