SHEIKH PIERRE GEMAYEL
Sheikh Pierre Gemayel, founder and leader of the Lebanese Kataeb
Party and father of two Presidents of the Lebanese Republic, the
late President-elect Sheikh Bashir Gemayel and the former President
Sheikh Amine Gemayel. Sheikh Pierre died August 29, 1984 of a heart
attack in his home in Bikfaiya. Just hours before, he had returned
from a morning Cabinet meeting.
Sheikh Pierre, as he was
respectfully known, spent his life struggling for the independence
and sovereignty of his country. Hardly a page of the political
history of modern Lebanon has been written without his name
appearing. He represents the belief in the coexistence of Muslims
and Christians in one state.
Sheikh Pierre Gemayel was born
in Bikfaiya on November 6, 1905. Since his family openly expressed
hostility to Ottoman rule in Lebanon, his father and uncle were
sentenced to death by the Ottoman authorities. To escape, the family
was forced to settle in Mansourah, Egypt from 1914 until the end of
World War I.
Sheikh Pierre studied at Jesuit schools and
graduated from the French Faculty of Medicine in Beirut with a
degree in Pharmacology. He founded the Kataeb Party in 1936 with
four other young Lebanese: Charles Helou ( who later became a
President of Lebanon ), Shafic Nassif, Emile Yared and Georges
Naccache. Sheikh Pierre was chosen to head the organization because
he was not a political figure.
In the early days of the
Kataeb Party, the Party opposed both the attempts by the
pan-Arabists to dominate Lebanon and the French efforts to dominate
Lebanon under the mandate. Sheikh Pierre and the Kataeb Party have
always believed in an independent and sovereign Lebanon free of all
foreign influence. During their first year, 300 persons joined the
Kataeb Party. In a 1937 demonstration, defying a French order to
disband their party, the Kataeb clashed with the Senegalese French
colonial police near Gemayel's Pharmacy. Sheikh Pierre was wounded
and arrested only to be released shortly afterwards.
Sheikh
Pierre and his Kataeb followers clashed again with the French Police
in November 1943 following a joint demonstration with the Najjadah
Party to protest the arrest of the Lebanese President and other
Lebanese leaders by French authorities. By 1943, the Kataeb
membership reached 35,000 due to their increasing popularity and a
change of rules which allowed women to join the
party.
Several times a Cabinet Minister and a member of
Parliament since 1960, Sheikh Pierre has been an active leader in
Lebanese politics. He was Minister of Post and Telecommunications
and Minister of Health and Social Affairs. On October 11, 1978 after
the 100-day war between the Lebanese resistance and the Syrian Army,
he strongly denounced the Syrian occupation of Lebanon. He
participated in the Geneva and Lausanne conferences for national
unity in November 1983 and March 1984.
Sheikh Pierre played
an outstanding role as a leader of the Lebanese Christian community.
In 1976, he formed the "Lebanese Front", a political alliance of
mainly Christian parties, with former President Camille Chamoun and
other Christian leaders. He has survived several assassination
attempts, one in 1962 and one on June 5, 1979.
Sheikh Pierre
was a loyal nationalist of an independent Lebanon. His life was
dedicated to this goal. He represented the belief in a
multi-confessional, democratic Lebanon. The wisdom and statemanship
he demonstrated throughout his life will certainly be remembered
with pride and distinction.
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