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Horsh Beirut

Coordinates: 33°52′16″N 35°30′36″E / 33.87111°N 35.51000°E / 33.87111; 35.51000
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Horsh Beirut
Map
LocationBeirut
Coordinates33°52′16″N 35°30′36″E / 33.87111°N 35.51000°E / 33.87111; 35.51000
Center of the park in Beirut, Lebanon.

Horsh Beirut (Arabic: حرش بيروت) is an urban park in the heart of the capital of Lebanon, Beirut. The urban park is also known as Horsh El Snaubar (Arabic: حرش الصنوبر or French: Bois de Pins). The park covers about 0.3 square kilometres (0.12 sq mi)[1] of green space within municipal Beirut.

History

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Jean-Paul Huchon, the French civil administrator and politician's dedication plaque on Beirut's National Park.

In the 13th century, William of Tyre (or Latin: Willelmus Tyrensis), the medieval prelate, chronicler and the archbishop of Tyre, named the forest of Beirut, as "La Pinée" or "Sapinoie".[2]

The park, Horsh, has suffered throughout history from frequent abuse of its timber especially by the armies of the Crusaders, Mamluks, Ottomans, and the Allies of World War II to build ships and weapons.[3] Large parts of the pine forest were segmented-out to become an Ottoman Casino in 1917 (which became the Pine Residence later during the French Mandate of Lebanon), a horse racecourse in 1921, Al-Shohadaa Cemetery in 1958, and Rawdat al-Shaheedein Cemetery in the 1970s. Moreover, the development of new roads during the 1950s state planning produced some leftovers of the remaining woodland that became subject to conflict and appropriation.

Horsh was bombed to burn by Israeli jet fighters during the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon. Much of it was also turned into a Palestinian refugee camp.[4] From a pine forest over 1,250,000 m2 in 1696 it decreased to a park over 800,000 m2 in 1967 (≈ 5% of Municipal Beirut),[5]

Today, Horsh Beirut is a 0.3-square-kilometre (0.12 sq mi)[6] triangular park at the southern border of the city limited by Omar Beyhum Street, 22 November Avenue, Abdelnasser Avenue and National Museum of Beirut (Musée national de Beyrouth).

The park, or Horsh Beirut, has been reconstructed after the end of the Lebanese Civil War and it has been closed for the general public for about 25 years.[7] Lebanese citizens had to apply for a permission and only have chances to get one if they are older than 35 years.[7] At the same time there have been reports of Western foreigners getting permission while applications by Lebanese were rejected.[7][8] Beirut residents have repeatedly protested against the denial of access to the park including the unequal access policies for Western and non-Western park visitors.[7][9] However, it ended up being reopened to the public by the governor of Beirut, Ziad Chebib, on September 3, 2015, in what was considered a victory for civil society after constantly demanding its reopening to all Lebanese citizens.

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References

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  1. ^ Doyle, Paul. Lebanon, Bradt Travel Guides, 2012, page 153.
  2. ^ Lombard, Maurice (Aug 25, 1973). Espaces et reseaux du haut moyen age. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 9789027971586 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Al-Wali, T. (1993). Beirut fi'Tarikh wal'Hadara wal'Omran (Beirut: History, Culture, and Urbanism). Beirut: Dar al-Elem lil'Malayeen. pp. 106-107.
  4. ^ "Public spaces in the Middle East". The Economist. 11 June 2016. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
  5. ^ Al-Wali, T. (1993). Beirut fi'Tarikh wal'Hadara wal'Omran (Beirut: History, Culture, and Urbanism). Beirut: Dar al-Elem lil'Malayeen.
  6. ^ "Beirut Municipality Sells Beirut's Collective Memory and the Last of its Green Spaces | al Akhbar English". Archived from the original on 2017-09-19. Retrieved 2015-07-14.
  7. ^ a b c d "Closed to the Public for Decades, Beirut's Only Park May Re-Open This Year". nextcity.org.
  8. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Horsh Beirut the forbidden green. YouTube.
  9. ^ "تظاهرة لفتح حرش بيروت / Demonstration to open Horsh Beirut". www.facebook.com.
  • Al-Wali, T. (1993). Beirut fi'Tarikh wal'Hadara wal'Omran (Beirut: History, Culture, and Urbanism). Beirut: Dar al-Elem lil'Malayeen.
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