On Wednesday, the Lebanese people
marked the anniversary of the start of the civil war that plunged their
country into violence and chaos for 15 years. More than 25 years since the conflict ended, however, the Lebanese people have yet to enjoy domestic tranquility.
The older generations who remember the war hope to never see such dark
days again, urging the nation’s youth to put their sectarian and
ideological differences aside. In Beirut, many buildings still bear the scars of the gunfire and
shelling that once ravaged the city known as the “Paris of the Middle
East”. Saeed Shams al-Din, a 58-year-old engineer who remembers the war, described the conflict as “one of the worst in history”.
The Lebanese people had borne the brunt of the civil war, Shams al-Din
told Anadolu Agency, going on to urge the nation’s youth to remain in
the country and strive to maintain peace.