
BRIH, Lebanon – It took more than three decades and an unexpected death to bring the village of Brih back together. Nestled
among fruit trees and olive groves in a rugged valley, Brih was
populated for generations by both Christians and Druze – adherents to a
small but influential offshoot of Islam that emerged in the 11th
century.
But when Lebanon descended into civil war in the 1970s,
the two communities found themselves pitted against each other. In 1983,
when the last Christians fled, Druze villagers moved into abandoned
Christian houses; others were razed.
Then last November, Georges
Chalhoub, a 56-year-old shopkeeper whose forefathers had come from Brih
but who had lived near Beirut for much of his life, was killed in a car
accident. Chalhoub had dreamed of moving back to his ancestral village
and so his family decided to bury him there.











