|
(Continued from page 26)
Old bookstore run by elderly priest becomes latest victim of Lebanon's growing tensions
• TRIPOLI, Lebanon (AP) -- The masked men came in the night, ripped off the front door and set the bookstore on fire. They were out to punish the owner, an elderly priest, after false rumors that he had written an anti-Islamic tract. • Thousands of books that lined the walls became the latest victim of Lebanon's sectarian tensions, which have been swelling as civil war rages in neighboring Syria. • But the blaze in the northern city of Tripoli also moved many residents, Muslims and Christians alike, to offer to help repair the 40-year-old shop, showing how some Lebanese are rising up in protest. The outpouring echoes a similar response last month after a teenager was killed in a car bombing that targeted a prominent politician in the Lebanese capital. His death ignited protests and an online campaign. • On Sunday, a day after the fire, a dozen activists gathered in an arched alleyway outside the Saeh bookstore. A music box blared the melancholy song "I Love You, Lebanon" by the country's beloved singer Fairouz. A Lebanese army tank was parked at the end of the street, and soldiers in blue-and-khaki camouflage uniforms milled about. A young man with shaggy hair scrubbed soot off the alley's stone floor with a broom, assisted by a middle-aged Muslim woman in a headscarf. • "Most of the people who came don't know the bookstore," said Mutaz Salloum, a 26-year-old volunteer. "There's always fighting, bombs and attacks on people's property. People are really sick of it. We can't be quiet anymore." •
Today in History The Associated Press
• Today is Thursday, Jan. 9, the ninth day of 2014. There are 356 days left in the year. • • Today's Highlight in History: • On Jan. 9, 1914, the County of Los Angeles opened the country's first public defender's office, headed by Walton J. Wood. • • On this date: • In 1788, Connecticut became the fifth state to ratify the U.S. Constitution.
(Continued on page 28)
|
|