'Anjar' (,
Armenian: Ô±Õ¶Õ³Õ¡Ö€), also known as 'Haoush Mousa' (), is a town of
Lebanon located in the
Bekaa Valley. The population is about 2,400
[1], consisting almost entirely of
Armenians. The total area of its territory is about twenty square kilometers (7.7 square miles). In the summer, the population swells to 3,500, as members of the
Armenian Diaspora return to visit there.
Anjar is home to the
Armenian Apostolic Saint Paul Church which is the second largest Armenian church in Lebanon.
[2]
Formerly known as 'Gerrha', a stronghold built by
Umayyad Caliph
Al-Walid ibn Abdel Malek in the
8th century, the site was later abandoned, leaving a number of well-preserved ruins. (The present-day name derives from Arabic ''Ayn Gerrha'', or "source of Gerrha".) The famous Umayyad ruins are now a
World Heritage Site.
The area adjacent to the ruins was resettled in
1939 with several thousand Armenian refugees from the
Musa Dagh area of
Turkey. Its six neighborhoods are named after the six villages of Musa Dagh. The refugees were aided by the
French government.
The
Syrian Army chose it as one of its main military bases in the
Beqaa Valley and more disturbingly in the eyes of most Lebanese as the headquarters of its feared intelligence services. The Syrians have since then withdrawn from the town. With the Syrian occupation gone, the people of Anjar are eager to make their town a major Lebanese tourist attraction once again.
References
1. http://www.mousaler.com/anjar/data/demographics.html
2. http://www.armenian-genocide.org/Memorial.99/current_category.70/memorials_detail.html
See also
★
Franco-Armenian relations
External links
★
Official Website of Anjar
★
Website about Anjar
★
Lebanon, the Cedars' Land: Anjar
★
'Ya Libnan' | Lebanon News | 'Spotlight on Anjar'
★
Photos of Anjar ruins