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Pierre Gemayel (last name also spelt Jumail or Jumayyil) was a Lebanese political leader. He is remembered as the founder of the Kataeb Party (also known as the Phalangist Party, as a parliamentary powerbroker, and as the father of Bachir Gemayel and Amine Gemayel, both of whom were elected to the Presidency of the Republic in his lifetime. He opposed the French Mandate over Lebanon in the late 1930s and early 1940s, and advocated an independent state, free from foreign control. He was known for his deft political manoeuvring, which led him to take positions which were seen by supporters as pragmatic, but by opponents as contradictory, or even hypocritical. Although publicly sympathetic to the Palestinian cause, for example, he privately cultivated relations with Israeli agents. A controversial politician, he survived several assassination attempts.
Early Life
Pierre Gemayel was born on 6 November 1905, in the village of Bifkaya, Lebanon, where his family had played a prominent role since 1540. His father and uncle were forced to flee to Egypt after being sentenced to death in 1914 for opposing Ottoman rule, returning to Lebanon only at the end of World War I.
Gemayel, a Maronite Catholic, was educated at Jesuit schools. He went on to study Pharmacology at the French Faculty of Medicine in Beirut, where he later opened a pharmacy. He also took an interest in sport, and led Lebanon's team at the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin, where he observed the organization of Germany's Nazi Party. Although he rejected Nazi ideology, he admired the formidable and efficient organization, and on his return to Lebanon later that year, he founded the Kataeb Party and organized it with a similar structure.
Charles Hélou, who later served as Lebanon's President from 1964 to 1970, worked with Pierre Gemayel in the early organization of the party. By the time of his presidency, however, Hélou was no longer a party member, and Gemayel unsuccessfully opposed him in the presidential election of 1964.
Independence Leader
In the years before and after Lebanon's independence, Gemayel's influence and that of the Kataeb Party was limited. It survived a French attempt to forcibly dissolve it in 1937 and took part in an uprising against the French Mandate in 1943, but despite its membership of 35,000, it operated on the fringes of Lebanese politics. It was not until the Civil War of 1958, that Gemayel emerged as a leader of a right-wing (mainly Christian) movement that opposed a Nasserist-inspired attempt to overthrow the government of president Camille Chamoun. In the aftermath of the war, Gemayel was appointed a cabinet minister in a four-member Unity government. Two years later, Gemayel was elected to the National Assembly, from a Beirut constituency, a seat he held for the rest of his life. By the end of the 1960s, the Kataeb Party held 9 seats in the National Assembly, making it one of the largest groupings in Lebanon's notoriously fractured parliament. Although his bids for the presidency in 1964 and 1970 were unsuccessful, Gemayel continued to hold cabinet posts intermittently throughout the remaining quarter-century of his life.
Lebanon has long been a proxy battleground in the Israeli-Arab conflict, and Gemayel's positions often shifted. His supporters viewed this as a sign of flexibility, while his detractors saw it as incoherent. Gemayel signed the Cairo Accords of 1969, which allowed Palestinian guerillas to set up bases on Lebanese soil, from which to carry out raids against Israel. He later defended his actions, saying that Lebanon really had no choice. In the 1970s, he came to oppose the armed Palestinian presence in Lebanon. The Kataeb built a private army, which came to be commanded by Gemayel's son Bachir, and was secretly armed, trained, and funded by Israel. It is one of the many ironies of Lebanese politics that a party that initially drew inspiration from the virulently anti-semitic Nazi movement in Germany was later to become a close collaborator with the Jewish state.
Gemayel was also to reverse his position on The Syrian intervention in the Lebanese Civil War of 1975 to 1990. He initially welcomed Syrian intervention, believing that the Syrian army alone was capable of disarming the Palestinian guerrillas, whom he now called terrorists, despite his earlier support for them. He soon became convinced, however, that Syria was occupying Lebanon for reasons of its own, and in 1976, he joined other mainly Christian leaders, including former president Camille Chamoun, the diplomat Charles Malik, and the radical Guardians of the Cedars Party leader Etienne Saqr, in forming the Lebanese Front to oppose the Syrian occupation. On October 11, 1978, Gemayel bitterly denounced the Syrian military presence , and the Lebanese Front joined the Lebanese regular army in an unsuccessful 100-day war against the Syrian army.
Legacy
Gemayel saw his younger son, Bachir Gemayel, elected President of Lebanon on August 23, 1982, only to be assassinated on September 14, nine days before his scheduled inauguration. No conclusive evidence has ever come to light, at least publicly, as the identity of the assassins. Bachir's older brother, Amine Gemayel was elected to replace him. Pierre Gemayel himself initially stayed out of his son's government, but in early 1984, after participating in two conferences in Lausanne, Switzerland, aimed at ending the civil war and the occupation of the country by Syrian and Israeli troops (which had invaded the country in 1982), he agreed to served once more in a Cabinet of National Unity. He was still in office when he died in Bifkaya, on 29 August 1984, aged 78 years.
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