As a part of our current research project, we are attempting to archive as broad a perspective as possible concerning the the production of Lebanese hashish in the 21st century. We see this as a way to seek our own understanding of the complex issues surrounding this topic.
As a part of working to tell [...]
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7 Jun, 2008
We’ve archived a good number of perspectives on the resurgence of the “Buds of Bekaa”, and many of those articles have included quotes and sympathetic coverage of Bekaa’s farmers, but none of the articles have been written completely from the Lebanese perspective.
Thanks to the Internet, it’s possible to provide a unique Lebanese perspective from Ya [...]
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7 Jun, 2008
Here’s yet another addition to our ongoing look at Lebanese Hashish, from Issue #191, 6/22/01 - Drug War Chronicle
Return of the Repressed: Hash Production Revives in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley, Farmers Vow to Fight Eradication
6/22/01
For hundreds of years, the Bekaa Valley on the Lebanese-Syrian border was known for its luxuriant cannabis crops, most destined to [...]
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6 Jun, 2008
Lebanon was also predominantly important in the context of history as it was recorded in the cannon of the Bible books, or as westerners call it The Holy Bible.
From the beginning books, Lebanon is central in location. It was a landmark that is supported by the many familiar references to it. One knew where [...]
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6 Jun, 2008
The following piece, an interesting addition to our ongoing series of journal entries about Lebanese Hashish, was originally found at the Asia Pacific Media Services Limited website . . .
Looking for Leb Red
When I arrived at the University of London in the late 1980s, the thing to take to parties was Leb Red– not a [...]
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5 Jun, 2008
The entire “Bud’s In Bekaa” series was inspired, at least in part, by a 2007 article in the Christian Science Monitor which is also the first posting in this series of journal entries. Going back 20+ years in time, here’s a CS Monitor story from the mid 1980’s when hashish production in Lebanon’s Bekaa [...]
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5 Jun, 2008
“The Bible described Lebanon as “the land of milk and honey” because of its rich farmland, and in Roman times, Bekaa Valley was known as ‘the breadbasket of the Empire’.”1
According to Eye on Lebanon, “Farming remains a way of life . . . agricultural products still generate 12% of the country’s GDP. Bekaa valley is [...]
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4 Jun, 2008
As we mentioned previously, there have been a number of prior programs attempting to offer alternatives to hashish production for farmers in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley. The following New York Times article details an attempt earlier this decade to bring dairy farming to that region.
Cattlemen In Lebanon Miss Lucre Of Hashish
By NEIL MACFARQUHAR
April [...]
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4 Jun, 2008
Continuing our look back at the most recent historical spike in the production of Lebanese hashish, we’ll continue with another addition to the archive of articles from 2001. . .
Lebanon: Hashish Grows Again In The Fields Of Lebanon
Why Farmers In Hermel Have More Faith In ‘Gold’ Than Government
Sun, 01 Jul 2001
by Robert Fisk
originally [...]
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3 Jun, 2008
Since we’ve been giving a bit of attention to “Cannabis/Hashish in Lebanon” here at the Cannabis Chronicle of late, it seems only natural to put last year’s hash harvest into a bit better perspective. With that in mind, it should be obvious to those who know us that we’d like to share a bit [...]
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3 Jun, 2008
Whether we like it or not, it seems that everything in life is political. Therefore, it’s no great surprise that Lebanese hashish production in the Bekaa Valley would be a hot-potato of a political issue, not only in Lebanon, but her neighboring countries as well.
Considering the fact that hashish profits potentially offer a funding [...]
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2 Jun, 2008
In today’s age of readily available and inexpensive chemical fertilizers, it might be hard to imagine a major war being fought over mineral fertilizer deposits. But, believe it or not, back in the day before fertilizers (and explosives) became manufactured goods, it was quite natural (and seemingly almost inevitable) that a war would break [...]
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13 May, 2008
Most North Americans were raised with a glorified tale of the first Thanksgiving, a historical event that dates back to a 1621 feast in Plymouth, Massachusetts. A large part of that tradition is centered around the Indian named Squanto, who not only is commonly given credit for suggesting the traditional Thanksgiving feast to Pilgrims, [...]
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8 May, 2008
We’d hoped to have finished our own version of a biography for Lady Eve Balfour by now, but a variety of personal, family, and work commitments have not allowed us to complete that goal. Rather than leave our readers hanging, we’ll provide a great short biography by Oliver C. Fox that’s better than anything [...]
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22 Mar, 2008