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On June 13, 1978, mercenaries of the Maronite leader Bashir Gemayel brutally assassinated Antoine (Tony) Frangieh, the son of the Lebanese ex-president Suleiman Frangieh, his wife, and daughter, along with some thirty of his supporters in the town of Ehden in north Lebanon. This massacre was part of Bashir Gemayel’s attempts to unite the Maronite community under his leadership and gain control over Lebanon. Although intra- Maronite clashes were common, the Frangieh family turned the Ehden massacre into a resistance myth. According to the family, the entire event was an American-Israeli plot to divide Lebanon, and the Ehden victims died while resisting these schemes. This article examines the evolution of the resistance myth, its importance for the family’s political aspirations, and its relevance in the years following the massacre.

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This page is a summary of: The Ehden massacre of 1978 in Lebanon: The creation of a resistance myth, The Journal of the Middle East and Africa, July 2016, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/21520844.2016.1228041.
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