DBAYEH, Lebanon Tucked away in the hills north of Beirut below a Maronite monastery, Lebanon s only remaining Christian-majority Palestinian camp gives few outward clues to its identity. Unlike the country s other Palestinian refugee camps, there are no flags or political slogans on display in Dbayeh camp.
Tucked away in the hills north of Beirut below a Maronite monastery, Lebanon’s only remaining Christian-majority Palestinian camp gives few outward clues to its identity. Unlike the country’s other Palestinian refugee camps, there are no flags or political slogans on display in Dbayeh camp. Behind closed doors, it’s a different story. At a recent community…
DBAYEH, Lebanon (AP) Tucked away in the hills north of Beirut below a Maronite monastery, Lebanon’s only remaining Christian-majority Palestinian camp gives few outward clues to its identity. Unlike the country’s other Palestinian refugee camps, there are no flags or political slogans on display in Dbayeh camp.
The residents of Lebanon's only Christian-majority Palestinian camp are trying to rebuild the ties to fellow Palestinians broken years ago the country's civil war