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On Thursday May 17, 2001, the Fondation prepared for the National
Heritage Day a thematic exhebition, "The Tree", which
took place in the Science Museum/Planet Discovery, Beirut, from
17 to 24 of May 2001. The program for this day included: guided
visits to several museums and historical sites, a walk in the gardens
of the Sisters of Besançon School, Sursock Palace as well
as Saint Joseph School, in addition to other exhibitions:"At
the Encounter of Trees" and "The Art, The Tree and the
Heritage", in Downtown-Beirut.
The Foundation chose to focus attention on the Tree, maybe because,
as Henry Guys said in Beirut and Lebanon in 1847, on
the top of the lebanese mountains there was a perfumed tree called
Leban which gave Lebanon its name: Sur le haut
Liban se trouve un arbre dont lécorce est très
odorante et que lon appelle encore larbre à parfum,
doù vient peut-être le nom de Liban, la montagne
à arbres de Leban.
The Tree: symbol of our heritage is a fundamental, constitutive
element of our human, natural, historical, and cultural heritage.
The Tree is the Carpet of green that covers our mountains
and hills with beauty and brightness, and gives Lebanon its charm
and splendor.
Our ancestors used it to build ships and travel around the world,
architects used it to build temples, houses, cradles and graves.
Crowns of victory were made from its branches.
The Foundation emphasized the role and importance of the tree throughout
the life of people.
It invited young Lebanese people to care and preserve the medlar
tree, the lemon and orange tree whose aromatic smell fills our coastal
cities, the apple, cherry, peach, pear and almond trees, the biblical
fig tree and the countless vineyards, the olive tree, symbol of
purity and peace, the oak persistent and deep-rooted, the pine tree,
the cypress tree and the thousand year old cedars, the symbol on
the national flag and Lebanese currency.
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