From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org
Former Hostage Ben Weir Returns to Lebanon
From
PCUSA NEWS <pcusanews@pcusa80.pcusa.org>
Date
29 Jul 1998 10:26:01
Reply-To: pcusanews list <pcusanews@pcusa80.pcusa.org>
29-July-1998
98250
Thirteen Years Later, Former Hostage Ben Weir
Returns to Lebanon
by Alexa Smith
LOUISVILLE, Ky.-It was around midnight 13 years ago when the Rev. Ben Weir
stepped from a car onto a west Beirut street - free for the first time in
495 days. Pulling off the ski mask that he'd been forced to wear off and
on, he headed for the home of a friend with a wad of handwritten letters in
his pocket for the families of four of the other U.S. hostages in Lebanon
who were still held in a basement room by extremists.
Weir was airlifted out of Beirut the next day. And he hadn't been able
to get back there until several weeks ago, when he and his wife, Carol,
revisited the Lebanese communities where they lived and worked for 32 years
before being swallowed up in political chaos.
"It was like coming home," said the now 75-year-old Presbyterian
minister and former General Assembly moderator of being back in Lebanon,
where in June he was commencement speaker at the Near East School of
Theology (NEST).
The Weirs began their tenure in Lebanon in 1953, serving from the
Shiite town of Nabatiyeh in the south to a cooperative parish in Tripoli in
the north. The family moved to Beirut in 1961 when Weir began work with
the Jinishian Memorial Program, a program designed to help needy Armenians
in Iran, Lebanon, Syria and Turkey, and Carol began teaching at NEST. At
the time of Weir's abduction, he was the Program Agency representative of
the United Presbyterian Church in the United States of America to the
National Evangelical Synod of Syria and Lebanon (NESSL), which is
headquartered in Beirut.
Weir was shoved into a car by gunmen while walking with his wife on May
8, 1984, just a few blocks from NEST, where the couple was headed. Just
one of many kidnap victims in the nine years of turmoil in Lebanon, Weir
was one of 17 North Americans held by Islamic Jihad at various times,
allegedly in an attempt to pressure the U.S. and Kuwait into a swap of
prisoners - the Americans for men who'd been jailed in Kuwait on charges of
bombing the French and U.S. embassies there.
In the 16 months of his captivity, Weir was held both in solitary
confinement and in small rooms with several other hostages: Associated
Press bureau chief Terry Anderson, American University of Beirut professor
Tom Sutherland, American University hospital administrator David Jacobsen
and Father Martin Jenko, a Roman Catholic priest.
Snatched away abruptly from 30 years' worth of relationships, Weir has
longed to go back to Lebanon - to reconnect and to remember. In fact, the
Weirs tried to do so two years ago, but the plans fell through. When
NEST's invitation came this year, both Weirs jumped at the chance. "Ben
did not have that opportunity to say good-bye," said Carol, who stayed in
Beirut 11 months after the kidnapping, until it was clear that she was
needed in Washington as an advocate for the hostages.
"It was providence that the Weirs could come 13 years after Ben's
release," said NEST president Mary Mikhail in an interview with the
Presbyterian News Service. "It was as if they just left yesterday. So
many people inquired about the possibility of visiting them, inviting them
or spending even a short time with them. The Weirs have always [been] and
still are considered as partners in the ministry of Jesus Christ -
co-workers with us all here."
Or as Salim Sahiouny, Weir's longtime colleague at NESSL, says, "They
spent 30 years amongst us. They really were part of our community and were
loved and respected by the community, by all denominations, by all
religious groups: Muslim and Druze. ...
"I had seen Ben in the States after he had been released," Sahiouny
said, recalling that Weir asked Sahiouny to stand on the platform as part
of the family when Weir was elected moderator of the 1986 PC(USA) General
Assembly in Minneapolis. "But this was the first time in Beirut, the first
time in Lebanon."
Postwar Beirut itself is a city changed from the one the Weirs left.
It is in the middle of a building spree that some estimate may go on for
five more years to repair the damage done by years of shelling, sniper fire
and bombs. In fact, the four-story apartment building where the Weirs
lived - just a few blocks from NEST - has been demolished and replaced by a
28-story high-rise with condominiums that sell for up to $1 million each.
The seminary is slowly regaining its prewar enrollment level of more than
100 seminarians, drawn from across the Middle East and North Africa. The
classrooms are no longer spontaneously converted into makeshift hospitals
or worship centers for bombed-out congregations. The school's bomb shelter
sits unused.
"There are lots of stresses," said Weir. "Lebanon was a middle-class
country before the war. But jobs are hard to find. There's been a rash of
building. And there's a rich superclass [able to afford] ostentatious
spending. What's left of the middle class is hard-pressed to make ends
meet. They are scratching just to survive."
But what has not changed, according to Weir, is the closeness within
the Arab Christian community that was home to him for so long.
"We found people expressing great emotion ... that I was fine, that I
was able to return. They'd say to us, `You know you're back home where you
belong. You ought to stay here.' There was also compassion for my 16
months of captivity and the distress that caused the family. But almost no
Lebanese family has been untouched by that shadow. Every family
experienced some loss, many [have] great losses - death, separation from
family [since some have left the country to find work]," said Weir. "And
that shadow is still there."
In his commencement remarks, Weir told his listeners that "waiting on
God" is an aspect of ministry - something he learned about in his tense 16
months as a hostage. "It is not," he said, "just passivity. It is
actively trying to exercise faith." Reflecting on those comments, Sahiouny
told the Presbyterian News Service that listeners could tell that "this
person - though he ... [was] badly treated for over one year - remembered
this part of the world."
Remembering is something both Weirs do - for both are working to raise
financial and prayer support for NEST from the U.S. When asked about how
at home he felt after all the years away, Weir said, "In one sense, a great
deal has happened in the years between [my release and now]. We've taught
at San Francisco Theological Seminary. We've done a lot. But on the other
hand, as I returned and stood under the banyan tree where I was released,
it all seemed very near in some ways. ...
"It really was a homecoming," he said, "in a very humbling and
delightful way."
Several of the other former hostages have visited Lebanon again,
including Anderson and Sutherland.
While in Beirut, the Weirs packed up mission documents stored in the
NEST basement - some dating back to the early 1800s - for shipment to the
Presbyterian Historical Society in Philadelphia.
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