The Cedars of Lebanon stand solitary on a mountain top. What little remains of these majestic trees is a silent testament to the health, or lack of it, of Lebanon and the rest of the Middle East.
The Cedars of Lebanon stand solitary on a mountain top. What little remains of these majestic trees is a silent testament to the health, or lack of it, of Lebanon and the rest of the Middle East.
The Cedars are the most powerful symbol of Lebanon - the flag sports an image of one of the remaining trees.
They have lasted millennia, they stand witness to the dozens of armies that marched up and down the coasts of Lebanon to and from battle, and to the tenacity of Phoenicians, Canaanites and Maronites that conquered the mountains to harvest the Cedar wood.
They stand in the lore of the Middle East, in the wood of the Solar Boat buried beside the Great Pyramid of Giza, in the cedar chest that Osiris was sealed in to die, in the boats that plied the Med-iterranean in search of tr-ade, plunder and treasure.
Yet, what stands now is a small grove, some dozens of trees, where once there were mountainsides. The disappearance of the Cedars of Lebanon is due to deforestation and soil erosion - a classic tale of humans blindly using up their resources for short-term interest.
Some of the trees in the Cedar grove above the village of Bsharre are now also ill, they have a disease that requires their pruning and a diminishing of their majesty, and longevity.
The Cedars are a symbol of where the Middle East has come to: a state of disregard for nature, its resources, and above all for humans' place in the great play. The mountains above Beirut are now paved with concrete. That city, despite flashes of architectural beauty, suffers from rampant grey construction, the fumes of diesel and automotive congestion, and a sea littered with garbage, visible and invisible.
Cairo, Damascus, Alexandria all suffer the same fate. Demographics are a key driver of this unfortunate circumstance.
Large populations blindly living out technological and industrial habits will mean pollution and concrete - a new kind of deforestation.
There are activists who are attempting to reclaim the Lebanese mountains. Their efforts are commendable and indeed one can see the dark saplings on the slopes of Jaj or the Chouf in the Lebanese mountains.
However, their efforts must expand in scope and kind - it is not enough to replant hundreds of trees, hundred of thousands must be sown, and this effort must also be reflected in the clean-up state of cities and politics.
Past glory
The Cedars have been a symbol of past glory, of deadwood in a sense, when they can be of the essential need for renewal.
The road for the Middle East, like any society, can only be in renewal, in the projects of reforestation, or a clean-up of the environment, or urban renewal - not just words, but activities requiring human planning, devotion of time, money and resources currently allocated to less productive activities: political infighting and corruption, ideolo-gical wishes, or a comforting sense of victimisation.
The latter produce barren mountains, and the bare remnants of a forest, an ill grove whose majesty is fading fast. The former is an act that reflects the imperatives of nature: renew, renew again, or die.
Admission of this state of affairs may be harsh, and a sting to pride, but it is a rule of nature to renew for the sake of one's children - for survival.
This rule applies to people's relationship to their environment, as well as to their religion, politics and their relation with their neighbour.
This rule stands not only for Arab societies but for the Arab-Israeli conflict as well. The most famous appointment of the woods of the Cedars of Lebanon was with Solomon's Temple.
The hard and scented cedar beams were the basis of that spiritual monument. The memory of that place, the Temple Mount, is now the symbol of the toughest conflict between peoples on this planet.
The wood of the Temple building has rotted away, but the spirit behind it - certainly a relationship with the divine that means inclusion and not intolerance - must be now renewed, renewed again - or the region will perish as the old wood has.
The writer is a former UN and Canadian diplomat, a commentator on Middle East and international affairs.
Sign up for the Daily Briefing
Get the latest news and updates straight to your inbox