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The Emir Fakhr ed Din
Born
in 1572, Fakhr ed-Din, Arabic for the Glory of the Faith, was the son of the
Emir Qorqmas of the Arab tribe of Beni Ma'n, that followed the Druse religion[1]. The Turkish occupation did not extinguish the
desire for independence in the Arab territories. Fakhr ed-Din thought to extend
his emirate in Sciuf in Lebanon over to the Mediterranean coast and to make
friends with the enemies of the Turks. Through money, diplomacy and arms he
became the leader of Beirut, Baalbeck, Tyre, Sidon, Acre, Haifa and Banias. The
pashas of Tripoli in Syria and of Damascus were afraid of him and alerted the
Sublime Port of the Turkish government in Constantinople. The Sultan Ahmad I
ordered the pasha of Damascus to attack the rebel. Fakhr ed-Din did not dare to
resist and having left command of his forces with his brother Yunus and his son
Ali, he went into voluntary exile in Italy. Received with great honor by Cosimo
II de Medicis, he stayed in Florence from 1613-1618. From there he continued
the attempts to get rid of the Turks from Lebanon, Palestine and later Syria.
He also paid homage to the pope, Paul V. In the meantime he calmed
Constantinople with acts of deference.
The Sultan finally permitted him to return as governor of only the district of
Sciuf but Fakhr ed-Din, with elegant gifts, re-conquered his entire
territory.
At the middle of the 16th c. due to the anti-Christian fanaticism of the
people, which caused some victims, the Franciscans had to leave Nazareth, where
they had been since the end of the 14th c. In 1620 the Druse emir, at the
request of Thomas of Novara, the Custos of the Holy Land, supported by the
French consul Baptiste Tarquet, conceded to the Franciscans permission to live
in Nazareth, to restore the church over the grotto of the Annunciation and to
build a friary. For the restoration, of his own will he gave a generous
donation. At the request of another Custos of the Holy Land, Fr. Diego of San
Severino, seconded by the consul Francesco of Verrazano of the granduchy of
Toscany, in 1631 Fakhr ed-Din granted to the Franciscans the property of Mt
Tabor.
The pashas of Damascus, Tripoli and Gaza, with other emirs, accused Fakhr
ed-Din to the Sultan for favoring the Christians to the detriment of the
Muslims. This accusation, plus the fact that the Druse had opened the port of
Sidon to European ships and had tried to unite all his subjects into one
country and defend it against the Turks, drove Constantinople to intervene. In
June 1632 the leader of the Ottoman army, the Albanian Kutciuk Ahmad, attacked
the rebel on land with 45,000 men and by sea with 50 galleons. He was
conquered, taken prisoner and deported with his family to Damascus. Condemned
to death on March 14, 1635, Fakhr ed-Din knelt down and made the sign of the
cross. After his death he was stripped and they found he was wearing a golden
cross of Lorraine. It seems that the Druse emir was converted by the Capuchin
father, Adrian of La Brosse.
The Custody of the Holy Land remembers with gratitude the Emir Fakhr ed Din who always extended great friendship and sympathy to the Franciscans. At the request of Fr. Tomas da Novara, he donated the ruins of the Nazareth Annunciation Shrine to the Franciscans. He also offered a donation to restore the church and build a small convent. In 1631 he also granted the Franciscans the ownership of Mount Tabor.
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[1] G. Governanti, L'emiro Fakhr ed-Din, in
TS, 37 (1961), 204-207. G. Levi della Vida, s.v.Fakhr ed-Din, in EI, vol XIV,
Rome 1932, 730.
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