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Clooney-Alamuddin engagement sparks strong opinions in Lebanon

There have been mixed reactions to the news that George Clooney is to wed Beirut-born Amal Alamuddin
Some have been delighted that Clooney has chosen a Lebanese bride, but others don't see what the fuss is about (AFP)

Reports that Beirut-born Amal Alamuddin has stolen the heart of Oscar-winning heartthrob George Clooney have caused a frenzy in Lebanon, where citizens are more used to negative news about domestic or regional conflict.

In Baakline, the leafy home district of Alamuddin's father in the Lebanese mountains, Ramzi Sabbagh could hardly contain his enthusiasm.

"She has made Lebanon and Baakline proud, given that she is originally from here," he told AFP.

Despite the excitement, few of Baakline's residents actually know Alamuddin, 36, whose family fled for Britain during Lebanon's 1975-1990 civil war.

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Alamuddin, who was just three at the time, now holds British citizenship and is an attorney specialising in international law and human rights.

Soon after People Magazine broke the news of her engagement to Hollywood's most coveted bachelor, Lebanese internet users began expressing their delight.

"Clooney engaged to a Lebanese woman is proof that we're the best," one user wrote on Twitter.

"Only a Lebanese woman could make a husband out of Clooney," added another.

For others, the news was a chance to mock Lebanon's perennial political paralysis.

"Let's vote George Clooney president of Lebanon," wrote one wit, as the country's parliament wrangles over the choice of the next head of state.

A satirical site, in a nod to tensions between Israel and Lebanon, which technically remain at war, joked that Clooney's decision to wed an Arab had raised Israel's ire.

"Israel presses for military action against Clooney after he proposes to Lebanese girlfriend," it wrote.

'Cousin George'

In tiny Lebanon, where family ties are all-important, some Lebanese lost no time in referring to Clooney as "cousin George"  - a very popular name among the Christian community.

Tongue-in-cheek, many internet users wondered if Clooney's impending nuptials might see him switch his allegiances from the coffee brand he promotes to Lebanon's famed brew.

"Clooney ditches Nespresso to become face of Cafe Najjar," a satirical site wrote.

Another photo circulated showed Clooney under the slogan "Mate, what else?" in reference to the yerba mate beverage loved by the Druze community that Alamuddin's family hails from.

The Druze are a heterodox offshoot of Islam whose faith is largely secret. They make up around five percent of Lebanon, which has 18 official sects, and the community is gradually shrinking.

The engagement hasn't escaped the attention of the community's influential leader Walid Jumblatt, who joked to AFP that "maybe Clooney will make a movie about the Last of the Mohicans here: the Druze!"

Contacted by AFP, Alamuddin's parents declined to comment.

"We don't want as a family to comment on our children's private life," said her mother Baria, a well-known journalist for the pan-Arab daily Al-Hayat, based in London.

Alamuddin's father Ramzi taught tourism at the American University in Beirut, and her sister Tala currently lives in Singapore. She has two half-brothers from her father's first marriage.

A source close to Alamuddin's family said Clooney and the Lebanese beauty are "madly in love", adding that her family had met the actor in the United States and liked him.

The news that Clooney, almost as famed for his bachelor lifestyle as his acting, is to marry has caused an international media frenzy, with outlets clamouring for details of the lady who has "tamed" him.

The tall brunette, who is fluent in Arabic, French and English, studied at the French school in London and holds degrees from Oxford and New York University.

She worked with the international tribunal examining the assassination of former Lebanese prime minister Rafiq Hariri and assisted ex-UN head Kofi Annan in efforts to make peace in Syria.

She also represented Ukraine's former president Yulia Tymochenko and the controversial founder of Wikileaks, Julian Assange.

Beirut's Daily Star newspaper, quoting a source close to the couple said Clooney and Alamuddin are to wed in London in September.

But not everyone is enthused.

"It's difficult to accept that she's marrying a non-Druze," grumbled a young man in Baakline.

Another resident looked blankly when asked about the subject.

"George Clooney? Who's that?"

Ramzy Baroud, an author and commentator on Middle East issues had this to say about the whole affair:

"None of this really matters to me, nor should it matter to you either; but what truly bothers me is that many, especially giddy Arabs and Muslims out there are thrilled that some Hollywood celebrity has chosen one of them (as if that is a measure of cultural and religious validation) .

They are forgetting (although I am sure many were never aware in the first place) that Clooney was involved in the Save Darfur campaign per the strategy of the Zionist lobby in Washington to distract from the genocide in Iraq.

Then, hundreds of Arab and Muslim intellectuals, including myself spoke out against the killings in Darfur, but also in Iraq, and we did so out of a sense of moral urgency, as opposed to a cleverly timed political campaign to defame Arabs and Muslims.

If Clooney did indeed care for Sudan, he would have staged another major campaign against the bloody civil war that recently took place in the now independent south Sudan. But of course, since Arabs and Muslims were not part of that fight (in fact, tens of thousands of refugees from the devastated south were welcomed in the north) few noticed or cared.

They were just random 'black people killing each other', as far as the neocons are concerned, and there is no political value in that, at least for now.

Needless to say, I had no expectations over the guy in the first place, but my disappointment is in those who are so selective in their memory, and in those who allow their lurking sense of cultural insecurity (constantly lusting for Western validation as a way to acquire a sense of meaning and value) that cared little when Clooney was a bedfellow of the lobby, but cannot contain their excitement that the 'sexiest man alive' (per the scientifically-valid research conducted by People magazine in 2006 - I am kidding, of course) has chosen an Arab as a mate. It is slightly shameful and quite embarrassing."

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