I am Syrian and I think that they are very similar. Differences are based on cities rather than region and tend to be the spices used and small details which sometimes have a big impact on the taste.
American Lebanese Syrian Associated Charities was created in 1957.
im lebanese and id have to say lebanese food is way better. Well I am Syrian and I have to say that they are very similar with differences mainly in the spices and quantities used. It is worth noting that strictly speaking dishes in the Levantine region are associated with cities NOT regions or countries. So a dish might taste differently depending on whether you have it in Damascus, Homs or Aleppo.
Syrian/Lebanese
Syrian or Lebanese
SIETHE IN Syrian?Or Lebanese SI-THIE? HELP.........That is what I called my Grandmother!!
Most Lebanese are fake. And Syrians are known to being the most naturally beautiful girls. But Lebanese are known to being more stylish. They look almost the same tho...
Many Lebanese Christians and Sunnis hate Syria because of what the Syrian rule of the last 40 years has done to Lebanon. The Syrian government meddle in Lebanese affairs and have never respected the independence and sovereignty of Lebanon and have always had a great influence over Lebanon. Many Sunnis and Christians want Lebanon to be an independent state, and are supporters of Lebanese nationalism. Syria has never accepted this and the Lebanese have never been fond of them for this.
The Hundred Days War was a subconflict within the 1977-82 phase of the Lebanese Civil War which occurred at the Lebanese Capital Beirut. It was fought between the Christian Lebanese Forces (LF) militia, under the command of the Kataeb Party's President Bashir Gemayel, and the Syrian troops of the Arab Deterrent Force (ADF).
Their posts dotted the Lebanese and Syrian coast. Their trading centres dotted the Mediterranean Seacoast.
The Lebanese borders were set by France during the early division of the Mandate for Syria, at which point, Lebanon was split off from the other Syrian regions. Currently, the Lebanese borders are defended by the United Nations (UNIFIL) which has recognized the Lebanese-Israeli border as being the "Blue Line" south of the Litani River.
Lebanon is the country in question. Eventually, the arrival of the Palestinian Liberation Organization in the early 1970s resulted in the Lebanese Civil War between Shiites, Lebanese Sunnis, Palestinian Sunnis, and Maronite Christians and saw Israeli and Syrian forces as well.
All of the Lebanese factions signed the Ta'if Agreement in Saudi Arabia, which gave the Muslim population more power than they had previously held, but did not completely eliminate Christian safeguards on power. The Israeli invasion force retreated to the area south of the Litani River (until 2000) and the Syrian invasion force was installed as a "legitimate" peacekeeping and occupation force. (While it was legitimate under the Ta'if Agreement, most Lebanese regarded the Syrian Occupation as a hostile control over their government and finally ejected it in 2006.)