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50 years after Lebanon's civil war began, a bullet-riddled bus stands as a reminder

Mohammed Othman, a Palestinian survivor of the April 13, 1975 attack on a bus carrying Palestinians that sparked Lebanon's civil war, prays over the graves of those killed that day, at the Palestine Martyrs Cemetery, in Beirut, Lebanon, Friday, April 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

BEIRUT (AP) — It was an ordinary day in Beirut. In one part of Lebanon's capital, a church was inaugurated, with the leader of the Christian Phalange party there. In another, Palestinian factions held a military parade. Phalangists and Palestinians had clashed, again, that morning.

What happened next on April 13, 1975, would change the course of Lebanon, plunging it into 15 years of civil war that would kill about 150,000 people, leave 17,000 missing and lead to foreign intervention. Beirut became synonymous with snipers, kidnappings and car bombs.

Lebanon has never fully grappled with the war's legacy, and in many ways it has never fully recovered, 50 years later. The government on Sunday marked the anniversary with a small ceremony and minute of silence, a rare official acknowledgement of the legacy of the conflict.

The massacre

Unrest had been brewing. Palestinian militants had begun launching attacks against Israel from Lebanese territory. Leftist groups and many Muslims in Lebanon sympathized with the Palestinian cause. Christians and some other groups saw the Palestinian militants as a threat.

At the time, Mohammad Othman was 16, a Palestinian refugee in the Tel al-Zaatar camp east of Beirut.

Three buses had left camp that morning, carrying students like him as well as militants from a coalition of hardline factions that had broken away from the Palestinian Liberation Organization. They passed through the Ein Rummaneh neighborhood without incident and joined the military parade.

The buses were supposed to return together, but some participants were tired after marching and wanted to go back early. They hired a small bus from the street, Othman said. Thirty-three people packed in.

They were unaware that earlier that day, small clashes had broken out between Palestinians and Phalange Party members guarding the church in Ein Rummaneh. A bodyguard for party leader Pierre Gemayel had been killed.

Suddenly the road was blocked, and gunmen began shooting at the bus “from all sides,” Othman recalled.

Some passengers had guns they had carried in the parade, Othman said, but they were unable to draw them quickly in the crowded bus.

A camp neighbor fell dead on top of him. The man’s 9-year-old son was also killed. Othman was shot in the shoulder.

“The shooting didn’t stop for about 45 minutes until they thought everyone was dead,” he said. Othman said paramedics who eventually arrived had a confrontation with armed men who tried to stop them from evacuating him.

Twenty-two people were killed.

Conflicting narratives

Some Lebanese say the men who attacked the bus were responding to an assassination attempt against Gemayel by Palestinian militants. Others say the Phalangists had set up an ambush intended to spark a wider conflict.

Marwan Chahine, a Lebanese-French journalist who wrote a book about the events of April 13, 1975, said he believes both narratives are wrong.

Chahine said he found no evidence of an attempt to kill Gemayel, who had left the church by the time his bodyguard was shot. And he said the attack on the bus appeared to be more a matter of trigger-happy young men at a checkpoint than a “planned operation.”

There had been past confrontations, "but I think this one took this proportion because it arrived after many others and at a point when the authority of the state was very weak,” Chahine said.

The Lebanese army had largely ceded control to militias, and it did not respond to the events in Ein Rummaneh that day. The armed Palestinian factions had been increasingly prominent in Lebanon after the PLO was driven out of Jordan in 1970, and Lebanese Christians had also increasingly armed themselves.

“The Kataeb would say that the Palestinians were a state within a state,” Chahine said, using the Phalange Party's Arabic name. “But the reality was, you had two states in a state. Nobody was following any rules."

Selim Sayegh, a member of parliament with the Kataeb Party who was 14 and living in Ein Rummaneh when the fighting started, said he believes war had been inevitable since the Lebanese army backed down from an attempt to take control of Palestinian camps two years earlier.

Sayegh said men at the checkpoint that day saw a bus full of Palestinians with “weapons apparent” and "thought that is the second wave of the operation” that started with the killing of Gemayel's bodyguard.

The war unfolded quickly from there. Alliances shifted. New factions formed. Israel and Syria occupied parts of the country. The United States intervened, and the U.S. embassy and Marine barracks were targeted by bombings. Beirut was divided between Christian and Muslim sectors.

In response to the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon, a Shiite militant group was formed in the early 1980s with Iranian backing: Hezbollah. It would grow to be arguably the most powerful armed non-state group in the region.

Hezbollah was the only militant group allowed to keep its weapons after Lebanon's civil war, given special status as a “resistance force” because Israel was still in southern Lebanon. After the group was badly weakened last year in a war with Israel that ended with a ceasefire, there has been increasing pressure for it to disarm.

The survivors

Othman said he became a fighter after the war started because “there were no longer schools or anything else to do.” Later he would disarm and became a pharmacist.

He remembers being bewildered when a peace accord in 1989 ushered in the end of civil war: “All this war and bombing, and in the end they make some deals and it’s all over.”

Of the 10 others who survived the bus attack, he said, three were killed a year later when Christian militias attacked the Tel al-Zaatar camp. Another was killed in a 1981 bombing at the Iraqi embassy. A couple died of natural causes, one lives in Germany, and he has lost track of the others.

The bus has also survived, as a reminder.

Ahead of the 50th anniversary of the attack, it was towed from storage on a farm to the private Nabu Museum in Heri, north of Beirut. Visitors took photos with it and peered into bullet holes in its rusted sides.

Ghida Margie Fakih, a museum spokesperson, said the bus will remain on display indefinitely as a “wake-up call” to remind Lebanese not to go down the path of conflict again.

The bus “changed the whole history in Lebanon and took us somewhere that nobody wanted to go,” she said.

Mohammed Othman, a Palestinian survivor of the April 13, 1975 attack on a bus carrying Palestinians that sparked Lebanon's civil war, steps out the Palestine Martyrs Cemetery where they buried some of those killed that day, in Beirut, Lebanon, Friday, April 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)
FILE - A Palestinian Fatah guerrilla fires a machine gun at Syrian troops, near the resort town of Bhamdoun, mount Lebanon. (AP Photo/Zuhair Saade, File)
FILE - A Muslim militiaman aims his rifle down an alley at Christian forces on the other side of the Green Line, in Beirut, Lebanon, Jan. 4, 1982. (AP Photo, File)
FILE - A banner shows small portraits of people reported missing during the Lebanese civil war and aftermath, during the ninth anniversary of an ongoing sit-in, in front the U.N headquarters in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, April 11, 2014. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla, File)
FILE - Recruits in the Phalange Party militia go through training procedures at the Christina Militia Security Garrison, Jan. 3, 1977, in Beirut, Lebanon. (AP Photo, File)
A building that is still riddled with bullets and shells from previous fighting during Lebanon's civil war on a former Beirut frontline, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)
The Lebanese capital's landmark Holiday Inn hotel riddled with bullets and shells damaged from previous fighting during Lebanon's civil war on a former Beirut frontline, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)
The Dome City Center, left, known as "The Egg," an unfinished cinema that was damaged from previous fighting during Lebanon's civil war on a former Beirut frontline, stands in Lebanon, Wednesday, April 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)
A man walks past a building full of bullet holes from previous fighting during Lebanon's civil war on a former Beirut frontline, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)
People view the bus that started the Lebanese civil war on April 13, 1975, when an ambush by Christian gunmen of a busload of Palestinians kicked off the war that lasted 15 years, displayed at Nabu Museum in Batroun, northern Lebanon, Saturday, April 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)
A man checks the bus that started the Lebanese civil war on April 13, 1975, when an ambush by Christian gunmen of a busload of Palestinians kicked off the war that lasted 15 years, displayed at Nabu Museum in Batroun, northern Lebanon, Saturday, April 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)
Lebanese Mounir Al-Masri, a former fighter, speaks as he stands inside his sister's apartment that was damaged during Lebanon's civil war on a former Beirut frontline, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)
Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam lays a wreath at Martyrs' statue marking the 50th anniversary of the Lebanese civil war in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Sunday, April 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)
Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam stands a moment of silence marking the 50th anniversary of the Lebanese civil war at Martyrs' Square in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Sunday, April 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)