- Multi-million pound museum is built on former militant stronghold in the Lebanese town of Mleeta
- It features tanks, rockets, archive video footage and even a gift shop
The mostly-outdoor museum features barbed wire, tanks, rockets, archive video footage and a lot of guns.
Visitors are able to walk around replica war scenes that feature destroyed Israeli tanks - including one symbolically rendered impotent by a twisted firing barrel - and grave stones lying on their side.
Tourist attraction: Lebanese militant group
Hezbollah has built a multi-million pound theme park designed to
indoctrinate its children about the glory of martyrdom against its enemy
Israel
Part art: The mostly-outdoor museum in the town
of Mleeta features barbed wire, tanks, rockets, archive video footage
and a lot of guns
Reality: The theme park was constructed atop one of Hezbollah strongholds in the town of Mleeta
The video segment of the tour allows
visitors to watch a history of Hezbollah that clearly sets out the
organisation's grievances with Israel and celebrates its victories
against it.The theme park was constructed atop one of their strongholds in the town of Mleeta.
It was designed to attract a wide range of visitors, including children and western tourists.
A walk inside what was once an active bunker even allows tourists to hold onto a machine gun, just like Hezbollah fighters once did.
New footage has emerged after a reporter for Vice.com took a guided tour of the museum.
And while it might make for a fascinating day trip, Hezbollah's real motive is to promote what it calls 'resistance tourism'.
Symbolic: Replica war scenes feature destroyed Israeli tanks - including this one rendered impotent by a twisted firing barrel
Indoctrination: The concept of 'resistance tourism' is taken to its logical conclusion
Gift shop: Visitors can buy tourist-friendly
items such as this cap featuring Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
and Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah
The militant group, which was founded
in the 1980s to oppose Israel's occupation of southern Lebanon, is keen
to promote its ideology.Its most recent conflict with Israel took place in 2006, when the pair went to war after the Lebanese guerilla group killed three Israeli soldiers and captured two others in a cross-border raid.
Although Israel inflicted heavy damage on the Hezbollah, it was unable to prevent it from firing some 4,000 rockets into Israel during the month-long conflict.
Since then, Israel has accused Hezbollah of repeatedly violating the UN-brokered ceasefire by restocking its arsenal and covertly moving forces into south Lebanon, near the Israeli border.
Armoury: The militant group, which was founded
in the 1980s to oppose Israel's occupation of southern Lebanon, is keen
to promote its ideology
Disrespectful: An Israeli grave lies on its side as every opportunity to slight the enemy is seized upon
A walk inside what was once an active bunker
even allows tourists to hold onto a machine gun, just like Hezbollah
fighters once did
Hezbollah's most recent conflict with Israel
took place in 2006, when the pair went to war after the Lebanese
guerilla group killed three Israeli soldiers and captured two others in a
cross-border raid
Just last year, Israel believed
Hezbollah had more than 40,000 rockets, nearly three time the pre-war
level, including more powerful weapons capable of reaching Israel's Tel
Aviv heartland.
Israel has for years accused Hezbollah of re-arming with the help of Iran and Syria, setting up 'rocket villages' in southern Lebanon.
The Israel-Lebanon border has been tense but largely quiet since the war, which killed around 1,200 Lebanese and 160 Israelis, according to official counts from each side.
Israel has for years accused Hezbollah of re-arming with the help of Iran and Syria, setting up 'rocket villages' in southern Lebanon.
The Israel-Lebanon border has been tense but largely quiet since the war, which killed around 1,200 Lebanese and 160 Israelis, according to official counts from each side.
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