Historical background The first
Jesuits arrived from Lyon to Beirut in 1831. They sought to establish a college, and a seminary to train future priests, who were to serve a vast area stretching from Armenia to Egypt. The project was almost abandoned due to the
1840 Lebanon conflict, which pitted the Christian and the
Druze communities of
Mount Lebanon against each other. In January of the following year, the Jesuits set up a college and a residence in of Beirut. In 1843, Father Benoît Planchet bought a piece of land in
Ghazir, a town north of Beirut, where he established an elementary school. Two years later, Father Canuti welcomed the first
seminarians of what became the Oriental Seminary. A secondary school was opened in 1855.
The library The library was founded in 1875, initially as the library of the
Saint Joseph University in Beirut. It took over the collection of the Seminary of Ghazir, and its collection was enlarged by Father Alexandre Bourquenoud who inventoried the archaeological finds of the region. Father
Louis Cheikho, director from 1880 to 1927, gave it the name of
Bibliothèque Orientale in 1894 and enriched it by the works of Orientalists and through the acquisition of old
manuscripts. In 1898, it published the Arabic-language oriental catholic journal
al-Machriq (The Levant). In 1906, a second journal was created by the Oriental Faculty of the university: the
Mélanges de la Faculté Orientale which became the ''Mélanges de l'Université Saint-Joseph''. The library was enriched by international exchanges and the European orientalists of the time. When the
World War I broek out in 1914, it had no equivalent in the whole of the Near East. The
Turkish authorities expelled the Jesuits during the war. Fearing the consequences of this expulsion, the consuls of Germany,
Austria-Hungary, and the United States in Istanbul intervened directly with the Turkish government to ensure that the library collection would be protected. The library emerged virtually unscathed from the looting following
WWI, and the
Lebanese civil war, despite being located a few meters from the
Green Line separating the two warring parts of Beirut. Since 2000, the library, which is still owned by the
Jesuits, came under the management of the Saint Joseph University, and was open to the public. The library premises, furniture, storage facilities, and reproduction equipment sustained heavy damage after the
2020 Beirut port explosion. No one was hurt on the premises, and the library’s collection of rare holdings, was “miraculously” spared. Emergency funds were raised by the Aliph foundation (International alliance for the protection of heritage in conflict areas), the
Qatar National Library,
UNESCO, AFAC (Arab Fund for Arts and Culture), and Œuvre d'Orient, to help cover the cost of the restoration, estimated at $500,000. It was re-inaugurated on 14 March 2022. == Architecture ==