Our Lady of Lebanon

Shrine of Our Lady of Lebanon
مزار سيدة لبنان
Shrine of Our Lady of Lebanon
Religion
OwnershipMaronite Church
PatronOur Lady of Lebanon
Lebanon
Lebanese people
Feast1st Sunday of May
Location
LocationHarissa
CountryLebanon
Interactive map of Shrine of Our Lady of Lebanon
AdministrationCongregation of Maronite Lebanese Missionaries
Architecture
StyleBlessed Virgin Mary with outstretched hands, bronze crown
Creator33°58′54″N 35°39′5″E / 33.98167°N 35.65139°E / 33.98167; 35.65139
Completed1904
Our Lady of Lebanon
Queen and Patroness of Lebanon
Venerated inLatin Catholicism
Eastern Catholicism
Maronite Church
Melkite Greek Church
Major shrineShrine of Our Lady of Lebanon, Harissa, Lebanon
Feast1st Sunday of May
AttributesBlessed Virgin Mary with outstretched hands, bronze crown
PatronageLebanon and Lebanese people

The Shrine of Our Lady of Lebanon (also known as Our Lady of Harissa, Arabic: سيدة لبنان, Sayyidat Lubnān) is a Marian shrine and a pilgrimage site in the village of Harissa in Lebanon.

The shrine belongs to the Maronite Patriarchate who entrusted its administration to the Congregation of Maronite Lebanese Missionaries since its foundation in 1904 and also to the Jesuit Lucien Cattin, according to Christian Taoutel, a Lebanese historian at Saint Joseph University. One of the most important shrines in the world honoring Mary, Mother of Jesus, the shrine is highlighted by a huge, 15-tonne bronze statue measuring 8.5 m high and with a diameter of 5 m. The Virgin Mary is shown stretching her hands towards Beirut.

The Shrine of Our Lady of Lebanon draws millions of faithful Christians, Druze, and Muslims from all over the world. Its golden jubilee in 1954 was also the centenary of the proclamation of the Catholic dogma of the Immaculate Conception. During these celebrations, Pope Pius XII sent his representative, Cardinal Angelo Roncalli (later Pope John XXIII) to Lebanon. Pope John Paul II visited the Shrine in 1997. Pope Leo XIV visited the shrine in 2025.

The Congregation of Maronite Lebanese Missionaries, responsible for shrine administration, works at reinforcing relations among all local Churches, Christian communities and apostolic movements.

The Lebanese Christians as well as the Druze and Muslims, all have a special devotion to Mary, Mother of Jesus. The Maronite Patriarch of Antioch named her the "Queen of Lebanon" in 1908 upon the Shrine’s completion. Overlooking the coast off Jounieh, the shrine has become a major tourist attraction where tourists take the gondola lift, the Téléphérique, from the city of Jounieh to Harissa.