Barouk () is a village in the Chouf District of Mount Lebanon Governorate in Lebanon. Barouk is located 52 kilometers southeast of Beirut. Its average elevation is 1000 to 1200 meters above sea level and its total land area consists of 2,762 . The village had 5,197 registered voters in 2010. Its inhabitants are predominantly Druze and Maronites and Melkites Christians.
Historically, Barouk is known for being the "land of good", because of its fountain, Nabeh-el-Barouk. The poet Rachid Nakhle, the writer of the national anthem, "Kulluna lel watan", was born in Barouk. The village is also well known for its apples and other fruits, and for its many pine and oak forests. Barouk is named after the adjacent mountain of Jabal el-Barouk ('Mount Barouk'), which stands 1,943 meters above sea level. The mountain also has the largest nature reserve in Lebanon, the Al Shouf Cedar Nature Reserve.
It is also home to a multitude of restaurants, many of which closed during the covid pandemic and then re-opened a few years later when things stabilized.
The Barouk Public School has seen extensive renovations between 2018 and 2019, reconfiguring the building'
/ref>
|
|