An episode (7/18/2022) of the "Al-Marsad" program sheds light on the monastery carved in the mountain, which played an important role in the printing and publishing of books because it contained the first printing press in the Arab world.

The monastery’s administrators allocated a special room that was converted into a museum to display the first printer in the Arab world that the monastery acquired in 1910 and was written in Syriac letters, before it was modernized and converted into Arabic, and continued to work until 1939.

The "Observatory" also visited the places where the famous French poet "La Martin" passed through the cedar forests in 1832, and a cedar tree was dedicated to him in the place where he was sitting, and it was named after him.

In addition to the place where the thinker, journalist and plastic artist, Gibran Khalil Gibran frequented since his childhood, before he turned into a private museum to display his paintings and original copies of his most prominent books, and manuscripts written by his hand.