
File photo: A woman holds up an image of Lebanon's Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah during a rally at a stadium in Beirut's southern suburb. AFP
He enjoys cult status among his Shia supporters, is equipped with a formidable arsenal far bigger and more modern than the national army's, and holds sway over the country's institutions.
Nasrallah has rarely been seen in public since his movement fought a devastating 2006 war pitting his fighters against Israeli troops invasion and attacks on Lebanon.
No one knows where he lives, and the vast majority of his speeches in the past two decades have been televised from a secret location.
The 64-year-old delivered his latest such speech on Thursday, after Israel detonated the communications devices of hundreds of Hezbollah's operatives in an unprecedented attack that shook Lebanon.
A gifted public speaker, Nasrallah is a master of cadence, swinging from humour to belittle his enemies to rage to fire up his 100,000-man militia.
The bearded, bespectacled cleric is never seen without traditional robes and the black turban that marks him out as a descendant of the prophet Mohammed.
He is married and has four surviving children. His eldest son Hadi was killed by Israeli troops in south Lebanon in 1997.
He was elected secretary general of Hezbollah in 1992, aged just 32, after an Israeli helicopter gunship killed his predecessor Abbas al-Musawi.
Hezbollah is the only group that refused to give up its weapons after Lebanon's 15-year civil war ended in 1990, as Nasrallah insists that Israel remains an existential threat.
Since Israel launched its genocidal war on Gaza, Hezbollah has battled Israeli troops almost daily along the Lebanon-Israel border.
The unprecedented attacks that this week saw hundreds of Hezbollah members' pagers and walkie-talkies explode across Lebanon on Tuesday and Wednesday have put Nasrallah under huge pressure to respond.
Powerful political force
Born in Beirut's impoverished northern suburb of Burj Hammud on August 31, 1960, he was one of nine children of a grocer hailing from the tiny southern village of Bazuriyeh.
Nasrallah studied both politics and the Koran for three years at a seminary in the Iraqi Shia holy city of Najaf, before being expelled in 1978 when the Sunni-dominated government turned on Shia activists.
He then became heavily involved in Lebanese politics and gained much of his early experience in the Amal militia during the civil war.
But he broke away from Amal when Israeli occupation troops marched on Beirut in 1982 to become one of the founders of Hezbollah.
He acquired his cult status in Lebanon and across the Arab world after Israel withdrew its troops from south Lebanon under relentless Hezbollah resistance attack in May 2000, ending 22 years of occupation of the border strip.
Nasrallah's years at the helm of Hezbollah, or Party of God, have seen the group expand from guerrilla faction into the country's most powerful political force.
Hezbollah is admired by many Shias in Lebanon for supporting local charities, building up health and education services in its strongholds and assisting the needy among its supporters.
Nasrallah's personal popularity soared across the Arab world after a UN-brokered ceasefire ended the 2006 Israeli war on Lebanon. His reputation however took a blow when he sent fighters to neighbouring Syria to support President Bashar al-Assad during Syria's civil war.
*This story was edited by Ahram Online.
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