city:beirut

  • Remembering Husayn Muruwwah, the ‘Red Mujtahid’
    http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/26064/remembering-husayn-muruwwah-the-%E2%80%98red-mujtahid%E2%80%99

    On 17 February 1987, during one of the bloodiest periods of the Lebanese Civil War (1975-1990), the prominent journalist, literary critic, intellectual, and activist Husayn Muruwwah (or Hussein Mroué[i]) was assassinated at his home in Ramlet al-Baida, West Beirut. Muruwwah left Lebanon at the age of fourteen to train at the Najaf hawza (seminary) in Iraq. He intended to follow in the footsteps of his father, who was a respected religious scholar and cleric. Yet after a multifaceted intellectual journey that spanned several decades and multiple locations, Muruwwah went on to become a celebrated Marxist philosopher and senior member of the Lebanese Communist Party (LCP); “a Red mujtahid who was at once proud of the cultural heritage of Islam and politically committed to the cause of social justice, political freedom and emancipation from foreign domination along Communist lines.”[ii]

  • Yemen : Saudi-Led Coalition Airstrike Near School

    (Beirut) – A Saudi-led coalition airstrike near a school in northern Yemen on January 10, 2017, killed two students and a school administrator and wounded three children, Human Rights Watch said today. The unlawful attack reinforces the urgent need for an international investigation into alleged laws-of-war violations in Yemen, an end to arms sales to Saudi Arabia, and the return of the coalition to the United Nations secretary-general’s “list of shame” for abuses against children in armed conflict.

    https://www.hrw.org/sites/default/files/styles/946w/public/multimedia_images_2017/1_3.jpg?itok=GNjU4Kxa
    https://www.hrw.org/news/2017/02/16/yemen-saudi-led-coalition-airstrike-near-school
    #Yémen #conflit #guerre #école

  • Finding Humor in the Everyday Interview with Anissa Rafeh - #Culture
    http://www.orientpalms.com/Finding-Humor-in-the-Everyday

    Aaliya’s Bookshop in Beirut hosted the launch of Beirut to the ‘burbs, Anissa Rafeh’s second book. The day after the launch, Anissa sat down with Orient Palms to discuss cross-culturalism, writing, and life in general. In this latest work, Rafeh brings to light the little nuances found in the everyday life of a cross-cultural individual, describing her own move from one locale to another with a healthy dose of laugh-out-loud humor. How about you start by telling us a little bit about your (...) #mode

  • The Kurds of Lebanon: identity, activism and ideology - KurdishQuestion.com
    http://www.kurdishquestion.com/article/3815-the-kurds-of-lebanon-identity-activism-and-ideology

    Many members of the Kurdish community in Lebanon cannot give a solid answer to the question of whether they consider themselves Kurdish first and foremost, or Lebanese. It’s a conundrum shared by many other national and ethnic groups in the country, who arrived in the 20th century as refugees and immigrants, but were only ever partially integrated into the political and social fabric of Lebanon. Here, some Kurdish families have been prominent member of Beirut society since Ottoman times, while others are newly arrived refugees from Syria, with little hope of ever gaining official permission to stay in the county, let alone citizenship. Under these circumstances, Lebanese Kurds are caught between integration in the local Sunni community, and allegiance to independence movements back in Kurdistan. The community is fractured between being “Lebanese” and being “Kurdish”. As with many diaspora communities, those who cling to Kurdish identity are just as split; between support for the Barzani government in Iraqi Kurdistan and the democratic confederalist ideology of the PKK and PYD.

    In the 1980’s the Kurdish population of Lebanon numbered between 60,000 and 90,000, and was centred in Beirut and its suburbs. Most had left rural Turkey in the earlier half of the century, fleeing persecution at the hands of Turkish nationalists. Sixty years later, the small community was only partially accepted in Lebanon; a country where political power is tied to strong ethno-religious sects. Thus, the Kurds were largely ignored, or treated as second rate members of the Sunni community. It was under these circumstances that the Kurdistan Worker’s Party (PKK) under the leadership of Abdullah Ocalan moved into the Beqaa valley in eastern Lebanon.

  • #LalaQueen designer bags Interview with Sally Sarieddine - #Accessories
    http://www.orientpalms.com/LalaQueen-designer-bags

    Sally Sarieddine, founder of LaLaQueen, is a force to be reckoned with. Through her designs and the concept store now open in Downtown Beirut, the beating heart of the city, you can easily tell that it’s not simply about bags, but about concepts and ideas that are embedded within each stitch in every bag, in every corner of the gorgeous boutique, and definitely through Sally herself. An entrepreneur who isn’t afraid to take risks and stand for what she believes in, Ms. Sarieddine was kind (...) #mode

  • Desperate Assad conscripting 50-year-olds as beleaguered Syrian regime forces halved by deaths, defections and draft-dodging
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/01/13/desperate-assad-conscripting-50-year-olds-beleaguered-syrian/?WT.mc_id=tmg_share_tw

    Karim Habib never imagined he would join the millions of refugees fleeing his country, but on Monday he got a call he had long been dreading.

    A friend in the Syrian army informed him that he would soon be called up for military service, which the 48-year-old oil worker believed was long behind him. He decided to pack his bags and head for the border.

    “I did not think they would come for me,” he says from a relative’s house in Beirut, the capital of neighbouring Lebanon. “But they are recruiting more men now than at any other time during the war.

    “The regime is so desperate they are coming for anyone that can carry a weapon. The age limit is supposed to be 42, but now even those in their 50s and those with health problems are having to fight.

    "They are being stationed around the country - manning checkpoints in Aleppo and even on the frontlines around Damascus,” he said.

    #Syrie #conscription

  • De Beyrouth, #Martin_Chulov du Guardian affirme qu’ en #Syrie l’#Iran est en train d’installer des chiites (de toute nationalité) dans des zones préalablement habitées par des sunnites.
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/jan/13/irans-syria-project-pushing-population-shifts-to-increase-influence

    Et sa source est un groupe genre #al-qaida :

    Labib al-Nahas, the chief of foreign relations for #Ahrar_al-Sham, who led negotiations in Istanbul, said Tehran was seeking to create areas it could control. “Iran was very ready to make a full swap between the north and south. They wanted a geographical continuation into Lebanon. Full sectarian segregation is at the heart of the Iranian project in Syria. They are looking for geographical zones that they can fully dominate and influence. This will have repercussions on the entire region.

    • The propaganda of Martin Chulov: FAKE NEWS Propaganda in the Guardian newspaper
      http://angryarab.blogspot.fr/2017/01/the-propaganda-of-martin-chulov-fake.html

      And here I used to recommend the Guardian newspaper as an alternative to US media after Sep. 11. Now the Guardian has become indistinguishable from the New York Times and Washington Post in its propaganda coverage of Syria. This story is — simply put — made up. As you all know, Syrian rebels regularly, if not daily, produce fake news and spread them throughout social media and they are often carried in Gulf regime media, which in turn inspire Western media to reproduce them citing the authority of Qatari regime or Saudi regime media. This story is made up by Ahrar Ash-Sham. And you will see in dispatches by Western correspondents in Beirut, like Chulov, a reference such as this: “said one senior Lebanese leader”. Lebanon is deeply divided between two camps: one camp is led by HIzbullah and the other is led by the Saudi embassy in Beirut. To which camp do you think this Lebanese “leader” belongs to? And they cite “a Lebanese leader” as if any of the Lebanese leaders are independent and neutral about the war in Syria. This is like citing “a US leader” in a story about Israel.

    • J’ai un ami Sunnite originaire de Idlib qui tient le mème discours. Il parle d’un afflux massif de chiites provenant d’autres régions, d’autres pays et que les régions sunnites seraient sous le coup d’une « colonisation de peuplement. »
      En dehors de la véracité de la chose j’ai quand mème l’impression que la question religieuse prend une place de plus en plus importante dans un pays qui semblait en dehors de ce genre de tensions. L’installation des chiites est une question que je voulais vous poser.
      Pour terminer, ses « sources » sont de Idlib et non pas du Gardian, ce qui rend pas les choses plus vraies ou plus fausses mais qui peut témoigner de l’état d’esprit qui règne là bas.

    • La question que cela pose, d’un point de vue démographique, est d’où viendrait ces masses de chiites. Dans la plupart des sources sur les appartenances religieuses en Syrie, les chiites sont généralement estimés à 1% (par exemple : https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syrie#Groupes_.2F_Population_.2F_pourcentage). Ca vaut ce que ça vaut mais de là à parler d’invasion massive... Il s’agit principalement à ma connaissance très imparfaite de communautés urbaines (notamment au sud de Damas), de quelques petites villes frontalières de la Beqaa nord (région de Hermel au Liban) et de quelques poches dont on a parlé récemment, au nord-ouest d’Alep (zones assiégées dont les populations ont été « échangées » avec les populations évacuées d’Alep. J’aurais beaucoup de mal croire que l’Iran installe des populations d’origine iranienne ou des chiites irakiens.

    • Moi aussi j’ai des doutes, car le voeu des Usa et UE quand ils ont attaqué la Syrie c’était justement de déplacer les populations en les divisant en « chiites, sunnites, Kurdes, et autres communautés » pour faire des micro-états divisés comme en ex-Yougoslavie qui a été balkanisée de la même façon.Tout a été prévu de longue date : http://armedforcesjournal.com/peters-blood-borders-map
      Les forces armées américaines se trouvent actuellement a Erbil dans le futur Kurdistan et la France participe à créer un état kurde, ce qui déplait à Erdogan bien sur ...

    • @rumor ce sont des fakes-news en vérité, la démographie des chiites ne peux pas permettre ce qui est prétendu. C’est inverser la véritable politique contre les chiites que de les accuser de favoriser leur population minime. En vérité les sunnites, et Kurdes chasseront les Yézidis et autres communautés. HRW a dénoncé le fait de crimes commis par les Kurdes pour avoir chassés les habitants de leurs maisons, et les avoir terroriser.

    • Merci pour ce signalement qui touche à une question aussi sensible que d’actualité, même si la source (Guardian Chulov), de fait, est terriblement biaisée... @rumor : les « peuplements chiites » qui hantent les cauchemars d’une bonne partie des Syriens (cf. témoignage Unagi, auquel j’ajoute le mien, au sein des milieux alaouites !!!) seraient en provenance d’Iran, voire de plus loin (Afghanistan et Cie). Pas plus crédible pour autant, mais ça fait fantasmer encore plus sur l’invasion étrangère. Il faut vraiment que ces sociétés soient en crise pour que de tels bobards puissent prendre aussi bien...

    • Se souvenir aussi que ça fait partie du plan de de déstabilisation suggéré par l’ambassade américaine en 2006 :
      https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/06DAMASCUS5399_a.html

      — Vulnerability:

      –- THE ALLIANCE WITH TEHRAN: Bashar is walking a fine line in his increasingly strong relations with Iran, seeking necessary support while not completely alienating Syria’s moderate Sunni Arab neighbors by being perceived as aiding Persian and fundamentalist Shia interests. Bashar’s decision to not attend the Talabani / Ahmadinejad summit in Tehran following FM Moallem,s trip to Iraq can be seen as a manifestation of Bashar’s sensitivity to the Arab optic on his Iranian alliance.

      –- Possible action:

      –- PLAY ON SUNNI FEARS OF IRANIAN INFLUENCE: There are fears in Syria that the Iranians are active in both Shia proselytizing and conversion of, mostly poor, Sunnis. Though often exaggerated, such fears reflect an element of the Sunni community in Syria that is increasingly upset by and focused on the spread of Iranian influence in their country through activities ranging from mosque construction to business. Both the local Egyptian and Saudi missions here, (as well as prominent Syrian Sunni religious leaders), are giving increasing attention to the matter and we should coordinate more closely with their governments on ways to better

  • The Garbage King of Beirut
    http://www.ozy.com/rising-stars/the-garbage-king-of-beirut/70966

    Ziad Abichaker loves Lebanon dearly, right down to its trash — in fact, he has said that he has “a love affair” with garbage.

    As a structural and environmental engineer, Abichaker sees only raw materials, and in a country with a stinking, unresolved garbage crisis, his time has come. He has quietly opened 12 waste management plants in Lebanon over the past 10 years, but his latest plant is even more ambitious: a zero-waste facility. Every kind of household trash can come in, and only useful products go out. This technology combined with the public’s exasperation with traditional waste management in Lebanon means Abichaker’s recycling dreams may finally be realized.

    Il se trouve que j’ai passé une après-midi avec lui chez un ami commun en août 2015 (au Liban évidemment). J’avais été très impressionné, d’autant qu’on était à ce moment en pleine crise des déchets.

  • #Blanka_Matragi When Art meets Fashion - #Couture
    http://www.orientpalms.com/Blanka-Matragi-6486

    I had the chance to meet and interview Blanka Matragi in her bespoke atelier in Hamra street in Beirut. She is a Czech-Lebanese fashion designer who mingles diverse art forms into her Haute Couture and Ready-to-Wear collections. Her love of tailoring, her artistic concepts mixed to her innovative techniques make her unique: no wonder that her favorite motto is “take things out of the ordinary”! You were born and raised in the Czech Republic. Then you married a Lebanese scientist and you (...) #mode

  • Will the last newspaper editor to leave Beirut please turn out the lights - Middle East News - Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/middle-east-news/.premium-1.762702

    The Lebanese newspaper As-Safir printed its final edition last Saturday. In a short video posted on YouTube, founder and editor-in-chief Talal Salman can be seen taking his scarf and turning off the lights in his office. Darkness falls as he leaves the building of the newspaper he founded in 1974.
    As-Safir, published in Beirut, used to be one of the most important Arabic-language papers in Lebanon. It took a pro-Syrian stance (and, as a result, was suspected of being funded by the Assad regime) but in its early days, the daily opposed Syrian involvement in the long Lebanese civil war. When the first Lebanon war with Israel broke out in 1982, and when the confrontations between Israel and Hezbollah began, the newspaper stood behind the militant Shi’ite organization – even though Salman’s ideology was, and remained, pan-Arab and left-wing. Salman saw As-Safir as a Lebanese national paper, obliged to support the resistance to foreign occupation, especially that of Israel.
    Salman blames the paper’s closure on financial reasons and its shrinking circulation figures. Even the newspaper’s website didn’t help to turns things around. As-Safir is a family newspaper: the CEO is one of Salman’s sons, his daughter is the managing editor, while another daughter runs the archive. Unlike other dailies in Lebanon, which enjoy the support of political parties or aid from foreign Arab governments, As-Safir had no stable financial base, especially after the Syrian regime – which probably did provide some funding in the past – ran into its own financial difficulties.
    As-Safir is not the only Lebanese newspaper that has failed to go up against online competition. An-Nahar, which was founded in 1933 and was once the most prominent, best-selling paper in Lebanon, is also facing an uncertain future. It recently announced that nearly 100 staffers were to be laid off, and it has had problems paying salaries for over a year.

  • “Insan” by #Wael_Farran - #Accessories
    http://www.orientpalms.com/Insan-by-Wael-Farran

    Designer Wael Farran produces luxurious and futuristic pieces of furniture, and his new collection, labeled “Insan” (“Man”, in Arabic) is no exception to that rule. He gives Orient Palms an insight into what inspires him the most, why he chooses to create art in the way that he does, and why he thinks Beirut is the perfect city for this kind of craftsmanship. Wael Farran is an architect, and also an artist, a creator and a collector. He has worked for 15 years in the field of art and manages (...) #mode

  • Damascus water supply cut after rebels pollute it with diesel
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Middle-East/2016/Dec-23/386585-damascus-water-supply-cut-after-rebels-pollute-it-with-diesel.a

    BEIRUT: The Damascus water authority said Friday it had been forced to cut supplies to the Syrian capital for a few days after rebels polluted the water with diesel.

    It said in a statement on its website that authorities would use water reserves until the problem was resolved.

    #rebelles...

  • France sets date for peace conference in Paris
    Dec. 23, 2016 2:48 P.M. (Updated: Dec. 23, 2016 2:48 P.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?ID=774568

    BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — France’s Foreign Minister announced on Thursday that a date has been set for a much anticipated, multilateral Palestinian-Israeli peace conference, scheduled to be held in Paris on Jan. 15, according to reports from Israeli media.

    Some 70 countries will reportedly participate in the conference, with a goal to hold a direct meeting between Israeli and Palestinian leaders on the sidelines after conclusion of the conference.

    French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault made the announcement during a visit to the Lebanese capital Beirut, saying that he hoped the meeting would “relaunch” the peace process and “re-affirm the necessity of having two states,” according to Time of Israel.

    Ayrault said that despite repeated rejections by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of the French initiative, that Netanyahu would be invited to Paris anyway.

  • Interview with #Krikor_Jabotian - #Couture
    http://www.orientpalms.com/Interview-with-Krikor-Jabotian

    The moment you step foot into Krikor Jabotian’s space in Beirut’s Ashrafieh, you realise that you’re in for a treat. The young, self-made designer’s beautiful dresses are reflected on every wall of his atelier. The ceiling-to-floor white atelier is as intricately beautiful and detailed as all his work, with tiny specks of beauty dropped all over the wondrous space he welcomed us at to discuss his career from it’s very beginnings to what he’s currently working on; a journey he delightfully shared (...) (...)

  • It was bizarre to watch #Samantha_Power at the UN conveniently forget to mention all the massacres done in America’s name
    http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/samantha-power-un-us-ambassador-america-syria-aleppo-massacres-srebre

    So there was Samantha Power doing her “shame” bit in the UN. “Is there no act of barbarism against civilians, no execution of a child that gets under your skin, that just creeps you out a little bit?”, America’s ambassador to the UN asked the Russians and Syrians and Iranians. She spoke of Halabja, Rwanda, Srebrenica “and, now, Aleppo”.

    Odd, that. For when Samantha talked about “barbarism against civilians” in Aleppo, I remembered climbing over the dead Palestinian civilians massacred at the Sabra and Chatila refugee camps in Beirut in 1982, slaughtered by Israel’s Lebanese militia friends while the Israeli army – Washington’s most powerful ally in the Middle East – watched. But Samantha didn’t mention them. Not enough dead Palestinians, perhaps? Only 1,700 killed, including women and children. Halabja was up to 5,000 dead. But Sabra and Chatila certainly “creeped me out” at the time.

    And then I recalled the monstrous American invasion of Iraq. Perhaps half a million dead. It’s one of the statistics for Rwanda’s dead. Certainly far more than Srebrenica’s 9,000 dead. And I can tell you that Iraq’s half million dead “creeped me out” rather a lot, not to mention the torture and murders in the CIA’s interrogation centres in Afghanistan as well as in Iraq. It also “creeped me out” to learn that the US president used to send innocent prisoners off to be interrogated in... Assad’s Syria! Yes, they were sent by Washington to be questioned in what Samantha now calls Syria’s “Gulags”.

    #amnésie #Etats-Unis

  • Interview with Jewelry Designer Nagib #Tabbah Exceptional Talent Meets Family Heritage - #Accessories
    http://www.orientpalms.com/Interview-with-Jewelry-Designer-Nagib-Tabbah

    For more than 150 years now, the Tabbah family has established itself as one of the most respected names in the world of bespoke jewelry. Nagib Tabbah is today heading the company founded by his great grand-father in Lebanon. Orient Palms had the chance to meet with him in his headquarters in Beirut and to discuss his exceptional journey: from the first time he saw gold melting to his latest jewelry creations. You once explained that “jewellery design isn’t just a job, but a calling”… But (...) #mode

  • Finalement je vire le post sur Palmyre sur le thème des fake news, puisque la ville semble être finalement tombée. Elijah Magnier maintient que les médias occidentaux ont annoncé la chute de Palmyre avec une journée d’avance, mais de fait, le thème n’est plus vraiment les fake news.

    • Je pense que je suis passé à côté du sujet. Hier soir et ce matin, j’ai été stupéfait par le manque de recul, les « spécialistes » de la rébellitude soudainement experts en opérations militaires, les éléments de langage assez transparents dès les premiers articles, mais ce n’est pas comme ça que j’ai abordé le sujet, et je me suis planté en partant sur la réalité des informations relatées (finalement avérées) alors que le sujet était ailleurs.

    • ISIS Close to Recapturing Palmyra From Syrian Forces - The New York Times
      http://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/10/world/middleeast/isis-palmyra-syria.html

      BEIRUT, Lebanon — Islamic State fighters appeared close to retaking Palmyra, Syria, on Saturday, just nine months after Syrian government forces drove them from the desert city, where they had terrorized residents and blown up irreplaceable ancient monuments.

      Residents said Islamic State militants were battling soldiers in the city’s center, after retaking outlying oil fields and nearly encircling the city over the past week as the government and its allies were focused on a pivotal battle in Aleppo, further north.

    • Quelques conseils pour ne pas se faire avoir par des rumeurs

      – Partez du principe qu’une information donnée sur le web par un inconnu est par défaut plus fausse que vraie .
      – Fiez-vous plutôt aux médias reconnus, aux journalistes identifiés et connus. Et ne considérez pas non plus que cela suffit à rendre leurs informations vraies . Dans des situations de crise comme celle-ci, l’information circule très vite, et peut souvent s’avérer par la suite erronée. Il vaut mieux attendre que plusieurs médias donnent un même fait pour le considérer comme établi.
      – Une photo n’est jamais une preuve en soi, particulièrement quand elle émane d’un compte inconnu. Elle peut être ancienne, montrer autre chose que ce qui est dit, ou être manipulée.
      – Un principe de base est de recouper : si plusieurs médias fiables donnent la même information, elle a de bonnes chances d’être avérée
      Méfiez-vous aussi des informations anxiogènes (type « ne prenez pas le métro, un ami a dit un autre ami que la police s’attendait à d’autres attentats », un message qui tourne apparemment samedi matin) que vous pouvez recevoir via SMS, messages de proches, etc, et qui s’avèrent fréquemment être des rumeurs relayées de proche en proche, sans rélle source.

      J’aime bien comme finalement, en les lisant, aucune information n’est vraie.

  • This is why everything you’ve read about the wars in Syria and Iraq could be wrong - Patrick Cockburn
    http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/syria-aleppo-iraq-mosul-isis-middle-east-conflict-assad-war-everythin

    The Iraqi army, backed by US-led airstrikes, is trying to capture east Mosul at the same time as the Syrian army and its Shia paramilitary allies are fighting their way into east Aleppo. An estimated 300 civilians have been killed in Aleppo by government artillery and bombing in the last fortnight, and in Mosul there are reportedly some 600 civilian dead over a month.

    Despite these similarities, the reporting by the international media of these two sieges is radically different.

    In Mosul, civilian loss of life is blamed on Isis, with its indiscriminate use of mortars and suicide bombers, while the Iraqi army and their air support are largely given a free pass. Isis is accused of preventing civilians from leaving the city so they can be used as human shields.

    Contrast this with Western media descriptions of the inhuman savagery of President Assad’s forces indiscriminately slaughtering civilians regardless of whether they stay or try to flee. The UN chief of humanitarian affairs, Stephen O’Brien, suggested this week that the rebels in east Aleppo were stopping civilians departing – but unlike Mosul, the issue gets little coverage.

    One factor making the sieges of east Aleppo and east Mosul so similar, and different, from past sieges in the Middle East, such as the Israeli siege of Beirut in 1982 or of Gaza in 2014, is that there are no independent foreign journalists present. They are not there for the very good reason that Isis imprisons and beheads foreigners while Jabhat al-Nusra, until recently the al-Qaeda affiliate in Syria, is only a shade less bloodthirsty and generally holds them for ransom. 

    These are the two groups that dominate the armed opposition in Syria as a whole. In Aleppo, though only about 20 per cent of the 10,000 fighters are Nusra, it is they – along with their allies in Ahrar al-Sham – who are leading the resistance.

    Unsurprisingly, foreign journalists covering developments in east Aleppo and rebel-held areas of Syria overwhelmingly do so from Lebanon or Turkey. A number of intrepid correspondents who tried to do eyewitness reporting from rebel-held areas swiftly found themselves tipped into the boots of cars or otherwise incarcerated.

    Experience shows that foreign reporters are quite right not to trust their lives even to the most moderate of the armed opposition inside Syria. But, strangely enough, the same media organisations continue to put their trust in the veracity of information coming out of areas under the control of these same potential kidnappers and hostage takers.

  • Unsettling the “Refugee Crisis” : Notes from Beirut - IJURR
    http://www.ijurr.org/spotlight-urban-refugee-crisis/unsettling-refugee-crisis-notes-beirut

    Nos incertitudes et une certitude : les notions par lesquelles nous pensons la crise des réfugiés (réfugiés, camp, crise) sont imprécises et faussent nos perceptions, nous empêchant de comprendre qui fait quoi, et comment les gens survivent malgré tout et malgré les Etats et les organisations internationales qui cherchent à les parquer dans des lieux clos et des catégories intellectuelles étanches alors que ces personnes ne cessent d’échapper à ces mises en boîte. Un texte brillant de Mona Fawaz

    No one knows how many of the neighbourhood residents who are not counted as Syrian refugees because they hold Lebanese passports are in reality Syrians who exchanged their passports with Lebanese individuals in a calculation that it can improve their access to local employment while Lebanese men who can afford the costs of a trip across the Mediterranean purchased the passport with the hope to secure asylum in Europe.
    [...]
    What if certain solidarities along the lines of shared religious and/or political beliefs transcend those of national belonging so that distinctions among population groups often do not coincide with the assumptions of clear national divides upheld by the label of refugee as a distinctive social attribute?

  • Interview with #Lara_Khoury Designing Clothes with Meaning - #Ready-to-Wear
    http://www.orientpalms.com/Interview-with-Lara-Khoury

    Lara Khoury isn’t your run-of-the-mill designer, she is superbly talented and incredibly passionate, while keeping her humility and natural charm. A Lebanese fashion designer early in her career, Lara is constantly inspired and inspiring, making sure that all her work holds a meaning much deeper than what might show on the surface. It was a pleasure meeting her at her gorgeous studio in Beirut’s Gemmayzeh, where she discussed her passion for design and her early beginnings, as well as her (...) #mode

  • Lebanon: Paradise Lost - Edward Said
    http://www.travelandleisure.com/articles/paradise-lost

    I vividly recall that Dhour’s landscape was dominated by the Grand Hotel Kassouf, a fortress-like structure near the end of the single winding road built by the French along the spine of two mountains, 5,000 feet straight up and slightly to the north of the capital. This road, with its massive red-roofed houses, small hotels, and a few scattered shops on both sides, made up the long, stringy town that stretched for about two miles and overlooked Beirut from the east. We spent that first summer at the Kassouf, and then rented houses all over Dhour every year after. But for Dhour’s residents, the hotel was the great social pinnacle of the village, just far enough away from the little shopping area and most of the summer rentals to represent a sophisticated, somewhat remote aerie that set it apart from the not always convincing rusticity of Dhour. Many families would return to Dhour year after year for the pure and usually dry mountain air, the misty afternoons and evenings, and the compelling views of the surrounding mountains, with Beirut’s white houses and its blue bay shimmering in the sunset like a dream city without inhabitants.

    In my young consciousness, the Kassouf was part of a constellation of mountain grands hôtels that we occasionally visited on the “outings” that my father planned for us as a family. This group of destinations included the Park and the Printania Palace hotels in nearby Brummana and, just a little farther away, down that town’s southern slope, the Grand Hotel in Beit Mery, a small adjoining village. If the resort was near enough to Dhour we would go there for tea or lunch. The distant hotels were usually reserved for rest stops on the way back from some remote waterfall or spring that my parents thought would be amusing for us to sit at for a while.