Gazing over wasteland, Beirutis mourn lost ‘Lady of the World’

Author: Agencies

Over centuries, Beirut built its reputation as a cultural crossroads, a thriving port and a playground known as “the Paris of the Middle East”. In just moments, much of it lay in ruins.

Now stunned residents come and stare at the heaps of rubble and twisted steel, contemplating all they have lost.

An elevated highway running alongside the port area, where a seismic explosion in a warehouse on August 4 blasted across a wide swathe of the Lebanese capital, has become a vantage point for Beirutis.

“You look around and everything is destroyed, there is nothing left,” said Maria Rizk, a doctor, gazing over the flattened area as the sun set in the evening.

“These are the places we used to hang out, this is a bar we used to go to, this is my friend’s house, this is the port, these are the streets we know and love,” she said.

“This is what makes Beirut and now it’s all gone. It’s beyond repair.”

An elevated highway running alongside the port area, where a seismic explosion in a warehouse on August 4 blasted across a wide swathe of the Lebanese capital, has become a vantage point for Beirutis

Traffic slows to a crawl as drivers stare at the wasteland. One man cried in his car as he listened to a ballad by Lebanese singer Majida El Roumi “Beirut, Set El Donya” – “Beirut, Lady of the World”.

The lyrics include: “Rise from under the rubble … rise from your sorrows.”

Beirut has suffered war and invasion over the years that have laid waste to neighbourhoods, so its people are no strangers to destruction. But the city’s vivaciousness and cosmopolitan style have always emerged intact.

The port blast was of a scale never seen before, however.

Student Christelle, also looking over the explosion site, said: “It’s heartbreaking to see. Beirut was an amazing city and this is the centre of it. All tourists and all people from around the world come here to see the beauty of Lebanon and now it’s all gone.”

After night falls, a family looks over the ruins from their apartment, whose walls have been blown out. What lights are on in the city twinkle amid the darkness. They can make out the shell of a wrecked grain silo in the port.

“We are two families living here, me, my brother, his wife and my two children in this humble house,” said Ahmad Othman, a cleaner. “You can see what happened here after the explosion, nothing is the same anymore.”

On the skeletons of wrecked buildings, people have hung national flags, with Lebanon’s distinctive cedar tree emblem in their centre; a sign of love of country amid the ruins.

Share
Leave a Comment

Recent Posts

  • Pakistan

Punjab starts implementing plan to combat smog

The Punjab government has initiated implementation of a comprehensive strategy to combat environmental pollution and…

10 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Apni Chhat, Apna Ghar: CM Maryam approves 3-marla plot scheme

Punjab Chief Minister Punjab Maryam Nawaz Sharif has approved a scheme to provide three-marla plots…

10 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Seven outlaws arrested, weapons recovered

The Islamabad Capital Territory (ICT) Police on Saturday apprehended seven criminals involved in various illegal…

10 hours ago
  • Pakistan

DC inaugurates 7th agricultural population census

Deputy Commissioner Larkana Dr. Sharjeel Noor Channa has inaugurated the 7th Agricultural Population Census. The…

10 hours ago
  • Pakistan

PTI arming ‘youth force activists and Afghan nationals,’ says Azma

Punjab's Information Minister Azma Bokhari has accused the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) of arming activists and…

10 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Danyal says PTI’s political decline exposed before people

Parliamentary Secretary for Information and Broadcasting, Barrister Daniyal Chaudhry, blasted PTI's political decline, saying Bushra…

10 hours ago