<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><?xml-stylesheet href="http://www.blogger.com/styles/atom.css" type="text/css"?><feed xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom' xmlns:openSearch='http://a9.com/-/spec/opensearchrss/1.0/' xmlns:georss='http://www.georss.org/georss' xmlns:gd='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005' xmlns:thr='http://purl.org/syndication/thread/1.0'><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31447542</id><updated>2011-04-21T15:53:46.830-07:00</updated><title type='text'>Notes from the Siege of Beirut (2006)</title><subtitle type='html'>Rasha's siege notes</subtitle><link rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#feed' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default?max-results=100'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/'/><link rel='hub' href='http://pubsubhubbub.appspot.com/'/><author><name>Rasha</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><generator version='7.00' uri='http://www.blogger.com'>Blogger</generator><openSearch:totalResults>13</openSearch:totalResults><openSearch:startIndex>1</openSearch:startIndex><openSearch:itemsPerPage>100</openSearch:itemsPerPage><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31447542.post-115545614024643138</id><published>2006-08-13T01:00:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2006-08-13T01:02:20.266-07:00</updated><title type='text'>Note 13 - Saida</title><content type='html'>The Bougainvilliers Are in Full, Glorious Bloom&lt;br /&gt;This siege note is dedicated  to Akram. Akram is from Saida (in English it should be Sidon, but I don't have  the patience to accomodate the white man or his burden in this siege note, won't  you humor me?). Akram was my first friend from Saida. I had visited Saida before  I met him, but it became a whole other story after I went there with him, and  after I became familiar with his work. Akram is also one of the constitutional  elements of my life in Beirut. Our friendship is peculiar because it has carved  a world specific to it, a language of its own, replete with metaphors, a stock  of memories, and piles and piles of images and stories. I like to think of it as  a space, a retreat, like a small interior garden where a deeply anchored  quietude prevails.&lt;br /&gt;Since I have been back here, Akram has been stuck outside  the country. Until this war, I had grown used to missing him, but from the  moment the airport was shelled and the siege began, missing him has become a  whole other story. I miss the "retreat", the quietude of our friendship.  Conversations that expand over hours not because much is spoken, rather because  whatever is, takes all the time it needs to be said. The sentences I have not  been able to finish since this war began would have fallen right into place in  our friendship/retreat.&lt;br /&gt;If you can still remember the first days of this  war, Israel's strategy was first and foremost to dismember this country. The  network of roads and bridges in the south was practically all destroyed.  Communication between the south's three main areas (or sections) was rendered  very impracticable, but the roads linking the south to the capital Beirut were  entirely severed. Saida and Beirut were usually a 20 to 30 minute drive apart,  linked by a highway along the coast. Now the safe passage to Saida goes through  the mountains that oversee that coast line. It's a 3 hour and the half long  drive. Since the war began, people in the south have been forced out of their  homes, home by home, hunted down by F-16 planes, car by car, family by family,  to each a shell, sometimes two. As such Saida has transformed into a hub for  southerners fleeing death and devastation.&lt;br /&gt;If Akram's absence has been  palpable, he certainly has been present in how I magined he would have witnessed  the transformation of Beirut and, surely, Saida. Everytime I took note of the  small, discreet changes that have taken place in Beirut, in my mind, I have  reported them to Akram. I was lonesome for sharing our shared obsession for  archiving the mundane, for compiling empirical and anthropological notes of the  quotidian around us.&lt;br /&gt;I admit that a few days ago, in a fit of selfishness, I  wrote to him and suggested he should come back. (I am everyday more and more  aware of how fragile I become under siege.) My arguments were pompous, they did  not mask well my purely selfish longing for him.&lt;br /&gt;Throughout the war, shelling  , siege, grief and sorrow, the bougainvilliers have been in full, glorious  bloom. Their colors are dizzying in their intensity: purplish red, boastfull  fuschia, glaring white, and sometimes canari yellow. Most of the time, their  bloom, which is the objective outcome of "natural" factors, namely, access to  water, sun, heat, and even perhaps wind, has irritated me. Everything has  changed in this time of war, except the full glorious bloom of the  bougainvilliers. Other flowering trees have wilted, or shyed, as their  franchised gardners or patrons no longer operate on the same schedule or have  evacuated on the ships of the bi-nationals. On the road to Saida, I was struck,  irked and even upset at the bougainvilliers full bloom. From between their  abundant leaves and flowers, vignettes of the ravages appeared. Bridges torn in  their midst framed by the purple and fuschia bloom of the  bougainvilliers.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The Road to Saida: Trekking the Coast&lt;br /&gt;Maher went to  Saida and came back and told me I ought to go. I thought I would go to find  Akram, the world where a lot of things that are very meaningful to Akram dwell.  I wrote to him and confessed I was planning to visit Saida because I missed him  so much. I described it, in my cruel selfishness, as an "act of love". Instead  of sending me instructions as to guide my act of love, he gave me a phone number  for Ziad, a photographer, video artist and filmmaker. Ziad too is from Saida. He  now lives in Paris where he is pursuing some sort of a degree, but is very much  the son of Saida's privilges and the son of Saida's streets. Ziad happened to be  in Saida on a visit when the war broke out.&lt;br /&gt;Israel had given us two days,  forty eight hours of no airstrikes on the south to allow inhabitants in the  "zones of combat" to flee from sure death (as per Qana). Yesterday was the  second half of these 24 hours. I thought it would be the least unsafe  opportunity. And after making a set of phone calls, I set forth on my journey.  Maher wanted Ziad to film my trek through the city for his website.&lt;br /&gt;It was  difficult to hitch a ride and I ended up calling Ahmad, a very enterprising  young man whom I had met when I hung around journalists, a week or so ago (time  unravels at a different pace now). He found a 4-wheel drive and a driver, and  decided to accompany me. There are two routes to Saida. A coastal road (the old  and straightforward route) is deemed dangerous because it is unprotected from  the ire of Israeli warships lounging in our seas. There is another route, long  and circuitous that drives up through the mountain overlooking the coastal road  and then back down to Saida. I climbed into the 4-wheel drive and Ahmad  announced he preferred us to take the coastal road, but that the passage near  Damour had just been shelled. I asked to stop at a shop for us to buy water.&lt;br /&gt;The driver stopped at one of the main intersections a few blocks from the  apartment. When I climbed back, the driver was gone. Ahmad sat in his place. He  said the guy got scared and decided to go and see about getting a new passport  but let us use his car. Ahmad smiled to comfort me. I decided I was not going to  worry about that glitch, that the driver's fright was merely a glitch.&lt;br /&gt;As we  drove out of Beirut, the road was increasingly empty, there were a few trucks  carrying boxes of supplies labelled "Medecins sans Frontieres" and "Hammoud  Hospital".&lt;br /&gt;The last available bit of Hariri's proud highway from Beirut to  the south was the tunnel. I noted the graffitti: "W R = Love forever" and  smiled. There was something comforting about that marking. Or the absence of  other markings.&lt;br /&gt;We drove along the old road. It had not survived unscathed.  There were small holes in its middle, and pieces of rocks, cement and debris.  From within the winding inner roads, the new highway was visible and the big  craters from the shelling. Ahmad decided we ought to take a chance and go  through the Damour passageway, the bridge had been bombed almost entirely,  except for its extreme most edge, the width of a 4-wheel drive. An impromptu  army post guided traffic. It was iffy, but we made it.&lt;br /&gt;The moment we crossed  Damour, the thick charcoal smoke bellowing from the Jiyeh power plant filled the  air, the fire in the fuel reservoirs had not extinguished. The tanks were  charred, the plant was deserted. And so was the small port next to it.&lt;br /&gt;The  coastal road would have been bustling at this time in the summer. Expats,  bi-nationals, students on summer vacation, and tourists. This is the stretch of  the south's most visited beaches. They range from the very fancy to the modest.  At this time in the summer, the roads would have been busy with the town's  handsome beach boys, tanned, strutting in swim trunks and a claim to some local  fame. Everything was eerily deserted. Even army soldiers, posted in spots with  seemingly no rhyme or reason, walked cautiously, expecting to duck for cover at  any moment. Life all around had folded and packed. What remained was suspended  in terror from the Israeli barges lounging with arrogance and too far from  eyesight in the sea. The eye could not see them, but every muscle in your body  was stretched stiff with anxiety under their watch. Life was at the mercy of the  IDF's whims, they had shelled the entire coast repeatedly, as only to satiate  their cruelty, to assert their might.&lt;br /&gt;We drove on the small roads inside  Jiyeh and inside Rmeyleh and the small towns in between. We drove by closed  homes, doors locked, windows shut, shutters sealed. The last gaze of their  dwellers still lingering on the front porches, the gaze of a hesitant farewell  that quickly ran a checklist to make sure all was safely tucked and hoped for  the best, maybe even whispered a prayer or invoked God or Christ's clemency and  then hurried into the car and sped away for a temporary safer haven. Under the  cruel watch of the Israeli warships, lounging with arrogance and too far from  eyesight in the sea.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Saida&lt;br /&gt;The bay of Saida appeared and the coastal  highway leading to its seaside corniche was entirely deserted. The bridge that  unloads traffic from the highway onto the corniche had been pounded. Carcasses  of cars lined its sides, some buried under blocks of concrete. We drove around  and turned and entered Saida from roads tucked behind, lined with orange groves  and bougainvilliers in full bloom.&lt;br /&gt;Ahmad sitting behind the wheel said  nothing, and now Akram's voice was speaking to me, bits and pieces of  conversations from our trips to Saida and further south. The orange groves were  dizzyingly fragrant. I forgave their charms for Akram's sake and focused my  irritation with the bougainvilliers. Car traffic inside the city was heavy.  Pedestrian traffic was heavy.&lt;br /&gt;Saida had received more than 100,000 displaced  until two days ago. The numbers increase by the day. People were guided first to  the municipality where they were processed and instructed to go elsewhere, to a  school, a public edifice. I was told people were renting entrances of buildings  to sleep at night, or the garages of cars. So far more than 85 schools were  housing all these displaced, in addition to an old prison and the building of  the court of justice.&lt;br /&gt;Saida was delivered a serious pounding in the first  week of the war, but was relatively spared in comparison with other places in  the south. During that first week things went quiet, the city wound down a  little. Those who could afford to leave did, and the bi-nationals evacuated.  After it was cut off from Beirut, and seemed relatively safe, a semblance of a  normal pace of life returned. The streams of displaced added an intense bustle  to that pace, but the city still sleeps earlier than its usual.&lt;br /&gt;I called  Ziad. He had left his house leaving his cell phone behind. His mother instructed  me to drive near the old fort and look for his red Polo car. She also instructed  me to ask "The King" about him and he would dig him up for me. I did not know  who "The King" was. "You don't know the King?", she asked surprised. That was  Saida. A provincial capital. Everyone is one and the half degrees of separation  removed. Ahmad and I drove by the old fort looking for a red Polo. No red Polo,  but hordes of families lounging about, in the open-air, obviously out for  air.&lt;br /&gt;I called Abdel-Karim, following Maher's instructions.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Where Love  Dwells, Dalal and Abdel-Karim&lt;br /&gt;Maher's instructions were delivered during our  abbreviated phone conversations when he was in Tyre. They were brief because he  could not really say much, and I did not feel I could pressure him to say much  either. I call them instructions for kicks, to pretend I was on some sort of a  mission. Maher wanted me to collect stories and footage or images for his  project. Abdel-Karim and Dalal, his wife are his life-long comrades, he runs a  center in Saida that provides training for people with disabilities to be able  to integrate fully in the social economy of everyday life. They receive local  funding as well as funding from Europe.&lt;br /&gt;With the outbreak of the war, the  center's life and role has been turned wholly upside down. Abdel-Karim and Dalal  have themselves become displaced and Dalal who has another job has now become  involved in the center's relief work. They now reside in Saida, in a house  shared by several other families. Abdel-Karim and Dalal don't have any  disabilities, but the vice-president, wheel-chair bound, who resides in  Zreiriyeh a village further south, had to be evacuated and relocated to Saida,  with his family.&lt;br /&gt;In the space of a mere few days, the center's administration  realized they had to set-up an emergency plan. The center opened their fully  equipped bathroom to all the women and children who needed to take a shower. The  center's kitchen, also fully operational offered meals to all those who need it.  Two large pots with stuffed eggplant and squash were cooking in tomato sauce  when I visited. A ceaseless clothes collection drive was provisioning people  with clean garb. One of their ateliers was transformed to storing diapers, food  rations and medicines. The computer class room was transformed to a sleep area,  so was their exercize and recreation room.&lt;br /&gt;Teams of volunteers were called  and assigned tasks, by the time I visited they counted more than 15 teams  comprising four or five people, some had disabilities, others not. Their  emergency plan began with tending to their "own" people, namely the community of  people with disabilities they knew. They visited them in their homes and made  sure they had everything they needed. As streams of displaced were guided to the  municipality, volunteers from the center contacted the teams who were receiving  families to inform them they had the know-how and expertise to handle people  with all forms of disabilities and special needs and could be entrusted with  their care. Two weeks into the war and the "census" according to the  municipality's paperwork showed there were only 20 persons with disabilities  with special care. Abdel-Karim and Dalal were very skeptical. So Dalal assigned  a team of volunteers that toured every single site where the displaced were  resettled: schools, hospitals, public buildings. Wherever they went, they spread  word that they would be able to answer the needs of the disabled. They found  250. They noted down the needs of each and everyone and have now assigned  volunteers to visit them everyday and meet their needs. A simple example:  bathrooms. Public and private schools are not outfitted for people with  disabilities, so the center ordered for special devices from a local carpentry  shop to facilitate bathroom use (more than 20 of these devices were purchased  from the center's budget).&lt;br /&gt;People with physical and mental disabilities are  severely marginalized in everyday life in Lebanon under normal conditions of  life. During war their marginalization becomes heart-wrenching. As people were  evacuating under duress, in haste and panic, families were separated, the  disabled were sometimes entrusted to the care of others (more able) or left  behind. Their special needs were disregarded (wheelchairs, crutches were left  behind, long-term supply of medication, etc.). There are horrific stories. A man  with grave mental and physical disabilities was packed in the trunk of car and  driven for 80 kms until he was placed in a bed. An elderly woman who cannot walk  was left alone (she could not fit in the taxi her family hired to flee) and was  evacuated by the village mayor. He dropped her at the center and left.  Abdel-Karim was relaying onto me these stories, and his voice became hoarse. He  choked and repressed his tears as he told me the fatal ones: a woman had died  because her vital doses of insulin were not administered and one of their  volunteers died as he drove under shelling to rescue and evacuate three disabled  persons left behind in the village of Qasmiyeh just above of Tyre. The three  were eventually brought into safety and they did not know died on his way to  their rescue.&lt;br /&gt;I sat in the main office across from Abdel-Karim's small desk  cluttered with paperwork and a large computer monitor, Dalal was buzzing around  us with missives and missions. The office was bustling with activity. It felt  like the HQ of a major operation. People walked in and out, reporting on their  "missions", delivering things, taking things, the phone did not stop ringing,  and yet there was not a hint of tension, anywhere. It was the first time since  the outbreak of this war that I found myself in a place where love was palpable.  Love as in the spontaneous convivial filiation that binds a community  overpowered by a dark circumstance.&lt;br /&gt;Abdel-Karim ended every transaction or  exchange with a joke or a very affectionate note. I was mesmerized by his  ability to smile as often as he did. He is a tall, thin man, dark-skinned,  handsome, features chiseled finely. He exhuded so much tenderness and amiability  that the fine angular chisel of his features melted to roundness. Dalal, on the  other hand, is of short stature, but she exhudes so much energy, you cannot fit  her being in the size she actually occupies. She is fair-skinned, with colored  eyes and a killer laugh. She is straight to the point, no bull-shit gal, who  cannot sit down for more than fifteen minutes. Theirs is a great love story, but  that's a whole other story.&lt;br /&gt;They are both former fighters from the Communist  party who have retired from the front decades ago. In the political landscape of  power-wrangling in Saida, they are caught in the stampede of competition between  the two"ruling" poles of Saida: the Hariri family and the Saad family. Sadly,  actually the right epithet ought to be "sinisterly" but I don't know if that's  exists in the Queen's English, relief for the displaced (in all its aspects) has  been severely politicized. Abdel-Karim's gentle disposition turned to  unforgiving rancor when he assured me that once the war is over, he will not let  anyone get away with the corruption, the thievery and the banditry he has  witnessed. To the best of his abilities he was compiling a daily log (too brief  to become a journal) precisely to make sure he did not forget the crimes he was  seeing. "This is our political class", he said, "when it's time to do politics,  they do emergency relief, and when it's time to do emergency relief, they do  politics." Dalal had not shyed from fighting in public with officials who  withheld medicines for people she knew needed them badly. She has resorted to  every imaginable stratagem: she has faked her voice and affiliation to secure  beds for badly injured people in private hospitals that only open their doors to  the wealthy and the well-connected (8 cases that I went to visit). They found  her out after the 8th case. She caused a minor uproar in the press during an  interview on al-Jazeera and revealed a corruption scheme regarding one of the  medicines needed for people with mental disabilities. They both exploded in  laughter as they recounted Dalal's exploits. (A couple of days prior to my  visit, the Ministry of Health caught one of their employees stealing medicines  and selling them to pharmacies in Beirut. The Minister of Health had made a big  brouhaha about the "scandal" to show he was in control of the situation.)&lt;br /&gt;A  young woman stepped into the office, shyly. She needed to use the phone. She  asked Abdel-Karim for permission. She called her family who had relocated to  some other town. She reminded me of the people I see lining at public phones in  Beirut. In their gait you can read the list of questions they are burning to  ask. She spoke hurriedly, so as not to distract the center's phone line for too  long. Her conversation was like a telegraphic ledger of who's where and how they  were doing. She reported her information and information was reported back to  her. She hung up, smiled from within a veil of anxiety and thanked Abdel-Karim,  shyly. He gave her a compliment about her dress. She giggled a little but walked  out hunched from the weight of the information freshly delivered to her, her  mind processing facts, recalling each one, nailing each one so none would slip  her memory.&lt;br /&gt;The center was now also helping people find their kin. They gave  shelter to people who were sleeping on the street, totally stranded. Amongst  those, a Sri Lanki woman who worked as a housemaid and whom the household that  employed her had left behind.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;A Red Polo and Killer Smile&lt;br /&gt;I was ready  to receive instructions from Abdel-Karim and mostly Dalal (she had more of a  bent for instructions) as to where to go. Ziad called. He was ready to meet me.  I gave him directions to the center and went down to the street to fetch him.  Ziad is in his twenties, he walks with a slight enough strutt that you know his  street smarts still run deeper than his engagement with video art. Ziad is tall,  charming, ties his hair in a pony tail, wears a goatie-beard, and has an  unforgettable, fatal, killer smile. And smiles almost as often as Abdel-Karim.  He came accompanied by a friend of his, Hussein. A Pentax dangled from Ziad's  neck and Hussein carried the video camera.&lt;br /&gt;I asked Ziad what he'd been doing.  The first week, like most people, he had squatted at home, but as soon as the  shelling let a little, he started going out and thinking about his life, the  life of the city as it adjusted to this war. He was filming, but he was not a  "voyeur" he told me, and did not chase after the gore and misery. "When your  work is not about capturing the moment, you take your time to think and decide  what to film," he said to me. The previous week he had put together something on  the increasing shortage of water in Saida. And this week he was working on the  fuel shortage. He had been going to gas stations that were selling gas and  filmed the long lines, the tedious negotiations, the angry outbursts.&lt;br /&gt;I led  him and Hussein up to the center. They filmed. Dalal recommended I visit Dar  es-Salam, a care center for the senior and the elderly. Since the outbreak of  this war it started receiving patients with special needs, namely physical and  mental disabilities that need monitoring on the longer-term. I wanted Ziad to  take me to his Saida, or Akram's Saida.&lt;br /&gt;Ahmad appeared suddenly as we paused  on the street, he seemed nervous. We agreed on a time to leave and he insisted,  the sooner the better. Had he heard something? "No," he said. He was just  cautious. First the driver takes off, then Ahmad wants to leave barely an hour  after we set foot, I commended myself on my skills for organizing adventures. I  negotiated for two additional hours. He smiled. He had a kind heart and a kind  face, Ahmad.&lt;br /&gt;Ziad, Hussein and I climbed in the red Polo. "Where do you want  to go?", he asked. (Killer smile.) I answered, wherever he wanted to take me,  whatever he wanted me to witness, I had no plans really. He was now the  navigator. So he said we should go to the Hammoud Hospital. He went looking for  a physician who was a friend of his family and who told him about some sort of a  case in her care. Ziad just presented us as "press". We parked, we walked up to  the front desk. Ziad presented us as the press again. A few days earlier I had  appeared on al-Jazeera (I was interviewed about these damned siege notes) and  the front desk staff thought I was a newscaster. "You're on TV, right?", was the  question. "Yes," was the self-assured reply. The lobby of the hospital was busy  with activity, but the movement of limbs, bodies, the pace of conversations, the  weight of gazes, all was encumbered with an additional gravity.&lt;br /&gt;The physician  was not available. We left. "Where to now?", Ziad asked. I reluctantly took the  lead, and replied Dar es-Salam. As we winded through the streets of Saida. Ziad  teased Hussein about his supposed affinity for the Saad family. Hussein played  along. But it was clear the city was quite polarized and that competition had  pervaded to the small rituals and habits of everyday life. Oussama Saad (the  heir) is rumored to be distributing food rations with a clear label that reads  "Made in Syria", to underscore the Hariri family's feud with the Syrian regime  as a pro-American, anti-Arab stance. Oussama Saad had apparently made statements  that he had dispatched a commando of fighters to the front to participate with  Hezbollah in the battle. Hussein retorted something regarding the Hariri family.  I stopped listening as we drove by the municipal building and was dumb-struck by  the sight of incoming displaced.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Dar es-Salam&lt;br /&gt;The building stood on a  hill overlooking old Saida and the fort. There was a soft gentle breeze and all  was quieter up on that hill. We went through the charade of introductions, and  finally, it was Ziad's family name (his father) and my own (my father) that  allowed us entry. We requested to visit only those new patients who had come as  a result of the war, those with "special needs".&lt;br /&gt;We were guided by one of the  administrators in charge of the institution. The floor was innundated with  natural light. Even the corridor was well-lit. The rooms were spacious and fit  with four beds. The floor was not at full capacity.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In the first room,  Amal and her two brothers. The brothers are not able to walk, she has only  slight physical disability but stayed with them. A round soft face, amiable,  gorgeous black eyes. When we walked in she was adjusting her coiffe. One of her  brothers leaned by the window that gave onto the garden, and the other lay on  the bed, not engaged with us. Their family was relocated to a school, they came  to visit them. They had been at the hospital for 11 days.&lt;br /&gt;In the next room,  lay a man on a bed with severe mental and physical disabilities. "He was packed  in the trunk of a car", the administrator said, "and driven from Aytaroun (now  practically destroyed) to Saida. His brother drove him here, left Mahmoud, his  son to take care of his uncle, and drove with the rest of the family somewhere  else." Mahmoud was a fifteen year old boy that seemed a little too short for  fifteen in my opinion. He had a bright, bright, radiant, gorgeous face. Wide  hazel eyes. Mahmoud struck Ziad's heart. He walked up close to him. "I wanted to  take care of my uncle", replied Mahmoud to someone's question. That implied  changing diapers, feeding and bathing, explained the administrator. My heart  dropped to my knees with sorrow. Mahmoud and his uncle had been there for 11  days. When his father dropped him off with his uncle, Mahmoud had no idea where  his family would end up. He was without news for days. Mahmoud thought they  would stay in one of the schools in Saida. Somebody reported seeing them in one  of the schools, but it turned out to be false news. His father called one day  from Syria. Unfortunately, Mahmoud had gone to the mosque to pray. One of the  patients in the neighboring room answered the phone call and took down the  information. Mahmoud was deeply saddened to have missed the call.&lt;br /&gt;The  administrator praised him a lot and the extent to which his spirits were  positive, but reported catching the boy standing by the window looking sorrowful  and mournful into the horizon.&lt;br /&gt;In the next room, there were two men, both had  sustained serious injuries and were recovering at Dar es-Salam to alleviate  pressure on the hospitals. The first man did not speak. At least not when we  were there, he is from Aynata (the village received a pretty dramatic pounding).  He had two injuries in his legs. He asked the administrator for crutches. In the  second bed lay an elderly man with an injury to his leg as well. He had been  rescued by the Red Cross, from the same village (Aynata) and driven to Tyre,  from there he was transferred to Labib Hospital in Saida, and from there to Dar  es-Salam. He was in good spirits. His family was relocated to a school next  door.&lt;br /&gt;In the next room, lay two women. One was of an advanced age. Her son  sat next to her and was caring for her. Across from her was an elderly woman  that had physical disabilities and could not walk. She was from Abbassiyeh. She  had been left behind. The mayor of that village had dropped her off and left.  She did not speak. No one knew anything about her. She carried no identity  papers. She lay in bed and stared into the garden. Her gaze was not unfocused.  In fact it was intent. I have rarely seen such sharp, pure and focused sorrow.  We moved around her room and she did not budge. The hospital administrator  greeted her, to no reply.&lt;br /&gt;In the next room four elderly women were lodged.  One was from Zreiriyeh, a diabetic whose legs were amputated, and was on  dialysis. She had piercing green eyes. Ziad (Killer smile) got the old ladies to  talk. He walked in and asked each one where they were from. To the old lady from  Zreiriyeh he asked if she knew the Kojok family. She said she was born a Kojok,  "I recognized the green eyes", he replied knowingly. Her neighbor was from  Adloun, she needed cataract surgery and had been there for 20 days. One of the  women nudged me to ask her, and I asked her, and she said that she was from  Srifa. "You will hear about the massacre of Srifa, you will hear," she said to  me. She had driven with her family to Tyre, then to Saida, but her mother, who  shared the room with the other eldelry ladies, had walked a week later from  Srifa, "walked for three days, without respite," she kept repeating. "An old  lady like me, walking for three days. We saw death and we could do nothing but  walk."&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The Bougainvilliers will be Forgiven&lt;br /&gt;I know Ziad will return to  see Mahmoud. We drove away and decided to get coffee. On the way Ziad was struck  to see a gas station was operational and was selling gas. The line of cars was  huge. People were tense. I said I did not mind him filming. We zigzagged through  the cars, off course he honed in on the pretty girls and pretty women. Off  course he negotiated filming them in some sort of a sequence after flashing that  killer smile. I did not follow him. I stood watching the rhythm of stillness and  anxiety.&lt;br /&gt;As they drove me back to meet Ahmad, Ziad was playful again: "The  crucial question in this war is, where are the women of Saida? How could they  have disappeared?" Hussein replied that they all moved to Broumana (the  mountains) or evacuated with the foreigners. "Damn our luck, all the women of  Saida are bi-nationals!". "They're all gone? There must be some left, we must  find them." Hussein chuckled.&lt;br /&gt;Ahmad and I drove back the same way. I looked  forward to the fragrance of orange blossoms and was now forgiving to the full  glorious bloom of the bougainvilliers. My heart had never felt as heavy. There  was a lot to hang on to, I mean for hope or strength or whatever it is that  keeps people going, but there was so much wretchedness.&lt;br /&gt;... The sorrows I  have seen.&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31447542-115545614024643138?l=beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/feeds/115545614024643138/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=31447542&amp;postID=115545614024643138' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115545614024643138'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115545614024643138'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/2006/08/note-13-saida_13.html' title='Note 13 - Saida'/><author><name>Rasha</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31447542.post-115454982305060212</id><published>2006-08-02T13:14:00.001-07:00</published><updated>2006-08-02T13:17:03.060-07:00</updated><title type='text'>Note 12</title><content type='html'>&lt;span style="font-family:arial,helvetica;"&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt;(This siege note I wish tyo dedicate to  Maher)&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt;&lt;i&gt;The history of earlier drives into Lebanon shows that even  as the Israeli war machine gains momentum, so do the chances of terrible  accidents and atrocities. In 1982, under the protection of Israeli forces,  Christian Lebanese militias carried out the now infamous massacre of hundreds of  Palestinians in Beirut's Sabra and Shatila refugee camps. Ten years ago, during  a campaign against Hizbullah similar to the one now underway, Israeli gunners  blasted a United Nations monitoring post at the South Lebanese town of Qana,  where terrified locals had taken refuge. More than 100 civilians were killed in  a barrage that lasted only a few ghastly seconds. International outrage quickly  forced Israel to end its offensive.&lt;br /&gt;The Israelis say they are being more  careful this time around, not least because they don't want to be forced to  stop. "The presidential approval by Bush, the surprising level of support he's  giving Israel, the patience he's giving Israel—it looks as if there's a great  amount of slack being cut to us," says a senior Israeli security source, who did  not want to be identified by name because he is not authorized to speak on the  record. "Absent a Qana, it might go on."&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;p align="right"&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:78%;color:#000000;"&gt;–from the article&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:78%;color:#0000ff;"&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/13991020/site/newsweek/page/3/"&gt; "Torn to  Shreds"&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:78%;color:#000000;"&gt; in  last week's Newsweek.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p align="left"&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:100%;color:#000000;"&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:100%;color:#000000;"&gt;Bearing witness to a massacre only a few kilometers removed  from one's being (or home).&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:100%;color:#000000;"&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Coming into consciousness of, or bearing witness to, a  massacre only a few kilometers removed from one's being (or home), feels very  much like the experience of being in the proximity of a very powerful explosion  only at an extremely, extremely slowed motion. Taking stock of the information  on time, place, and the toll of victims, watching televised transmission of  rescue workers piling a kindergarden in rigor mortis, is identical to the  astounding sensation of the air being sucked from all around, that&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:100%;color:#000000;"&gt;typically precedes the explosion. And at  some point, it all sinks in, the information processes into information, and the  images breakdown into their compositional elements (rescue worker carrying four  year old with hand stretched to the sky and fingers wide spread), and you  explode, or implode, with some sort of a system shut down. For a split second  your heart does not beat the way it is used to, and your lungs don't quite  inhale or exhale according to the book.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;9:00 am, or somewhere around  there. I am zapping between al-Jazeera, LBC, BBC, Future TV, and my new  discovery of this war, Sky News. I have to finish some proposal text to send to  funders to collect desperately needed funds to support the army of volunteers  and the programs for displaced kids. I cannot disappoint "Nouna", I have to be  at the library at 10:00 am with the text in English.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;9:05 am, or  somewhere around there. Yasser Abou Halileh, who just landed in Lebanon from  Jordan is catching his breath on al-Jazeera. He arrived to Qana and just reached  the shattered shelter site. Qana was carpet-bombed throughout the night. The  air-bombing was not a "surprise" to anyone, because the Israeli army dropped  flyers advising residents to leave. The bodies piled in the shelter ravaged to  rubble were of people too poor to afford the ride from Qana to Sidon or Beirut,  or people with disabilities.&lt;br /&gt;Qana besides being an extremely poor village in  the anemic economic orbit of Tyre, was also the site of one of Christ's  miracles, then a little short of two thousand years later it housed a UNIFIL  base (UN peacekeeping force), and a notorious Israeli massacre of fleeing  hapless southern Lebanese villagers at said UNIFIL base. Yasser and his team  headed for Qana because rescue workers alerted the media to the possibility of  another massacre. The shelling did not stop as rescue workers lifted bodies from  under rubble.&lt;br /&gt;You know the rest of the story. An Yasser's story as well, it  is no different from any correspondent that suddenly becomes a human being, a  father, a brother, a son and Yasser was looking for words to put together into  sentences to report the first report of the massacre. When he and his camera  arrived, rescue workers were on site, slowly pulling bodies from under the  rubble. Yasser is catching his breath and slowly, you can feel the air being  sucked from all around him, children of all sizes, mostly small and extra small  (some are barely a few months old), piled next to him, covered in ashen powdered  concrete.&lt;br /&gt;As Yasser must have been experiencing "the explosion" of  "implosion", that's when I felt the air being sucked from all around me. I  jumped from my bed and ran hysterically in the house looking for someone in my  family to tell the news to. And when I did, I realized that a vacuum cloaked me.  I heard myself speak, I saw myself put my shoes on, pack my bag, feel tightness  in my chest, say goodbye to my parents, walk out into the street. Walk out into  the street. Flash of the voice of Yasser hiccuping wiith emotion. Nothing  unusual about this Sunday morning. Forgot the laptop. Forgot what I owed Nouna.  Flash of the image of the rescue workers leaning in half to be able to go into  the ravaged building. Back up. Back upstairs. Flash of baby lying on rubble, her  cutie derriere dripping a pool of blood and powdered concrete. Al-Jazeera's  screen. Zap, maybe it's a mistake. An exageration. Text message from Rula: "Are  you watching al-Jazeera?" I grab my purse again, leave. Come back: the laptop.  On the street, as I wait to hail a cab, I wonder why there is not a trace of  powdered concrete in the air. I could taste it in my mouth.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;10:15 am, or  somewhere around there. Municipal building, 3rd floor, Beirut's Municipal  Librairy. Elevator working. Flash of rescue worker carrying a baby girl,  barefoot, covered in powdered concrete. Her arm sticking out, upright in rigor  mortis, her palm wide and fingers stretched as if she were trying to reach out.  At the municipal library that morning, there was a training workshop for the  volunteers from the NGOs that are in charge of overseeing the settlement of the  displaced in the schools around Beirut. A training workshop for educational  games and activities around the book and storytelling. I walked in, greeted  Nouna and another lady, I know I was not very present, the vacuum still cloaked  me. I just said to them, as best as I could make coherent sentences "there was a  massacre in Qana". Most of the volunteers had woken up and rushed to the  workshop without hearing news.&lt;br /&gt;I put my laptop in the office, and sat, stood  up and started calling people. Everyone was choking in shock, rage and horror.  Rula was out of her mind, zapping frantically. Only al-Jazeera showed images,  BBC and CNN had a very down-played report. She beckoned me to make phone calls.  Who could I call? I am nobody. I called friends, and more friends, people in the  know and out of the know. Then a text message came: Protest in front of the  ESCWA building at noon. I was beginning to breathe again. Condoleezza Rice was  supposed to land in Beirut sometime around noon.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;11:00 am, or somewhere  around there. I was still sucked into the vacuum. Things moving around me were  confusing, I could not quite mediate with reality. My mind was racing. The  flashes of dead bodies were still coming. I needed to describe them, in gruesome  detail to someone. Whoever I called, described them to me, in their  gruesomeness: "Did you see that baby girl with her buttocks drenched in blood?"  She was there in front of my eyes, off course I had seen her.&lt;br /&gt;I typed  something in English on the laptop. I called Nouna. We discussed it. I repeated  the things she said to me so they would sink in. One of the attending volunteers  could not hold still, who smoked outside, paced, and checked her cell phone  about ten times, walked over to us and said she was going to the  protest.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;12:00 pm, sharp. I was back on the street. I walked towards the  ESCWA (basically the offices of he UN and UN-related institutions) building. The  street was filled with people, men, women, children carrying flags, Lebanese,  Hezbollah, and Amal, walked decidedly, almost angrily in the direction of the  ESCWA building. By the time I got there, there was a mob scene in front of the  building. Young men (and a few women) were banging on the gates, throwing rocks  to the windows that were bouncing against the glass and falling back on them.  The release of rage was collective.&lt;br /&gt;The sheath of vacuum around me, inside  me, dissipated. The explosion/implosion was now happening to me. I felt myself  transform into a magma of anger and sorrow at once. I felt my own rage channel  to the crowd, I stood on the sidewalk, sucked into the magnetism of the mob, my  body totally merged with theirs. The flashes from the al-Jazeera broadcast were  no longer caged inside me. They were wafting away. The flags were pulled down  and instead the masts in front of the fancy structure were now flagging  Hezbollah, Amal flags and portraits of Hassan Nasrallah.&lt;br /&gt;(When people later  criticized the mob scene for "attacking" the ESCWA building –"Was it  necessary?"– I was surprised they did not have that rage, or that they could not  comprehend it.)&lt;br /&gt;The crowd that unloaded into downtown Beirut was at that  point mostly comprised of the displaced from the southern suburb. They shouted:  "Hezbollah, Nasrallah, wel Dahiyah killa" (Hezbollah, Nasrallah, and the whole  of the southern suburbs.)&lt;br /&gt;On the other side of the street, at the foot of the  Media Center building where newsmedia post their cameras and microphones and  their anchors shoot their live shots, people were screaming at cameras.&lt;br /&gt;The  crowd was growing fatter and fatter, now people were coming more prepared, they  had signs and banners, in Arabic and English.&lt;br /&gt;I came across Mohammad, a  friend, and finally, finally I could cry. I burried my head in his shoulders and  wept helpless.&lt;br /&gt;Mohammad led me to the Media Center building. I sat in one of  the offices with windows onto the street. More and more people were coming. Army  and internal security personel were also arriving. They stood by and watched. At  some point a truck carrying some sort of a load of something parked in the lot  across the street from the ESCWA building. It became a stage atop which various  spokespersons stood and delivered speeches. I guess someone brought a voice  magnifier, and someone else brought a tape and a tape player because soon there  were also chants blaring. The flags flying on top of the crowd were now of  several political parties: the "Free Movement", the Communists, the Syrian  Nationalist (the most overt supporters of Hezbollah). The most touching scene  was of sunni and shi'i sheikhs huddled together, hand in hand almost talking and  then delivering speeches. From the window of the 6th floor, I could see their  round head coiffe and robes.&lt;br /&gt;Randa sent a text message from Cairo. I asked  her to call me. She was weeping and I begged her to call her activist friends  and organize a mobilization in Cairo. I wanted to weep, and hated myself for  stiffening my upper lip. I borrowed Mohammad's phone and started to call friends  across the world, hysterically, begging them to organize protests. I was  nonsensical. I woke my sister in New Jersey. My tears were now flowing  silently.&lt;br /&gt;I felt I was going to collapse. I had to leave and be quiet for a  while.&lt;br /&gt;I walked home, a long, long meditative walk in the punishing heat of a  late July afternoon. It was 2:00 pm. Everyone urged me to write something, a  "siege note" for Qana. I could not.&lt;br /&gt;Instead I slept. My eyelids felt heavy  from crying.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Unscathed&lt;br /&gt;Maher called. I woke up. He said he was leaving  with a team of journalists to Tyre. Did I want to come. (I did not know.) I  should be ready in ten minutes if I wanted to come. I said no, I was not  thinking and I regretted it for the rest of the day. Until now when I write, I  regret it.&lt;br /&gt;Maher is a filmmaker. When this war started he was in Paris. He  went nuts after a few days and decided to return. He wanted to be here for the  war. He came on one of the ships that the French sent to evacuate French  passport holders. His voyage was surreal, but that's another  story.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:100%;color:#000000;"&gt;He has  a project to establish a website to collect and disseminate the record of the  lived experience of this war, &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:100%;color:#000000;"&gt;lest it should lapse from the collective record again.  &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:100%;color:#000000;"&gt;He has started  to distribute cameras to young filmmakers, artists, even volunteers  to record,  film, transcribe the mundane and the non-sensational everyday of surviving this  war. The website is not ready yet, but as soon as it s, I will publicize  it.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:100%;color:#000000;"&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Maher had  been itching to go to Tyre, closest to one of the sites of battle. He went with  the convoy of journalists and humanitarian aid workers. If my rage took me to  the street and the mob scene, his would drive him to the front, to the site  where the hurt is most poignant. He told me he was going to Qana, and I was not  surprised.&lt;br /&gt;I called him the next day in the afternoon. He had indeed been to  Qana, and visited the site, and smelled death. From his voice, I felt that  something had happened, something that still impressed him greatly. His locution  was more sullen than lazy, but I could barely make out what he said, and I kept  asking him to repeat himself. He did not get exasperated, his voice was  detached. He was speaking to me from a different world.&lt;br /&gt;My heart sank. He  said Qana was exactly what I saw on TV. He kept referring to going through Srifa  as being very difficult. "Very difficult" he kept saying. Nearly all of Srifa is  destroyed. Limbs covered in powdered concrete emerge from between the ravages of  collapsed buildings. No one has had the energy or courage to pull out the dead.  The Red Cross and Civil Defense ambulances have been targetted relentlessly by  Israel. When the guns will quiet, we will discover that Qana is small-time  compared to Srifa. There is a pattern emerging now: Marwaheen, Srifa, Blida and  Qana: terror to induce forced displacement (or pardon my French, "deportation").  Scorched earth and mass graves, this is how we achieve the New Middle  East.&lt;br /&gt;Maher said nearly 60% of Bint Jbeil has now become flat rubble. Most of  its central area. There two limbs stick out of collapsed buildings, and the  smell of death is everywhere. While rescue workers pulled out the dead from that  shelter in Qana, the IDF was shelling the only functioning hospital in Bint  Jbeil, a day prior to Maher's visit. That's how battered Bint Jbeil was, even  its hospital the IDF decided was a Hezbollah stronghold and posed a grave  security threat on the well-being of the children of Kiryat Shmona who prefer to  go to school and not dwell in shelters after they have kissed the shells that  their army will shower on Lebanon to implement UN Resolution 1559 and eradicate  terror.&lt;br /&gt;In the convoy to Bint Jbeil, journalists outnumbered the rescue  workers, and they found a group of elderly men and women who were trapped in a  shelter. They could not ambulate without assistance and had not eaten for four  or five days. They were carried out and given some water and driven to places  where they could receive the care they needed.&lt;br /&gt;The BBC produced a number of  excellent reports from Bint Jbeil, in heir backdrop, I saw Maher's face. His  demeanor confirmed the impression I had after speaking to him on the phone.  Maher had seen the face of death. Not death as in the sorrowful but inevitable  expiring of everyday life, and not the death of a soldier on the battlefield. He  had seen the face of organized, carefully orchestrated, mass-scale death, the  planned death of hundreds and thousands as a solution to restoring power  hegemony in a region.&lt;br /&gt;You never leave a mass grave unscathed. Maher had seen  several that day. Even if helping survivors seems like a life-affirming release,  it will not alleviate the burden, the imprint of the face of death. I know he  has been branded for ever now and there is not much anything that can be done  about it. My forever beloved Marwan worked on collecting the bodies of victims  in Sabra and Chatila after the massacre. Seeing the face of death was so  overwhelming he left the country shortly thereafter. He moved to London and did  not return to Lebanon for decades. You can still feel the brand of that mass  grave in the lining of the timbre of his voice, in the lining to his gaze, there  is a mute inconsolable sorrow.&lt;br /&gt;I don't know if Maher will leave Lebanon, but  I know he will return to Beirut markedly changed. For the time being the pull of  the mass graves, of the people trapped in shelters, of bodies surging through  rubble is too powerful, he wants to be near them. While the journalists he drove  down with have left Tyre, he called last night to say he is tempted to stay. His  voice felt he called from a netherworld, Israel is now engaged in a massive  ground offensive in the south.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;This siege note took a couple of days  to write. I could not find my words or sense of self after news of the massacre  on Sunday.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Geneva;font-size:78%;color:#000000;"&gt;PS: Attached is a new map that locates the infrastructure,  mainly transport and vital sites, that have been bombed over the past days... &lt;br /&gt;This map clearly reveals the siege that different cities/inhabitants have  undergone and still suffer from, it also shows how Israel’s fierce assault on  Lebanon completely violates the Geneva conventions &amp; international law  relative to respect for human rights in armed conflicts, through it’s massive  destruction of vital civilian utility sites and infrastructure. The other map of  locations bombed is being updated daily on  www.lebanonupdates.blogspot.com&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Arial;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31447542-115454982305060212?l=beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/feeds/115454982305060212/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=31447542&amp;postID=115454982305060212' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115454982305060212'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115454982305060212'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/2006/08/note-12.html' title='Note 12'/><author><name>Rasha</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31447542.post-115454966144242016</id><published>2006-08-02T13:14:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2006-08-02T13:14:21.446-07:00</updated><title type='text'>Qana Massacre</title><content type='html'>&lt;span style="font-family:arial,helvetica;"&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Geneva;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt;To all those amongst you who have been reading my siege  notes. You may or may have not yet heard about the IDF's proudest strike today,  Sunday July 30th. Just past midnight  the IDF hit a 3-storey building that  sheltered women, children, elderly people and disabled people with shells that  destroyed the building. There were 63 or 64 people in the building and at the  time when I write this message there are 57 dead. There were more than 20  children amongst the dead. Th footage on al-Jazeera and al-Arabiyyah is  gruesome. You can check it on the net.&lt;br /&gt;The Israeli government claims they did  not know there were civilians, although just yesterday children were playing in  the courtyard in front of the building under the watchful eye of their warplanes  and drones according to several eyewitnesses.&lt;br /&gt;This is the second IDF massacre  on Qana. In 1996, during the IDF's "Operation Grapes of Wrath", their warplanes  blew to smithereens scores of people fleeing from their shelling who had taken  refuge in a UN peacekeeping base. UN peacekeepers were killed as  well.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;After the shelling of the shelter, the warplanes did not let from  shelling on Qana. They now shell other villages in the  south.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Geneva;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;u&gt;If you are an Arab citizen please protest your  government that has been complicit in providing moral cover for this Israeli war  against Lebanon.&lt;/u&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Geneva;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Geneva;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;u&gt;Please do something to make Israel and the US  understand that such massacres are not acceptable, please protest at the UN and  US buildings, please protest your elected officials if you are a US citizen. &lt;br /&gt;If you are an Israeli citizen, please take them to court. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/u&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Geneva;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Below is an article from as-Safir daily newspaper in  Lebanon.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Geneva;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt;&lt;br /&gt;“And all this is our fault , Israel says”&lt;br /&gt;By Hussein  Saad&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;    QANA, Lebanon, July 30 (Reuters) - Rescue workers placed  the&lt;br /&gt;body of a girl on the ground and ran to search for more. They&lt;br /&gt;heaved  hunks of concrete off a dead child caked in dust.&lt;br /&gt;    The rigid corpse of a  young boy, his bloody face disfigured,&lt;br /&gt;lay near a pulverised building.&lt;br /&gt;     Hours later, rescuers were still clambering over rubble&lt;br /&gt;using their hands to  pull the bodies of men, women and children&lt;br /&gt;from buildings destroyed by an  Israeli air strike on the&lt;br /&gt;southern Lebanese village of Qana on Sunday.&lt;br /&gt;     Most of the victims were asleep in the basement of the&lt;br /&gt;building when the  bombs hit at 1.30 a.m. (2230 GMT on Saturday).&lt;br /&gt;    The raid killed at least  54 Lebanese civilians, including 37&lt;br /&gt;children, Lebanese police said -- the  bloodiest single attack&lt;br /&gt;during Israel's 19-day-old war on Hizbollah.&lt;br /&gt;"Why  have they attacked one- and two-year-old children and&lt;br /&gt;defenceless women? What  have they done wrong?" asked Mohamed&lt;br /&gt;Samai, whose relatives were among the  dead.&lt;br /&gt;    The bodies were wrapped tightly in plastic sheets and  taped&lt;br /&gt;closed. They were assembled under an awning in the southern&lt;br /&gt;town.  Flowers were placed on the corpses.&lt;br /&gt;    Israel's military said it had warned  residents of Qana to&lt;br /&gt;leave and said Hizbollah guerrillas bore responsibility  for&lt;br /&gt;using the village to fire rockets at the Jewish state. Israel&lt;br /&gt;vowed to  pursue its campaign until Hizbollah stopped.&lt;br /&gt;    Five Lebanese civilians,  including two children, were killed&lt;br /&gt;by another Israeli airstrike in the  southern town of Yaroun&lt;br /&gt;early on Sunday afternoon, security sources  said.&lt;br /&gt;  &lt;br /&gt;    UNAWARE OF CIVILIANS&lt;br /&gt;    A senior air force commander  said Israel had dropped a bomb&lt;br /&gt;on the building in Qana on the assumption it  was sheltering&lt;br /&gt;Hizbollah crews and was unaware civilians were there.&lt;br /&gt;     "Had we known there were that many civilians inside,&lt;br /&gt;especially woman and  children, we certainly would not have&lt;br /&gt;attacked it," the commander told  Reuters.&lt;br /&gt;    A woman in red-patterned pyjamas lay crumpled and lifeless&lt;br /&gt;in  the broken masonry. A leg poked out from the shattered&lt;br /&gt;concrete nearby. A  medic carried a dead child in his arms from&lt;br /&gt;rubble. Other children lay dead  in the street.&lt;br /&gt;    Amedic checked the pulse of a man covered in blood  and&lt;br /&gt;raised his eye lids, desperately looking for signs of life&lt;br /&gt;before  giving up. Rescue workers draped sheets over bodies, the&lt;br /&gt;rigid arm of one  corpse pointing to the sky.&lt;br /&gt;    "This is not only Israel's fault, this is the  fault of&lt;br /&gt;America and the Arab states that backed Israel's attack. If  the&lt;br /&gt;Israelis want to attack let them fight the resistance&lt;br /&gt;face-to-face,"  said Samai, before collapsing.&lt;br /&gt;    About 63 civilians had been sheltering  from Israeli air&lt;br /&gt;strikes in one of the destroyed buildings, witnesses and  rescue&lt;br /&gt;workers said. Some of them had come from surrounding areas,&lt;br /&gt;seeking  shelter from the daily bombardments in Qana, located&lt;br /&gt;about 11 km (7 miles)  from the border .&lt;br /&gt;    The strike was less than a kilometre from the mass  grave of&lt;br /&gt;more than 100 Lebanese killed in Qana in 1996 by  Israel's&lt;br /&gt;shelling of a U.N. base. Killed in Israel's "Grapes of  Wrath"&lt;br /&gt;bombing campaign, they too had been sheltering from  bombardment.&lt;br /&gt;    Qana resident Ibrahim Shalloub, speechless with  distress,&lt;br /&gt;looked for his sister and cousins, still buried under  the&lt;br /&gt;rubble.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31447542-115454966144242016?l=beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/feeds/115454966144242016/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=31447542&amp;postID=115454966144242016' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115454966144242016'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115454966144242016'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/2006/08/qana-massacre.html' title='Qana Massacre'/><author><name>Rasha</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31447542.post-115454955014030804</id><published>2006-08-02T13:12:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2006-08-02T13:12:30.150-07:00</updated><title type='text'>Note 11</title><content type='html'>&lt;span style="font-family:arial,helvetica;"&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Geneva;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt;Every day, I have to ask at least twice or three times what  day it is, where we are now in July (Please tell me this war will be a July  affair only). The calendar of the Siege barely sticks in my head. It's Day 16 or  17 when I am writing now. I don't know.&lt;br /&gt;I have also tried to the best of my  abilities to keep up to date with professional commitments from my former life.  It's almost impossible, but if I stop I know I will fall apart entirely. It is  surreal to write emails following up with work. The world outside is decidedly  distant. The mental image of my apartment in New York is practically impossible  to summon. Avenue A, the deli at the corner and the Yemenis who own it, all  lapsed. This is what happens when you are under siege. Or these are the first  effects of the siege, maybe when time will pass, my perception of the world will  change and my imagination will be back at work, I will have this imagined  geography of where I once was and people I once knew. I know I am not alone in  this. My friend Christine said to me yesterday that she forces herself to go to  the office to keep from going insane, but she cannot remember anything about her  work before the siege started. The renowned Lebanese novelist, Elias Khoury,  said this morning on al-Jazeera that he is so reminded of past experience with  Israel's wars that he feels he is living between a time of memory and the  present time. This war is not exactly a replay of 1982, but we cannot help  recalling 1982. I keep joking that the "veterans" of 1982, those of us who  endured that Israeli murderous folly, should get some sort of a break, a package  of mundane privileges, free internet, free coffee, parking spots.&lt;br /&gt;Beirut has  been spared and life has resumed an almost normal pace. The sound of Israeli air  raids comes every so often just low enough to spread chills of horror and  fright. But the droves of displaced who arrive here every day have transformed  the space of the city. Their wretchedness is the poignant marker of the  war.&lt;br /&gt;We live from day to day. The scenarios for the conclusion of this war  seem very difficult to articulate, even to imagine. The US is intent on the  continuation of the war, Israel has suffered a defeat and the goals it has set  to determine some sort of victory don't seem fathomable. The Israeli press was  beginning to ask a few intelligent questions until the IDF suffered losses in an  ambush set-up by Hezbollah. One damn ambush, a mere handful of soldiers, and the  entire press corps went ballistic overnight. They were all about flattening  Lebanon, hurting the government, bringing out the big guns, more troops. One  damn ambush where a mere handful of soldiers were faced with a reality they were  not prepared to contend with: that Hezbollah guerrillas are well trained and  will fight without blinking to defend the land from a ground invasion. What a  funny army! What a funny society! What do they expect when they go to war with a  guerilla?&lt;br /&gt;One of their pundits (or officials) said that Israel was only  using 10% of its military capacity. Imagine, 10% for a mere 3 or 5 kms squares!  The arithmetics in Israel are suddenly emerging. For a very long time I have  wondered what the equation is between the death of brown people and a single  "white" life. There must be some sort of a secret arithmetic someplace in  someone's drawyer that guides "outrage" in the western world. Off course Rwanda  came to shatter all notions of an arithmetic. Then came the killing of Rachel  Corrie, a white face with a brown heart. She did not count. Or at least it took  a lot of pull to make her death a reason for outrage in the mainstream of the  western world. In this war, other equations have emerged, for the still  breathing life of a single Israeli soldier, the deaths in Gaza are enough to  crowd a cemetary. And just recently, we had the famous equation, for every shell  in Haifa, 10 buildings go down in the southern suburbs of Beirut. (This was  verified on Tuesday: 23 shells brought down 10 buildings). But I digress... &lt;br /&gt;It's a losing battle and they should negotiate a settlement and avoid more  bloodshed and wretchedness for us all. This a time to be smart, not  bloodthirsty.&lt;br /&gt;The shelling in the south has been astounding. People are  trapped in villages for days without anything: no food, no water, no  electricity, no medicines. They were sending out calls for help and no one could  get to them because the Israelis would not let ambulances come near (two were  shelled in the past two days). The UN has been allowed to deliver some basic  rations of food and medicine but they have been scarce. The Beqaa has been  shelled ruthlessly as well.&lt;br /&gt;The humanitarian tragedy is beyond description.  One of the local television stations airs the cries of help from citizen trapped  in their homes under shelling: so and so has not eaten for a week, so and so  needs diabetic medicine, so and so needs his chemotherapy, so and so needs to be  let out, so and so, so and so... The messages scroll, and scroll, and that's all  I can see and hear. I can think of very, very little else. In fact, I obsess  over these messages, of people trapped under shelling, bodies under rubble. I  keep having fantasies of a huge, huge civilian procession of human shields  walking alongisde convoys of food, medicine, ambulances, that defy Israeli's  military superiority in the air. A similar mass of people that took to the  street when it was aggrieved by former Prime Minister Hariri's death that walks  fearless and relentless to the south. A human convoy of hundreds and thousands  of people just taking back the country and lending their bodies to rescue their  brethren trapped in villages. Civility turning the tide on barbarism. A crazy  dream that ought neither be crazy nor a dream. Perhaps one day...&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;My  Palestinian friends are irked again that because Lebanon is "sexy", the world  watches Lebanon while Gaza is being sliced and bled. This is due to the  ruthlessness and savvyness of the western media. On the Arab media, there is as  much coverage of the Israeli horrors in Gaza as there is of the dose  administered to Lebanon. In all cases, as Israel is now waging a war on these  two fronts (in addition to its adventures in Nablus), something unexpected has  happened. The two fronts are now inexorably linked. Gaza is nothing like the  entire geography of Lebanon, politically, sociologically, culturally the two  geographies could not be more different, and yet, as the same shells explode and  kill there and here, and the flow of images from there and here is  uninterrupted, the geographies have merged. The tacit alliance between Hamas and  Hezbollah could not have achieved this proxiness. Their dead are now our own,  our siege is theirs, there is a tandem of solidarity, of tragedy, of resilience,  of defiance.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I have stopped accompanying journalists, I started to hang  around the schools and other sites where the displaced have been relocated. I go  from disappointment to outright rage at the governments' failure at responding  appropriately to the humanitarian crisis. The other face of this country's  victory is and will be its handling of the humanitarian crisis. The challenge is  of an unimaginable scale. It is clear that the government neither has the  wherewithalls or the know-how for handling it (and I would add will because when  there's a will, there is a way). Closer to a third of the population is  displaced. The Ministry of Social Affairs, the Ministry of the Interior, the  Ministry of Health, and a slew of other public institutions have been subsumed  in the pettiness of internecine political fighting. Not a single appointed  official has had the guts or displayed the resolution to tend to the problem  appropriately. If a crisis will erupt and I believe it will, they will have to  be held accountable.&lt;br /&gt;They parade on TV and in the streets, with their neat  hair and pressed suits, moving from their air-conditioned meeting rooms to  restaurants for "power lunches" and so-called coordination meetings, while  hundreds and hundreds of volunteers are actually carrying the burden of this  problem. What a shame this political class has proven to be. To make matters  worse, they whimper and nag about how the Lebanese state has to be "reinforced"  to diplomats and foreign envoys, while their OWN people sleep on mattresses (if  they are lucky to have been given one) and walk around barefoot in circles  wondering how they are expected to make a living.&lt;br /&gt;In wars, there are two  fronts: the battlefield and the civilian front. The critical civilian front in  this war is not the unaffected handsome and well-to-do of Lebanon, but the  800,000 displaced. If Hezbollah are waging the war on the battlefield, the other  field has been left to be tended to by bands of NGOs and charity organizations.  The NGOs have shouldered the brunt of the burden, but only a handful charity  organizations are not attached to the extremely petty ambitions of a political  figure or group. And the ugliness of their short-sighted calculations (just as  during the parliamentary elections that followed March 14th) have prevailed as  they hand over sacks of sugar and rice. Some charity organizations have had the  arrogance to force those who receive relief aid to hold up a photograph of the  so-called political figure! Others ask them to pledge their loyalty or simply  pledge their vote! This is how the political class is "rallying" around the  country! This is how they face Israel's might!&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I spent the afternoon  yesterday in Karm el-Zeytoon, a neighborhood in Ashrafieh (that translates  literally to "olive grove") where some schools have been opened to house some of  the displaced from the south and from Beirut's southern suburb. I went to visit  friends who were in charge of the Nazareth Nuns school (a public school). A band  of dashing young men and women, not yet thirty years of age, that have taken  upon themselves the task of ensuring the well-being and safety of some 120 or so  men, women, children and elderly. Some in that band of volunteers belong to the  Democratic Left movement, and the school, as are two neighboring other schools,  are under the charge of the Samir Kassir Foundation.&lt;br /&gt;Although they have  established a schedule of shifts so as not to have their entire lives taken over  by their volunteering, still, their entire lives are on hold and all they do in  effect is tend to the displaced. The atmosphere inside the school was convivial,  slow-paced but a low-grade tension is impossible to ignore. All throughout my  visit I was smitten by their grace. They have had to organize every single  aspect of everyday survival in that school: spaces where people sleep, the use  of bathrooms, the overall hygiene of the place, "house-cleaning", collection of  garbage, preparing meals, keeping stock of supplies, medicines, medical needs of  the group, fun and games for the kids, security of the site, etc. That night,  they were going to have the first attempt at screening a DVD in the school's  open air courtyard (Finfing Nemo). They are not yet thirty years of age and yet  they have to sort through the everyday problems that arise between adults their  parents' age.&lt;br /&gt;A nine-year old boy came nagging to T. (one of the main  volunteers), as he and I chatted in the makeshift "salon" (a broken table and  school bench at the side of the gateway to the school). He wanted T's permission  to go to a printer's shop where he had heard he could find work on a day to day  basis. He implored him. T. promised he would talk to the boy's father that night  and they would see. The boy told him that some man in the group assured him that  he would find him work. T did not have the heart to lecture him about the ills  of child labor. The boy was in turmoil over the humiliating state of his family  and was eager to share the burden with his father (a taxi driver whose earnings  have gone extremely low).&lt;br /&gt;At the opposite end of the open courtyard, R.  (another volunteer) was trying to settle a dispute between two women. Khadijeh  was upset with Hanadi because Hanadi had gotten all uppety and defiant that day  and reneged on her duty to clean the bathroom and her sleep area. Khadijeh had  cleaned in her place just to avoid a clash with other people in the group.  Hanadi and her were related by marriage, Hanadi had provoked her. She had gotten  uppety because her husband Ali, who works as a mechanic somewhere in the  southern suburbs had gone back the day before and opened shop and earned some  hard-needed cash. He claimed to have come back with 1,000$ in his pocket,  bragged about not needing hand-outs and charity. It was probably a lie, but his  wife was so tired of the brunt of humiliation she no longer felt obliged to  abide by the rules that regulated their lives in that shelter. The women's  screams got loud at some point, until Khadijeh walked away. It took some time  for them to cool down. The other residents looked away, a discreet gesture to  give the two women space for privacy. That's all the privacy afforded to people  there, a gaze turned away. Otherwise, strangers have had to live with each  other, their privacy shattered, their intimacy stripped.&lt;br /&gt;Half an hour later,  R. went to the back of the school building, I saw her, Khadijeh and Hanadi sit  around a pot of freshly brewed coffee and cigarettes, sorting things out in  gentler tone.&lt;br /&gt;Another volunteer walked in carrying medicines for the group.  He held a list in his hand and the bag of prescription drugs in the other. He  went looking for each one, he knew them one by one. An hour later, a volunteer  doctor came in, and that same volunteer went over the cases with him. He knew  them one by one, who was allergic to what, who was breastfeeding and could not  take that particular prescription, who had not reacted well to that medicine...  I was in awe.&lt;br /&gt;R. finished her seance with the two women and came back to sit  with me. I played cards with a six year old with one elbow in a cast and eyes  sparkling with humor. An elderly overweight woman came over and asked R. to find  her and her sister a room. She could not tolerate the heat or the mosquitoes in  her old age and health conditions. She begged her. She wanted to die in dignity,  not like that, on a mattress in a school. She could barely hold back her  tears.&lt;br /&gt;I left them reluctantly. I was worried about the volunteers as much as  the displaced. Until when could they go on on like that? Civil society is not  equipped to supplant the government in that daunting task.&lt;br /&gt;Two days ago, a TV  station caught Walid Eido (a parliamentarian from Beirut, and one of the  particularly mentally challenged from Hariri's al-Mustaqbal movement –God  forgive Hariri for plaguing us with his own band of court-jesters), lounging on  the beach, playing cards. They split their screen and aired images of the  hapless displaced. The contrast was sinister. The next day, this illustruous  representative of Beirut rushed on television to seem busy and babbled on as if  he were in the "know". I hope that this war will be the end of his ability to  walk the streets of Beirut. Do you understand my rage?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In my last siege  note, I ranted about the Arab political class. Yesterday morning Hosni Moubarak  served me with another stellar illsutration of his mugnificence. On his way back  from Saudi Arabia to Egypt, he stated publicaly that Egypt would never go to war  with Israel for Lebanon. Egypt is a country that is currently struggling with  its development and was negotiating growth and could not put all this at risk  for the sake of Lebanon. That same morning, the Egyptian government raised the  price of gas by 30%!&lt;br /&gt;Dignified! Contrast that sense of dignity with the  Lebanese injured who refused to be flown over to Jordan for treatment because of  the King's support of the Israeli war on Lebanon.&lt;br /&gt;On a final note I would  like to correct something I wrote from my last "siege note". I said that the  Arab League is complicit in the destruction of Lebanon. I need to ammend that  and say that the Arab League is complicit in the destruction of Gaza, in the  increase of settlements in Palestine, in the construction of the apartheid wall  and in the genocide in Darfur. These are its 2005-2006 achievements that linger  in my memory. There could be more.&lt;/span&gt;  &lt;/span&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31447542-115454955014030804?l=beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/feeds/115454955014030804/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=31447542&amp;postID=115454955014030804' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115454955014030804'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115454955014030804'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/2006/08/note-11_02.html' title='Note 11'/><author><name>Rasha</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31447542.post-115454952504772914</id><published>2006-08-02T13:11:00.001-07:00</published><updated>2006-08-02T13:12:05.063-07:00</updated><title type='text'>Note 9 and 10</title><content type='html'>&lt;span style="font-family:arial,helvetica;"&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Geneva;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt;Dear All,&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;My siege notes are beginning to disperse. I  write disjointed paragraphs but I cannot discipline myself to write everyday.  Despair overwhelms me. A profoundly debilitating sense of uselessness and  helplessness. Writing does not always help, communicating is not always easy,  finding the words, deciding which stories should be included, and which should  not. The experience of this siege is so emotionally and psychically draining,  the situation is so politically tenuous...&lt;br /&gt;I miss the world. I miss life. I  miss myself. People around me also go through these ups and downs, but I find  them generally to be more resilient, more steadfast, more courageous than I. I  am consumed by other people's despair. It's not very smart, I mean for a  strategy of survival.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;My day started today (in effect it is Day 13 of the  War, but just another morning under siege in my personal experience) with news  from Bint Jbeil, reported on al-Jazira. Ghassan Ben Jeddo, the director of the  Beirut office was analyzing the situation on the southern front in Bint Jbeil.  He announced flatly that Hezbollah had conceded to the military surrender of  Bint Jbeil, that the IDF had besieged the town, and that the town had been  almost entirely flattened to rubble. My breathing became tight. I knew well, and  had been told for days, that military defeats and victories were very tricky to  determine in this type of unusual warfare, because a conventional army has clear  retreats and advances whereas a band of guerrillas behaves in an entirely  different way. The military defeat in itself did not really matter enough to  cause tightness in my chest, although I was a little worried about the IDF  feeling empowered to proceed with "scorched earth" plans or some other  nightmarish fantasy. My breathing became tight because I immediately thought  about some 1,500 people, making up some 400 families whom I had heard the day  before were trapped in Bint Jbeil. Some were displaced from villages around Bint  Jbeil. They were trapped there in two buildings, one of which was a government  school. I could not imagine what they were living. As the al-Jazira showed  footage from around Bint Jbeil, there was a continuous soundtrack of pounding  from Israeli tanks. I could only see them and hear that pounding: were they  huddled together? Were they laid down on the floor, their hands over their  heads? How does one survive 2 days of continuous shelling like that? Had they  any hope of fleeing?&lt;br /&gt;They stayed with me, 1500 souls in Bint Jbeil. I went to  the public garden where displaced people were now living, I went to the  cooperative supermarket in Sabra, I went to an air-conditioned cafe with WiFi,  and the 1500 souls were with me. I had lunch, tried to write, still with me.  Until after sunset, a journalist friend told me he had interviewed the mayor of  Bint Jbeil in the afternoon. The man had suffered a stroke this past Sunday and  had been evacuated for treatment. By today he had recovered and was struggling  to find a way to get the remaining 40 Lebanese-Americans trapped in Bint Jbeil.  My friend allowed me to sigh with some relief, the trapped souls were 400 not  1,500 today...  (Most of the residents of Bint Jbeil are Lebanese-Americans from  Dearborn and Detroit Michigan.)&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Is there a point to relaying on to you  the events of the past few days? I am still stuck to the television. I am still  living from breaking news to breaking news. I now get things from the  second-tier horse's mouth, so to speak, journalists whom I have taken to  hovering around.&lt;br /&gt;Khiyam shall soon be rubble. As is Bint Jbeil. After Khiyam  will be Tyre. The Beqaa has received pounding. Israelis targetted factories,  some operational, others under construction. None were Hezbollah fortresses off  course. They also hit a UNIFIL outpost last night killing UN international  observers.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;This will be a long note because it is a cluster from the past  few days. It will most likely be a tedious read. It reflects my encounters these  past few days, conversations and discussions with friends journalists and  analysts as well as vignettes from Beirut under siege. As I attempt to tie all  of these sections together, I am back at the Cafe with WiFi. Yesterday they  played the soundtrack from Lawrence of Arabia. I don't know if they were aware  of the "post-colonial" and "postpost-colonial" dimension. Condi was in  Jerusalem. The Bedouins were firing rockets at Haifa. And Faisal spoke late into  the night, promising the rockets would go further than Haifa.&lt;br /&gt;Today, they  have a Charles Aznavour playlist. Somebody with executive power in this cafe is  a shameless sentimental. This is the first sign of a return to normalcy in my  experience so far. I, an unrepentant sentimental as well, am very fond of  Aznavour, this playlist has been the soundtrack to my convalescence from amorous  setbacks, it is a first tangibe reminder that I had once a different  life.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Hezbollah, now the symbol&lt;br /&gt;It took a few days into this war for  Hezbollah to acquire a new power of signification. The semiologists, the  political sociologists, and hords of regional experts and policy advisors have  to watch this carefully, they better at least, if they are to understand this  moment and the new political idiom. And they have quite something to contend  with, Hassan Nasrallah's pronouncements, al-Manar TV, the video productions, the  manufacture of image and meaning.&lt;br /&gt;Hezbollah have now become the only Arab  force to have refused to accomodate, even slightly, Israel's missives and  caprices. They are undaunted by the military might of the IDF, its awesome  ability to bring wretchedness to a people and a country and its ability to shrug  at international laws regulating warfare, conflict and non-aggression. They are  also undaunted by the moral highground provided by the US, and presently the  Arab League and the International Community (whoever this construct stands for).  In that, they have won the hearts and minds of Arab masses. The so-called Arab  street (that vague beguiling force at once vociferous and inept that the western  media have reified into a pressure valve of the potential/appetite for Terror  –or anti-western sentiment) has been won in heart and mind by Hezbollah's  retaliation to the Israeli assault. The Arab world is mesmerized by this  movement that has developped the ability to fight back, inflict pain and for the  first time in the history of the Arab-Israeli conflict pause a real threat to  Israel. Hezbollah does not have the ability to defeat the Israeli army. No one  in the region can and none of the Arab states is willing, in gest or merely  using the power of suggestion, to challenge Israel's absolute hegemony. (I don't  know whether Iran can or not, but in principle Israel's military abilities are  superior to the Islamic Republic's conventional army.)&lt;br /&gt;In its careful study  of a military strategy for defense, conducted in full cognizance of the  movement's weakness and strength and of Israel's weakness and strength,  Hezbollah has achieved what all Arab states have failed to achieve. Since the  war broke out, Hassan Nasrallah has displayed a persona and public behavior also  to the exact opposite of Arab heads of states, he may be in the "underground"  for security reasons, but he is not discheveled, he speaks in a cautious,  calculated calm, a quiet dignity. His adresses have been punctuated with key  notions that have long lapsed from the everyday political vocabulary in the Arab  world: responsibility (for defeat, victory and the toll on Lebanon), dignity,  justice, compassion (for the suffering inflicted on people and for the  Palestinian Israeli victims of Hezbollah shelling in Nazareth and Haifa). A  stark contrast with the political class in the Arab world that speaks of  "calculated retreats", "compromises for peace", and the real politik convictions  that induce Amr Moussa to cast himself as the gesticulating pantomime for the  Saudis and the Americans. In an interview with al-Jazira, Ahmad Fouad Najm, the  famous Egyptian popular poet quoted a Cairene street sweeper who said to him  that Hassan Nasrallah brought back to life the dead man buried inside him. This  is the "pulse" of the much-dreaded Arab street. This too is a measure of  Israel's miscalculation. Moreover, at the moment when Sunnis and Shi'as have  been blinded in murderous rage in Iraq, when Idiot-King Abdullah of Jordan and a  handful Barbaric Wahabi pundits babbled on about the dangerous emergence of a  "Shi'i crescent" in the region, Israel's assault has brought to the fore a  solidarity that transcends the Sunni-Shi'a divide in the Arab world, and  consolidated a front of those who reject Israeli hegemony and those who cower to  it in fear.&lt;br /&gt;This new symbolic power beyond the boundaries of Lebanon was  willed by Hezbollah in the postwar, it peeked in 1996, when Israel conducted its  notorious "Operation Grapes of Wrath". After the Israeli withdrawal from south  Lebanon, Hezbollah claimed the credit for liberation. Some analysts saw the  Israeli withdrawal from the occupied south as a strategic move to end the  "Lebanon" file, and deprive Syria from a crucial hand in its negotiations with  Israel (Hafez el-Assad died shortly after). Other analysts saw the Israeli  withdrawal as Hezbollah's defeat of the IDF in a long, long war of attrition.  Nevertheless, Hezbollah represented itself in its propaganda machine as the only  armed force in the Arab and Muslim world to have in fact defeated Israel.&lt;br /&gt;In  this present crisis, and from Hassan Nasrallah's first pronouncement (the  radio/audio adress he delivered), the "open" belligerance that Israel is  conducting on Lebanon has been represented as a turning point battle in the saga  of the Arab-Israeli conflict. A saga replete with humiliating defeats for Arab  armies, a turning point because Hezbollah promised to deliver a victory (as it  has achieved many victories in the past). In other words, he transformed this  present conflict from a "Lebanese" question into an Arab and regional  conflict.&lt;br /&gt;The significance of defeat and victory is bearing a deep impact far  and beyond the boundaries of Lebanon. This is one of the reasons Condoleeza  Rice's notion of a "New Middle East" smacks of first rate hubris. The "New  Middle East" is taking shape elsewhere, or the real new Middle East is here, and  there is little the White House, Ehud Olmert, 23-ton shells autographed by the  beautiful children of Israel (the pictures are quite astounding) dropped in the  middle of refugee camps to unearth underground bunkers of "terrorism", can do  about it.&lt;br /&gt;In the first few days of the Israeli assault on Lebanon, there was  barely any movement in Arab capitals. The Arab world seemed content watching us  burn on TV, our fate seemed sealed with the Arab League meeting. I remember  writing my rage in one of these dispatches. However, after Nasrallah's first  adress, which ended with the spectacularly staged shelling of the Israeli  warship, Hezbollah's sustained ability to hold its fort and to shell cities as  far as Haifa and Nazareth, in addition to the sight of Israel's sustained  massacres of civilians and destruction of Lebanon, turned the tide. Hezbollah's  position in the region and in Arab consciousness is etched with an empowering,  envigorating significance.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The New Middle East, Conspiracy and Hassan  Nasrallah's televised adress&lt;br /&gt;Condoleezza Rice showed up in Beirut two days  ago. The message she carries is that the US will not enforce a ceasfire. Israel  estimates it needs an additional week before the atmosphere is "conducive" to a  ceasefire. This means they need a week to achieve their aims. Their aims have  changed over the past two weeks, although they have formulated a set of demands  to the White House and the G8.&lt;br /&gt;Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Saniora on his  way to the Rome conference said he did not expect the meeting to produce a  ceasefire. Only Kofi Anan seems to expect that from this high-profile  meeting.&lt;br /&gt;She did not speak of a New Middle East in Lebanon, in fact there  were no public pronouncements made in Lebanon, but she did hold several press  conferences in Israel, where reference was made to this new map. The "New Middle  East" has not been officially unveiled by the Americans.&lt;br /&gt;It emerges at a  moment when Israel has failed at undermining Hamas with all the means the world  has afforded to support it: diplomatic pressure from the US and EU, an effective  paralysis of Hamas' ability to govern, an internal conflict between Hamas and  Fateh, the incarceration of cabinet members and parliamentarians, a humanitarian  siege, and a full scale military assault on Gaza. The Palestinian population has  yet to unseat Hamas or question the legitimacy of its position.&lt;br /&gt;This moment  is also when Iraq seems to have effectively slipped into a civil war and the US  and UK occupation forces are neck-deep in a quagmire with violence escalating to  frightful scale. Civil conflicts and violence develop a momentum and logic of  their own that create their own hell, and Iraq seems to be teetering at the  precipice of this hell with no sign of decisive and effective intervention to  bring it to a halt. This moment is also when the negotiations with Iran over the  development of nuclear weapons are taking baby steps and in circles.&lt;br /&gt;With the  war in Lebanon, the "moment" in which the "New Middle East" is unveiled is a  moment where Hezbollah has emerged as a force that is able to humiliate the  Israeli military on the field of battle, and represent the Israeli civilan  leadership as reckless, confused and bloodthirsty. Hezbollah define their  victory as maintaining their ability to deter Israel from assaulting Lebanon,  namely, deterring a ground attack (the battle in a cluster of villages has been  going on for 5 days now) but mostly firing rockets and missiles into the Israeli  interior. In that regard, they are so far victorious.&lt;br /&gt;So the question is on  what grounds are the US, Israel and the EU imagining the "New Middle East"? And  how do they imagine its implementation?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Past midnight last night,  al-Manar television announced they would broadcast a pre-recorded adress by  Hassan Nasrallah. He wanted to present his views and reactions to the diplomatic  activity that has been taking place in the past few days. He also wanted to send  a message to the nation, Israel and the wider world regarding Hezbollah's  strategy in this conflict. For Nasrallah the "New Middle East" was the final  indication that Israel's assault was premeditated (and part of a greater US  plan) and that Hezbollah's victory would be the principal bullwark to thwarting  the conspiracy of this "New Middle East". He also revealed that Hezbollah had  now received information that Israel had planned the assault on Lebanon and  Hezbollah for September or October. Israel planned to roll a massive ground  force across the borders, with a cover from the air targetting Hezbollah  leadership and roads and bridges that aimed at crippling the movement from  responding. The element of surprise was key to the success of that military  strategy. With the present conflict, Israel had proceeded with its plans, but  without the element of surprise. And that is one of the reasons Hezbollah have  the upper hand so far. And finally, he reiterated the "surprises" that Hezbollah  had delivered to Israel thus far: the warship, hitting as far into Israeli  territory as Tabariya, hitting as far as Haifa. He announced that Hezbollah was  now ready to hit targets "beyond Haifa", at a time of their choosing. Did he  mean Tel Aviv? Would he hit Tel Aviv? Was it his retaliation at psychological  warfare?&lt;br /&gt;This morning, Olmert's office announced they had heard Nasrallah's  threat and would respond accordingly.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;More on Being a Proud Arab&lt;br /&gt;Saudi  Arabia pledged hundreds of millions of dollars in aid and whatever to help  Lebanon in these tragic times. I wish the political class of this country had  the spine and intelligence to reject this fortune or negotiate its political  cost from the position of the empowered. Hezbollah is changing the terms, and  unfortunately the cabinet of Fouad Saniora, as well as the Hariri movement is  still behaving in total subservience to Saudi Arabia, protecting Saudi hegemony  in this country and the region.&lt;br /&gt;The Jordanians sent us a plane load of  emergency relief supplies. It just landed in our destroyed airport. The Israelis  gave the Jordanian plane the security cover. Jordan and Kuwait are sending  environmental experts to help us clean the sea from the oil and fuel spills that  Israelis dumped. Did I mention this? Did I mention that after their warships  retreated to a distance safe from Hezbollah's firepower, they spilled enough oil  to cause an environmental disaster on our coastline? Did I mention that no one  has been to fish a fish and that the shores are now pitch black?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;This  said, I still cannot get over, or forgive the Saudi, Egyptian and Jordanian  actions vis-a-vis the Israeli war on Lebanon. There was a chance to stand  upright, to redress from the hunch of servility. For a moment there was an  opportunity to salvage dignity and turn the tables for good. They chose to  cower, to protect US and Israeli interest and extend moral cover for Israel to  destroy this country. The Arab League is complicit in the destruction of this  country. Fawwaz Traboulsi said it time and time again on television stations,  they have a myriad means at their disposal to shake Israel and the US if only to  impose red lines, to defend a notion of sovereignty. They could have withdrawn  their ambassadors from Israel, they could have suspended the peace accords with  Israel, they could have threatened a regional escalation during the Arab League  meeting. Saudi Arabia could have used its hegemony over the oil market or its  deposits in US banks. Instead, Amr Moussa opined that the road map for peace was  defunct. This is servile complicity.&lt;br /&gt;Imagine how much they would have gained  in the eyes of their societies and as regional actors, had they simply stood in  one line-up in the face of Israel. Obviously, it is hubris on my part to imagine  these heads of states capable of any action beyond humiliating subservience.  This is one of the meanings of defeat. The total relinquishing of agency and  dignity.&lt;br /&gt;The political culture that prevails in the Arab world has a very  select cast of roles for officials (whether elected or not), at heart they are  variations on three main roles: taxidermists, court-jesters and kitchen  undercooks (the more accurate word is in French, "marmitons"). They resurrect  dead effigies, brandish defunct ideologies, they gesticulate and throw fits to  soothe, distract, and deter, or they slice and dice, pick-up the peels and  clean-up in the "big kitchen" of regional politics. This too is a face of  defeat.&lt;br /&gt;There has been much, much ink spilled on the impact of "defeat" on  Arab societies, identity, political culture, etc. The other meaning of defeat is  the inability to imagine political alternatives beyond the debilitating bi-polar  pathology (and I use the metaphor with the psychic disorder in mind) of  US/Israel vs. fundamentalist political Islam. These simply cannot be the two  options for citizenship, identity, governance and political representation.  (Perhaps it is impossible in Palestine because occupation is war, and war  creates situations in extremis –and yet the Palestinians, Moslems and  Christians, did not cower from electing Hamas into government, in cognizance of  the costs). And so far, that "third" option (obviously not Blair's "Third Way")  is not yet clear or cogent.&lt;br /&gt;In the present conflict, a secular egalitarian  democrat such as I, has no real place for representation or maneuver. Neither  have I and my ilk succeeded in carving a space for ourselves, nor have the  prevailing forces (the two poles) agreed to making allocations for us. That is  our defeat and our failure. In Lebanon, we are caught in the stampede and the  cross-fire. As I noted in one of these siege notes, I am not a supporter of  Hezbollah, but this has become a war with Israel. In the war with Israel, there  is no force in the world that will have me stand side by side with the IDF or  the Israeli state.&lt;br /&gt;It was my foolhardy hope, that the Lebanese front that  emerged after the mass mobilization on March 14th would rehabilitate its nearly  depleted political capital (depleted down to its most base and vulgar sectarian  constituencies) and refuse to meet with Condoleeza Rice. Out of principle that  the US and Israel are waging a war on one of the chief agents in Lebanon's  political landscape. Instead, all these handsome men and women showed up at the  US embassy, smiling, wearing their Sunday suits, aping the display of servility  that the Idiot-Kings and Senile-Presidents-for-Life display at the Arab league  meetings. She showed up at the embassy and enjoyed this band of court-jesters  and taxidermists society while the Depleted Uranium Smart Bombs were delivered  from the US military base in Qatar to Israel.&lt;br /&gt;Was I foolhardy to have once  seen an opportunity for change when the March 14th mobilization swept the  capital? Surely now, in light of this war. And you would think that by reading  newspapers, this band of brothers (and sisters) would learn something. You would  think that by watching what happened to their equivalent band of brothers in  Fateh would inspire another behavior. To no avail. Look at the pathetic story of  Mohammad Dahlan. Once a proud young man from Gaza, once a hero of the  Palestinian resistance, once a prisoner in Israel's gaols, once a popular leader  in the streets of Gaza. He was so corrupted by power, he became the US Foreign  Secretary's Boy Toy. His street smarts became thuggery, his humble origins fed  his appetite for cheap thrills: nice suits that he never hung well on his  shoulders, fancy cars that he never had a chance to drive on decent roads, fine  cuisine that he never knew how to order and first class tickets to capitals  where he flew to surrender more and more and more servility. The story of  Dahlan, although small and borderline insignificant should be told to children.  I look forward to the day when he will not be able to walk in the streets of  Palestine. Why do I single out Dahlan when so many others like him roam the  unpaved roads of Palestine, because for a brief moment I believed he was a man.  A time long ago that I cannot recall now.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In Lebanon, the Displaced, the  Schizophrenia&lt;br /&gt;Within Lebanon, the situation is different. The White House and  Israel are hedging their bets on an internal rift. The most dangerous would be a  Sunni-Shi'i divide. So far the country has been united, but warning signs are  let out everyday. The sectarian polarization is still cut grossly along the  lines of the pro-Syrian and anti-Syrian camps, they cut across the conventional  sectarian rifts that polarized the country during the civil war, and to some  extent in the postwar. In every speech, Hassan Nasrallah has hailed and  expressed gratitude for the fantastic popular support that has rallied around  the resistance. The council for sunni religious associations met yesterday,  reiterating their support for the resistance and condemning the silence and  cowardice of the Arab world.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It is compelling to see the hords of  volunteers tend to the displaced. There are two main organizations channeling  emergency aid and resources to the NGOs tending to the displaced, they are the  Hariri Foundation and the National Relief agency. The management of relocating  and lodging the displaced has been less than ideal, and I am of the opinion that  the government has not really galavanized its full abilities to face up to the  crisis. The Ministry of Social Affairs, the Ministry of Health and other  concerned public agencies are coordinating efforts to bring some order into the  chaos. However, there is increasing critique that they are not marshalled as  they were in the past. True the scale of displacement is harrowing and keeps  increasing everyday and the government has never had to contend with a challenge  so tremendous. We now count 800,000 people who are displaced. Access to  shelters, schools and other sites of relocation has been uneven. Problems have  begun to emerge. I have made an effort to collect as many anecdotes as possible,  to get an overall sense of the situation. So far, I have not been able to. The  overwhelming question seems to be managing the distress and frustration of the  displaced and the exhaustion of volunteers. The crisis seems to drag, and longer  term solutions will have to be implemented because immediate emergency solutions  are usually not sustainable over time.&lt;br /&gt;The anecdotes tell stories of everyday  heroes and everyday greed and sectarian prejudice. It's a mixed bag. Unanimously  however, the work that Bahia Hariri, sister of slain former Prime Minister Rafic  Hariri, and parliamentarian from Sidon (the northernmost first city in south  Lebanon), has been stellar. Using the arm of the Hariri Foundation in Sidon, she  is housing 12,500 displaced from the south (mostly Shi'ites) and tending to all  their needs. There are ironic anecdotes too, for example schools in the  Palestinian refugee camp of Ain el-Helweh have been opened to house Lebanese  refugees.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The brunt of this war are felt unevenly in the country. The  eastern suburb of the city and significant areas in the mountains have been more  or less spared from shelling and violence. Occasional Israeli air raids spread  fear. The targetting of the broadcast tower for the major Lebanese television  stations that claimed the life of an employee at the LBC (Lebanese Broadcasting  Corporation) was a poignant reminder, but the astounding wretchedness inflicted  on the South and the Beqa'a have not been inflicted elsewhere.&lt;br /&gt;This is not  atypical of Lebanon's exprience of its civil war and of the postwar occupation  of south Lebanon. This dysynchrony in "experiencing" the Israeli assault  translates sometimes to a schizophrenia. There are people sun-tanning, partying,  taking it easy while others are displaced. This too is part of the political  class's engagement in the war. They could inspire a different mindset.&lt;br /&gt;In  the Israeli invasion of 1982, I was in West Beirut. I was 13 years old. All my  friends and classmates fled the siege of West Beirut. The political rifts were  different then, but I remember that when I returned to school after the  withdrawal of the Israeli forces that fall, I carried the burden of the trauma  of the siege while my classmates had memories of fun and games of that summer  spent in the mountains. While they recalled witnessing shells fall on Beirut  from a distance, I recalled their sound as they exploded. I resented all the  stories they told of that summer. They were all happy stories. I shut my ears  when they recalled them. Until now, there are a set of songs that were popular  then, that I cannot hear without feeling a pinch of anxiety in my stomach. It's  the impact of that trauma. Part of the reason I cannot leave Beirut is that I  don't want to become like them. It's like a pledge I made to myself. But this is  happening again, on a smaller scale, because the shelling has reached beyond the  southern suburbs of Beirut and the south.&lt;br /&gt;These distances that separate the  people of this country have to be bridged somehow. The "united" front has to  find a more cogent gel. We have everything to win if we are able to meet that  challenge. We have our country to win. If we remain hapless victims who beg, and  who remain beholden to the "charity" of Arabs we will never have full  sovereignty... Hezbollah's victory can be articulated to become Lebanon's  victory (this too might be naive folly on my part, but I need to believe this,  at least for the next few days, so just humor me). Particularly now that the  Syrians are making noises about plans to roll their rusted tanks and army of  underfed and illiterate soldiers with its thuggish command back in the country. &lt;br /&gt;I am so weary of the return of Syrian control over Lebanon. The Syrian  people, all those pictured cursing the Lebanese for their arrogance and lack of  gratitude should protest against a re-entry of the Syrian military into Lebanon.  And if the self-described "last fort of dignity of the Arabs" are inspired to  fight Israel, they have the entire front of the Golan to do so. The Lebanese  will not liberate the Golan, the Syrians will have to. You don't subcontract  liberation. Moreover, Hezbollah has claimed time and time again that they are  prepared for the long haul and don't need a bullet from any of the Arab  states.This is another reason for the Lebanese political forces to band around  the resistance and shield the country.We might have a chance to rebuild this  country without owing a percentage of every contract to a thug from the Syrian  junta, and that feels like humane relief.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I will end this siege note with  another of the obsessions that taunt me. People caught under rubble. In  describing the surreptitious commonplace horror of the civil war in a televised  interview perhaps ten years ago, the famous Lebanese novelist Elias Khoury drew  the following scene. While everyday life was taking place, traffic,  transactions, just the mundane stuff of life, and as you walked passed  buildings, you knew that in the underground of that commonplace building, there  might be someone kidnapped, waiting to be traded or simply held in custody for  money or whatever reasons militias kidnapped for. And you walked by that  building.&lt;br /&gt;I am haunted by the nameless and faceless caught under rubble. In  the undergrounds of destroyed buildings or simply in the midst of its ravages.  Awaiting to be given a proper burial.&lt;/span&gt;  &lt;/span&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31447542-115454952504772914?l=beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/feeds/115454952504772914/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=31447542&amp;postID=115454952504772914' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115454952504772914'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115454952504772914'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/2006/08/note-9-and-10.html' title='Note 9 and 10'/><author><name>Rasha</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31447542.post-115454947569964900</id><published>2006-08-02T13:11:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2006-08-02T13:11:15.706-07:00</updated><title type='text'>Day 8</title><content type='html'>&lt;span style="font-family:arial,helvetica;"&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF"    style="font-family:Geneva;font-size:85%;color:#000000;"&gt;Dear All,&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I have to confess that writing is becoming  increasingly difficult. Writing, putting words together to make sentences to  convey meaning, like the small gestures and rituals that make-up the commonplace  acts of everyday life, has begun to lose its meaning and its cathartic power. I  am consumed with grief, there is another me trapped inside me that cries all the  time. And crying over the death of someone is a very particular cry. It has a  different sound, a different music and feels different. I dare not cry out in  the open, tears have flowed, time and time again, but I have repressed the  release of pain and grief. My body feels like a container of tears and grief. I  am sure it shows in the way I walk.&lt;br /&gt;Writing is not pointless per se, but it  is not longer an activity that gives me relief. The world outside this siege  seems increasingly far, as if it had evacuated with the bi-national passport  holders and foreigners.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The past few days have been MURDEROUS in the  south and the Beqaa Valley. The death toll has been increasing in a horrific  exponential envigorated with the White House giving a green light for the  military assault to persist. Beirut has been spared so far, but not the southern  suburbs. Today is Day 12 of the war, the Israeli military has conducted 3,000  air raids on Lebanon in 12 days. Out of the total deaths so far, which range  close to 400 (numbers are not definitive), almost 170 are children. The numbers  of the displaced are increasing by the hour. Have you seen the pictures of the  deaths? The mourners in Tyre? Have you seen the coffins lined up? And the  grieving mothers.&lt;br /&gt;It is impossible not to grieve with them, it is impossible  to shut one's ears to their wailing. It haunts me, it echoes the walls of the  city, it bounces off the concrete of destroyed bridges and buildings. In trying  to explain what drove Mohammad Atta to fly an airplane into one of the towers of  the World Trade Center, someone (I forget whom- sorry facts-checkers) once said  to me that Atta must have felt that "his scream was bigger than his chest". That  description stayed with me, I don't know if I agree with it, or if that's how  Atta felt in reality, but it comes back to me now because I feel that my grief  is bigger than my chest and I have no idea how to dissipate it.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The  Southern Suburbs&lt;br /&gt;I accompanied journalists to Haret Hreyk two days ago. I  suspect I am still shell-shocked from the sight of the destruction. I have  never, ever seen destruction in that fashion. Western journalists kept talking  about a "post-apocalyptic" landscape. The American journalists were reminded of  Ground Zero. There are no gaping holes in the ground, just an entire  neighborhood flattened into rubble. Mounds, and mounds of smoldering rubble.  Blocks of concrete, metal rods, mixed with furnishings, and the stuff that made  up the lives of residents: photographs, clothes, dishes, CD-roms, computer  monitors, knives and forks, books, notebooks, tapes, alarm clocks. The contents  of hundreds of families stacked amidst smoking rubble. A couple of buildings had  been hit earlier that morning and were still smoking, buildings were still  collapsing slowly.&lt;br /&gt;I was frightened to death and I could hear my own wailing  deep, deep within me.&lt;br /&gt;I stopped in front of one of the buildings that housed  clinics and offices that provide social services, there seemed to be a sea of  CD-Roms and DVDs all over. I picked up one, expecting to find something that had  to do with the Hezbollah propaganda machine (and it is pretty awesome). The  first one read "Sahh el-Nom 1", the second "Sahh el-Nom 17". "Sahh el-Nom" was a  very popular sit-com (way, way before the concept was even identified) produced  by Syrian TV in the 1960s. It was centered on the character of "Ghawwar  el-Tosheh", who has become a salient figure in popular Arab culture. I smiled  mournfully, at the irony. Around the corner passport photos and film negatives  covered the rubble.&lt;br /&gt;Haret Hreyk was a residential area. The residents, I was  told by our driver who lived a few blocks away, were evacuated by Hezbollah to  other places before the shelling began. Those who refused to leave then, left  after the first round of shelling. Haret Hreyk is eerily ghostly, there are  practically no people left in that neighborhood. In the two hundred meters  radius removed however, life is on-going. Residents testified that Hezbollah was  securing food, electricity and medicines to all those who stayed.&lt;br /&gt;Haret Hreyk  is also where Hezbollah had a number of their offices. Al-Manar TV station is  located in the block that has come to be known as the "security compound" (or  "security square"), the office of their research and policy studies center, and  other institutions attached the party. It is said that in that heavily inhabited  square of blocks, more than 35 buildings were destroyed entirely.&lt;br /&gt;Hezbollah  had organized a visit for journalists that day, as they had the day before. They  provided security cover for the area for the international media cameras to  document the destruction. There was a spokesperson greeting journalists. A small  rotund man, dressed in a track suit, fancy sunglasses, a two-day old stubble  carrying two state of the art cell phones. He spoke in concise soundbites and  was affable. There was nothing menacing about his demeanor, in fact were it not  for the destruction around him he looked more like he would be an assistant to  Scolari (similar dress code and portend) than part of the media team of a  "terrorist organization".&lt;br /&gt;The security apparatus of Hezbollah was also  impressive, underscoring the identity of Hezbollah. They were all affable,  welcoming, dressed casually and unarmed. They all held walkie-talkies, and when  looming danger of another Israeli air strike seemed tangible, they all ushered  the group of some 30 (and more) journalists to clear the area. They issued their  warnings calmly and confidently.&lt;br /&gt;One of the buildings was still burning. It  had been shelled earlier that day at dawn. Clouds of smoke were exhaling from  amidst the ravages. The rubble was very warm, as I stepped on concrete and  metal, my feet felt the heat.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Israeli Warfare Mystery&lt;br /&gt;Doctors in  hospitals in the south have testified on television that they a number of bodies  that have reached them have an unusual, unfamiliar skin color. Some of surviving  injured exhibit a pattern of burns that doctors have also never seen before. The  question is beginning to get attention for the world community of physicians and  human rights organization. Israel is suspected of loading its missiles with  toxic chemicals. The fear, in addition to their toxicity being immediately  lethal on its victims, is that the waters and earth may now be poisoned. The  inhabitants of the south may have to suffer from Israel's wrath for a very, very  long time, in chilling cold blood.&lt;br /&gt;The as-Safir newspaper, the second largest  running daily in Lebanon, has taken up the task to investigate the question. &lt;br /&gt;Beyond the crime of toxic poisoning, the type of shells and bombs used is  also astounding. I met a woman who was displaced from the borderig village of  Yater. She is a native American, blue blood and apple pie, but with a hijab.  She, her husband, her three babies and her husband's family, a total of 14  people were trapped in one room in their house in Yater. On the 6th or 7th day  of shelling, she cracked and her kids could not longer handle the violence.  Risking their lives, they jumped into their car, and decided to take their  chance. They drove straight without stopping, taking circuitous ways when the  main roads were impossible to tread. They expected to die on the road. After 14  hours of driving they made their way to the US embassy in the northeastern  suburbs of Beirut. They were not aware of evacuations. They were lost on the  way, and someone stole her husband's wallet with the 400$ in cash they carried  (the totality of their fortune), his green card and her US passport. I came  across her at the US embassy compound. She was trembling. She could barely tell  her story coherently. She repeated over and over that she had seen houses fly,  that the shells made the houses fly in the air and then collapse on the ground.  She repeated that she ought not to have gone to the window, but she could not  help it, she was curious, and she saw the houses fly.&lt;br /&gt;As a holder of US  passport (and real native) she had been allowed into the embassy. Her husband,  only a green card holder, was not. The US embassy changed their policy, I was  later told by people and journalists, but at various stages in the evacuation,  green-card holders were not included in the evacuations plan. Pardon me, in the  plans for "assisted departures".&lt;br /&gt;I don't know what happened to the American  mother from Portland Oregon and Yater south Lebanon. I know her babies are  lactose intolerant and their only food was the stock of soy milk she had with  her. She was very young, a face earnest, her skin transluscent white. In her  pale blue eyes there was despair and fright that she will not recover from for a  very long time.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The Displaced&lt;br /&gt;The displaced have been dispersed in the  country. They have been placed in schools, universities, government owned  buildings. Aid is arriving, but still in chaotic manner. Volunteers are  beginning to get tired. However nothing compares to the distress of the  displaced. They are in a state of complete emotional upheaval. Their presence  has already changed the habits and rituals of the neighborhoods where they have  been placed.&lt;br /&gt;As the sun begins to set and the harshness of its rays begins  to dim, you find families strolling on Hamra street (a main commercial  thoroughfare in West Beirut). Shops are closed, sandwich shops are closed, cafes  are intermittantly open, but the sidewalk provides an opportunity to escape the  confinement from the shelter where they been relocated. You can see it in their  walk, their body language. Their pace searches for peace of mind, not for a  destination, their lungs expand drawing in oxygen to inspire quietude and calm,  not for cardiovascular pressure. They have a deep, mournful, sorrowful gaze.  They left behind their entire lives, maybe even their beloved.&lt;br /&gt;In Ras Beirut,  small backstreets have come to life. To escape the heat of indoor confinement,  displaced families relocated to old homes or government-owned buildings, have  grown in the habit of placing plastic chairs and their narguiles on small front  porches or entrance hallways of buildings. I had to walk home after a long day  of working with journalists, two nights ago, and as I zigzagged through these  back streets, I was comforted by their gentle presence. They chatted, softly,  quietly, huddled in groups, watching the night unfold, fearful of the sound of  Israeli warplanes.&lt;br /&gt;The ceaseless newscast from a radio kept everyone  informed. It too sounded softly. It was a gentle summer night, and the families  dispersed and uprooted surrendered to the gentleness of the night.&lt;br /&gt;On the  next block, three young woman stood in line, queuing for access to a public  payphone. That too has become a familiar sight in Beirut. People lining at  public payphones. They stood, clearly tired but resilient. To my "good evening",  I was greeted back with smiles and another "good evening". I was relieved to see  that they felt safe, that they roamed the city at night without qualms. How long  can they afford to pay for these phone calls is another question. There is a  definite need for a long term plan. This emergency solution will soon reach a  crisis, and state structures need to be prepared to face the anger and  frustration of nearly 500,000 people.&lt;br /&gt;On the next block, a Mercedes car  packed with people was parked at a corner, in front of the entrance of a  building. The car's doors were flung open and the radio broadcast news. It was a  visit. Two displaced families on a nightly visit. Everyone was gentle, and a  soft breeze blew with clemency.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31447542-115454947569964900?l=beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/feeds/115454947569964900/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=31447542&amp;postID=115454947569964900' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115454947569964900'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115454947569964900'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/2006/08/day-8.html' title='Day 8'/><author><name>Rasha</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31447542.post-115355915647383003</id><published>2006-07-22T02:05:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2006-08-01T06:00:25.836-07:00</updated><title type='text'>Day 7</title><content type='html'>&lt;span style="font-family:arial,helvetica;"&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Geneva;font-size:85%;"  &gt;(This was supposed to be sent yesterday, but I am having  trouble with internet).&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Dear All,&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;This will be a disjointed "siege  note". Much has happened in the past two days, I no longer have the energy to  chronicle assaults, retaliations, reactions, diplomatic activity. official  pronouncements, and so on. I also realize that these exsitential and angry  dispatches that are meant to say: "I'm OK" and meant to help me overcome what is  happening around me, are held by readers (especially in Israel) to surprisingly  high expectations in journalism and reporting. An interesting community of  facts-checkers has emerged south of Lebanon's south. They find my "reporting"  deplorable and send corrections that conclude with profound philosopical  interrogations on who do I think I am, what I want from life, and if I am ready  for a serious dialogue with the "other". I am not a reporter, nor do I ever wish  to be. I am not interested in dialogue with Israelis and don't foresee that in  the horizon of this conflict I will. I should have take the advice of my  anti-Zionist Israeli friends and never even acknowledged the reactions to my  emails south of my south.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Evacuations&lt;br /&gt;Although the "evacuations" have  provided the cover for some sort of a calm, there was nonetheless enough  shelling in the past two days to cause grief and wretchedness (deaths, injuries  and serious damage). Israel attempted several times to proceed with ground  invasion but failed. Some reports claim that Hezbollah made incursions into  Israeli territory! This is significant only in the sense that so far, Hassan  Nasrallah seems to be the more calm, realistic and pragmatic interlocutor, while  the various figures from the Israeli military as well as Minister of Defense  seem to be drawing erroneous conclusions, make the wrong calculations and convey  unrealistic expectations. In fact, the Israeli military is beginning to behave  publically like the American military.&lt;br /&gt;Finally the German and US governments  were able to evacuate their passport holders (I no longer dare to say their  "nationals" since classes of citizenship seem to be the rule) trapped in the  south. People were shuttled in busses on circuitous roads from various points in  the South under the cover of a lull iin shelling. That lull allowed red coss  ambulances to bring some of the very seriously injured to hospitals further from  the zones of heavy shelling. It also allowed the cameras of journalists to  travel and record the toll of shelling on border towns and villages or Israel's  recurring targets.&lt;br /&gt;From tending to the injured but also packing the bodies of  the slain, emeregncy rescue workers, doctors as well as photojournalists and  camera men have all unanimously reported how unfamiliar Israel's weaponry is.  Bodies are disintegrating in unfamiliar ways or so seems to be a unanimous  observation. I actually plan to send a file to Shobak and ElectronicLebanon.net  to post a set of photos. They are really gruesome, but they have to be made  public. Rescue workers and doctors are urging forensic experts to try to find  out what the exploding shells are made of or what have they been "reinforced"  with.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Orient Queen&lt;br /&gt;"Cruise beyond your dreams" read posters pasted on  the walls of the huge air-conditioned tent that functions as the final stage in  processing the evacuees before they board the ship. The ship, as if someone  wanted to amuse Edward Said for a brief minute, is called Orient Queen. It is  part of a Lebanese-owned fleet of commercial cruises, AMC (Abu Merhi Cruises)  and contracted by the US embassy to shlep American passport holders to Cyprus.  Holders of American passports stranded in the south were shuttled by busses  earlier that day to the port of Beirut. They were greeted by US embassy  personnel, a small contingent of US Marines and Orient Queen crew. The buses  were parked on the dock and passengers waited their turn for long hours to be  searched, have their stuff searched their papers processed and then onto the  ship.&lt;br /&gt;The platoon or brigade or whatever the appropriate word is for the  group of US Marines landed in Beirut some twenty years after the bombing of  their base in 1983. In fact, to a renowned American journalist, they revealed  that they were known as "the Beirut platoon", or contigent or company... This  twenty some years "return" of the Marines was presented as a big "to do"  everybody had high emotions about it. Its significance escaped me. So what? They  were going to be here for 2 days to evacuate American passport holders and then  they went back to their lives. Their lives? As it turns out they were to return  to Jordan where they were training the Jordanian army. (Ooops, that was not  supposed to be said. Delete it from the record.)&lt;br /&gt;The marines were curteous in  the manner that army personnel is trained to be curteous. Their coordination  with the Orient Queen staff would have made sense only if it were a Monty Python  filmscript. Some very very funny movie with prophetic visions of social and  politcal horror to come. The Orient Queen has apparently a special brigade of  Rio Brazil Dancers. I refrained from saying go-go, but the way they wiggled  their hips and tied their yellow T-shirts to "celebrate their bodies" was all  about go-go.&lt;br /&gt;There is a famous story amongst trade unionists in the New  York-New Jersey about a solidarity between teamsters and airline attendants  during the Reagan administration and teamsters supporting airline attendants  during protests. Fearing the teamsters' homophobic proclivities, the trade  unionist that drove the truckdrivers to the site of the protest had the wisdom  to rent a bus with a VCR and bring along the only two "choices" that might  pacifiy his constituency: "The Godfather" or porn. Porn did it. By the time the  teamsters had reached New York, they were pacified. I recount this story because  the only way to describe the chemistry between Brazil-Go-Go dancers and US  Marines is to evoke that story.&lt;br /&gt;The moment you come across a member of the  US embassy personnel they correct you, "it'a assisted departure, not  evacuation". They explain that it's how they manage the feelings of the  Lebanese. Evacuation seems too terminal, too definitive and only those who  choose to leave, do. No one is forcing anyone to leave. True. But evacuees are  almost all in a state of shock. They were trapped in the south under the  unrelenting shells of Israel's campaign. Most testify that the arsenal of  weaponry is entirely new, unfamiliar, a lot more frightening.&lt;br /&gt;Rumors claim  that the evacuation fee on the cruise ship is up to 5,000$/person. The US  government provides loans to those who cannot afford to pay  upfront.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Letter to Maria&lt;br /&gt;One of my closest friends, my beloved  sister really, Maria left two days ago. Up until a few hours before she was  supposed to follow instructions from the British embassy for evacuation, she  could not get herself to leave. She has two boys aged nine and five. Maria and  her husband lived in London for a long while and earned citizenship there.  Everyone who matters in her life called and urged her to evacuate with the  Britons. She had moved from Beirut to the mountains on the second day of the  siege.&lt;br /&gt;She and I had maintained contact by phone. Maria is so close to my  heart, she is part of my bare consciousness of the world around me, one of the  foundational elements that make up my world. From the moment this horror had  started, our sentences had shortened, the tone of our conversations become  contemplative, inconclusive, incapable of circling to some sort of closure. We  could not even say "goodbye", invariably we ended conversations with "I will  call you back". It felt better to say that, to claim the exchange of information  and emotion not yet complete, than the opposite. We called one another to  exchange pointless information, "breaking news" that we had heard and had no  hope of breaking "fresh" to the other. We repeated headlines to one another and  news of other friends: so and so moved to there, so and so left, so and so went  nuts... Although absurd, our phone conversations had the rare virtue of being  "constitutional", they charged our respective systems and reminded us of the  people we once were, the lives we once lived. We asked the same question over  and over, "should I leave?", "should you leave?"... She did not want to but felt  she ought to for the boys. The eldest of the two was aware of almost everything:  Israel, Hezbollah, the "daisy cutters", bunker busters, and kidnapped prisoners.  And at age nine he was seized with anxiety and panic at the escalating horror of  the military campaign.&lt;br /&gt;She caved in two days ago. I called as she waited on  the docks with her two sons. Her husband did not want to leave. "It's awful,  it's awfull...", she kept saying. "It's awful, it's awful...", I echoed her.  "Have I done the right thing?", she pleaded. "Absolutely," I replied without a  hint of hesitation. I could not help telling her that I would miss her. It felt  selfish, childishly needy in the way children can be self-centered and  dependent. In truth I was terrified of living through this siege without her. I  felt like a good part of my heart, at least a good part of what I love about  being in Beirut, was standing at the docks waiting with her two sons. We spoke  three times. Three times my tears flowed uncontrolably, three times I did not  want her to feel anything in my voice, three times I said "I will call you  back". I cried like a scared little girl. How am I going to survive without her?  How will I make it through without her?&lt;br /&gt;She did not know where she would go  after Cyprus. I have not had the courage to call her husband and find out where  she is. As I write this, my tears are flowing. Silly, isn't it? I have all the  privileges in the world, in Beirut, I have so many safeguards, and yet I draw  emotional and mental strength from the friendship of people like Maria and when  she is forcibly driven away, my privileges feel futile,  useless.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Evacuations are not "assisted departures", they are uprootings,  they borne from decisions made under duress that feel nothing like decisions.  The extent of the evacuation does not bode well. In fact, standing on the docks  watching the American passport holders who were shuttled from the south in  busses I got a full sense of what the evacuation means when you're the one  staying behind. Whether rational, reasoned or reasonable, or not, there is a  faint, inchoate sense of extinction, death, perishing. These people may very  well one day remember us, all of us they have seen and witnessed and interacted  with before they boarded the ship. I don't know where we will be when they will  remember us.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31447542-115355915647383003?l=beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/feeds/115355915647383003/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=31447542&amp;postID=115355915647383003' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115355915647383003'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115355915647383003'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/2006/07/day-7.html' title='Day 7'/><author><name>Rasha</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31447542.post-115355913051575748</id><published>2006-07-22T02:04:00.001-07:00</published><updated>2006-08-01T06:00:08.876-07:00</updated><title type='text'>Day 6</title><content type='html'>&lt;span style="font-family:arial,helvetica;"&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Geneva;font-size:85%;"  &gt;(Dear All,&lt;br /&gt;The generator shut down before I could end this  entry. It's noon the next day now...)&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Dear All,&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I am drafting this  entry in this unusual diary at 11:30 pm, I have about half an hour before the  generator shuts down. Most of Beirut is in the dark. I dare not imagine what the  country is like. Today was a relatively calm day, but like most calm days that  come immediately after tumultuous days, it was a sinister day of taking stock of  damage, pulling bodies from under destroyed buildings, shuttling injured to  hospitals that have the capacity to tend to their wounds more adequately.&lt;br /&gt;The  relative calm allowed journalists to visit the sites of shelling and violence.  The images from Tyre, and villages in the south are shocking. Images from Haret  Hreyk (the neighborhood in the southern suburb that received the most "focused"  shelling) are also astounding.&lt;br /&gt;The number of deaths is yet uncertain, it  increases by the hour as bodies are pulled from the landscape of destruction. In  the southern suburbs, some people may be trapped in underground shelters under  the vestiges of their homes and apartment buildings. And yes, there is a problem  of space in morgues in the south and the Beqaa, because none of the towns and  villages are equipped to handle these numbers of deaths.&lt;br /&gt;The IDF has  destroyed almost entirely the village of 'Aytaroun. Some of the surviving  wounded are Canadian citizens. Like the 8 Canadians who died in the building in  Tyre (a building that housed the red cross and civil rescue), the Canadian  government has had very little regard for them.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Evacuations, Privilege,  Solidarity&lt;br /&gt;Today was a particularly strange day for me because I was granted  an opportunity to leave tomorrow morning. I hold a Canadian passport, I was born  in Toronto when my parents were students there. I left at age two. I have never  gone back, for lack of opportunity and occasion, no other reason. I have the  choice to sign up for the evacuation, but the European and North American  governments have been so despicable, so racist that I don't want to subject  myself to a discrimination of that sort. The Swedes, the Danes and the Germans  have evacuated their patriots with blond hair and blue eyes. The immigrants that  were given shelter to their countries "out of the kindness" of their governments  have been systematically left behind; and the guest workers who stayed to  enliven their economies and their babies who adjust the dynamism of their  demographies, were left behind to fend for shelter under the shells. But I  digress. The point I set out to make is that I refuse to be evacuated as a  second tier denizen.&lt;br /&gt;I had the opportunity to leave tomorrow by car to Syria,  then to Jordan and from there by plane to wherever I am supposed to be right  now. For days I have been itching to leave because I want to pursue my  professional commitments, meet deadlines and continue with my life. For days I  have been battling ambivalence towards this war, estranged from the passions it  has roused around me and from engagement in a cause. And yet when the phone call  came informing me that I had to be ready at 7:00 am the next morning, I asked  for a pause to think. I was torn. The landscape of the human and physical  ravages of Israel's genial strategy at implementing UN Resolution 1559, the  depth of destruction, the toll of nearly 250 deaths, more than 800 injured and  400,000 displaced, had bound me to a sense of duty. It was not even patriotism,  it was actually the will to defy Israel. They cannot do this and drive me away.  They will not drive me away.&lt;br /&gt;This is one of the most recurring mistakes that  the IDF makes, this is how we see things: THEY have destroyed this country, THEY  are taking an opportunity to turn it to rubble and to usher us into oblivion, if  there is ambivalence vis-a-vis the wisdom of Hezbollah's capture of the two  soldiers, there is unambiguous, unanimous solidarity to stand in the face of  Israel's barbaric arrogance. Some people see more in this war, some people see a  moment of where the logic/values of the policies of the Moubaraks, the Abdullahs  of the Arab world, i.e. the defeatist, pragmatic corrupt sell-outs will be  humiliated as well. And I am sure, other people see other things as  well.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The roads to Damascus are not safe. Its many different ways are  shelled everyday. Drivers know what "calculated" risks to take, I am assured,  but one never knows. Everyday the way out becomes more difficult. I decided to  stay, I don't know when I will have another opportunity to leave.&lt;br /&gt;The first  contingent of Britons was evacuated early this evening. There are two ships, but  the evacuation will take place over 3 days. Same for the French and Americans,  their evacuations will last for 2 days. While the evacuations are taking place,  there was relative quiet. A welcome lull. There was activity in the street, even  on the Corniche along the seaside. Refugees from the south, displaced from their  homes and provided shelter in public schools strolled in Hamra, looking for a  breath of fresh air. A break from the confinement in schools and other makeshift  shelters.&lt;br /&gt;Imagine the horror, the sad, sad horror: we are on borrowed time  and the only reason we are not under threat, under any serious threat is because  the passport holders of some of the G8 countries are evacuating safely to safer  harbors. With this relative calm, the sense of impending doom becomes almost  palpable, time, space, light and movement are subsumed in an eerie stillness. It  feels vaporous and fills the air. As it wafts from room to room, from apartment  to apartment, as it turns a corner and moves to another neighborhood, every  gesture, every act is a little delayed, slowed, surreptitiously lethargic, every  thought lingers too long in the unfinished or inchoate state. This eerie  stillness numbs the passage of time and the cognitive perception of things  material. Objects seem both familiar and unfamiliar. They are familiar in that  they were there the day before and seem not to have moved from their place. They  are unfamiliar because they seem to belong to another time, another life. There  was another life, I had another life that seems distant and foreign now. The  morning is different, noon is different, sunset is different. Another Beirut has  emerged. War time Beirut. War time Lebanon. War time mornings, war time noons.  Siege time Beirut, siege time morning, siege time sunsets. Everyone else in the  world is going about their day as they had planned it or as it was planned for  them. The shakers and movers of this world, the fledgling middle classes of the  developping world, the 11 million children workers in India, the good-doers and  the evil-doers. We are in a different geography of time, of agency, we are  besieged, captive, hostage. No chance of Stockholm syndrome this time. Our every  move is monitored: every moving vehicle delivering food, fuel, or medicines is  monitored, every phone call is listened on, every email read, every dream  snarled at, every desire crushed. Israel has the right to explode it to  smithereens.&lt;br /&gt;The shelling has not really let, don't get me wrong. It still  goes on but it's more occasional, there are more "blank spaces" in between  now.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Hezbollah&lt;br /&gt;These "siege notes" have been receiving a number of  reponses from Israelis. I have to say that most are of the annoying sort. First,  they always begin by noting that I am intelligent and I get commended for my  intelligence like Colin Powell gets commended for his English language speaking  skills and you wonder what those making these observations expect from you and  the world in the first place. Second, they systematically mistake expression of  dissent and critique with Arab regimes and official discourse as some sort of a  favorable disposition towards Israel. In other words there is, falsely, a  tautology between regarding Israel as an enemy country and endorsing radical  ideologies of Islamic fundamentalism or rabid nationalism. As if being a  democrat, an egalitarian and a feminist implied that one could not have even  more profound grounds for being critical of Israel and regarding that country as  an enemy country that has sponsored and produced nothing but war, violence,  wretchedness, misery, banditry and usurpation. And so heartened by my  ambivalence towards this war they recommend that more conversations should take  place between Israelis and I. Off course most propose that I make the effort to  seek those Israeli interlocutors out. This extreme form of Habermas-mania, that  assumes that deep conflicts can be "talked through" is the sumum of hubris. The  experience of the peace process is telling: it is clear that Israelis cannot  cannot cannot accept Palestinians as human beings whose humanity is of equal  value as their own. This is the bottom line. And until that bottom line is  changed, there is nothing that a member of a society that builds walls around  itself to shut itself off from the world and shut the world from itself can tell  me. Punto final.&lt;br /&gt;One of my impromptu (Israeli) commentators warned of my  candor, despaired at my position vis-a-vis Israel, and took generously time and  space to explain to me that Hezbollah he/she must be crushed because if they  were to win, they would destroy Israel and me, because of my values and  lifestyle. This view, along with other views salient in western media  (particularly American) of Hezbollah betrays ignorance. It is fatal  ignorance.&lt;br /&gt;The most gross miscalculation Israeli strategists are making is  based on the assumption that Hezbollah is a) not a legitimate political entity  in this country, b) its base is made up of extremists and c) its "elimination"  would leave the Lebanese construct unscathed. In point of fact, pushing the  Lebanese population to "rise up" against Hezbollah, or the scenario of a  Lebanese implosion is the worst case scenario for all regional "parties",  because the country would then become the jungle of violence and killing that  Iraq is today.&lt;br /&gt;Because I am a staunch secular democrat, I have never endorsed  Hezbollah, but I do not question their legitimacy as a political actor on the  Lebanese scene, I believe they are just as much a product of Lebanon's  contemporary history, its war and postwar as are all other parties. If one were  to evaluate the situation in vulgar sectarian terms, when it comes to  representing the interests of their constituency they certainly do a better job  than all the political representatives presently and in the past.&lt;br /&gt;It would be  utter folly (in fact it would be murderous folly) to regard Hezbollah as another  radical Islamist terrorist organization, at least in the ideological and  idiomatic vein of the American intelligentsia and punditry. (There is something  about a stubborness to misunderstand that betrays an intent to see a crisis  linger or even escalate in the US. If Americans feel better being misguided  idiots, Israelis should know better. If the Israeli intelligentsia wants to play  deaf like Americans the only outcome will be an Iraq scenario, although I  reiterate that Lebanon is not Iraq and the Lebanese are not and will not be  Iraqi and will not be manipulated into the barbaric sectarian horror. We've  tried that before and it does not work, and we are tired of fighting each  other.)&lt;br /&gt;Hezbollah is a mature political organization (that has matured  organically within the evolution of Lebanese politics) with an Islamist  ideology, that has learned (very quickly) to co-exist with other political  agents in this country, as well as other sects. If Lebanese politics was a  representation of short-sighted petty sectarian calculations, the lived social  experience of postwar Lebanon was different. Sectarian segregation was extremely  difficult to implement in the conduct of everyday social transactions, in the  conduct of business, employment and all other avenues of commonplace life. And  that is a capital we all carry within ourselves, there are exceptional moments  when the country came together willingly and spontaneously (as with the Israeli  attacks in 1993 and 1996), but there are other smaller, less spectacular moments  that punctuate the lived experience of the postwar that every single Lebanese  can recall where sectarian prejudice was utterly meaningless, experienced as  meaningless.&lt;br /&gt;When former Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri was assassinated, the  country seemed divided into two camps, the consensus was overwhelming however  that we will not revert to fighting one another, to eliminating one  another.&lt;br /&gt;If Israel plans to annihilate Hezbollah, it will annihilate Lebanon.  Hezbollah and its constituency are not only Lebanese in the perception of all,  they are also a key, essential element of contemporary Lebanon. Moreover the  specifics of UN Resolution 1559 may have regional implications, but at heart and  in essence they can only be resolved within the Lebanese consensus. Israel  CANNOT take it upon itself to implement that UN resolution. There is off course  sinister folly that Israel should implement any UN resolution considering its  stellar record of snarling, snickering and shrugging at every single UN  resolution that did not suit its sensibilities.&lt;br /&gt;Hezbollah are not al-Qaeda,  Israeli and US propaganda will portray them as much, and that is the downfall of  public opinion, that is the tragedy at the root of the consensus that agrees to  watching Lebanon burn. In more ways than can be counted they are different  political ideologies, groups and movements. First, they are not suicidal.  Second, they are not anti-historical. Third, they are a full-fledged political  agent at the center of a dynamic polity. Their ideology is not an ideology of  doom, they represent as much petty interests of their constituency as they are  imbricated in the fabric of regional politics.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Israel, and Channel  2&lt;br /&gt;I was watching Lise Doucet on the BBC interview one of Olmert's underlings  yesterday after the speech. This is the folly of the Israelis, and I believe it  will be their downfall, ultimately. He was lamenting that Hezbollah hit the  "peaceful" city of Haifa, an Israeli city that he described as exemplar of  coexistence between Jews, Christians and Muslims. Haifa! An Israeli city? Haifa?  The name is Arabic. The jewel in the crown of Palestinian cities... A peaceful  haven of coexistence between Jews, Muslims and Christians? My God! It took  DECADES for Christians and Muslims to appear on the roster of "human beings" in  the ledgers of the Israeli government. Decades of struggle, riots, pain and  suffering. And they are still second class citizen, and they are still  unwelcome, pushed out, day after day, crushed by the Israeli machine.&lt;br /&gt;This  eloquent underling was making the argument that Hezbollah wanted to destroy the  city of "coexistence". Off course, he does not care that the city the IDF has  currently under siege, the city they are bombing to rubble, the city where the  red cross and civil rescue headquarters were shelled to the ground, Tyre, is  itself a gorgeous jewel on the Lebanese coast. That it is a GENUINE city of  coexistence amongst Christians, Shi'ites and Sunnis. And the delightful town of  Marja'yun is also a city where sects and religions co-exist, and Zahleh... and  so on and so forth... But no matter, the Israelis have always done this, and  eventually, it catches up with them, and in the end, they realize that their  narrative is so far removed from reality they have to back track. The key to  understanding Israeli's relationship to our humanity lies in a text by David  Grossman, one of Israel's foremost novelists, essayists and writers. He wrote it  around the time of the First Intifada. Israel was then beginning to come into  reckoning that the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza was no longer tenable or  sound strategy for the well-being of its democracy.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;By the second or  third of these "siege notes", the emails reached Israel and Israeli blogs. A  journalist from Israel's Channel 2 contacted me by email and asked for an  interview. I was uncomfortable with the idea at first, for fear that my words be  distorted and my genuine, candid sentiments quoted to serve arguments I do not  endorse. Exposing oneself with transparency has its charm and price. That  journalist seems like a nice person, but I have no reason to trust her and she  understands my misgivings. My only defense is transparency. She sent me the set  of questions below for me to answer so she can air them on TV or use them for  some report. I decided to share them with you all.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;1. How your day looks  like from the morning.  What you did today? did you have coffee? how do you get  the news - television? radio? internet?&lt;br /&gt;The routine of our days is totally  changed. We now live under a regimen of survival under siege. Those of us still  not wounded and not stranded do whatever needs to be done to survive until the  next day. Coffee, yes, I have coffee in the morning, and at noon and in the  afternoon. Perhaps I have too much coffee. The passage of time is all about  monitoring news, checking everyone's OK, and figuring out what has to be done to  help those in distress. News are on all the time. All the time, whatever media  works.&lt;br /&gt;There is a great need for volunteers to tend to the hundreds of  thousands displaced now.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;2. Can you describe the neighborhood you live  in?&lt;br /&gt;So it will be bombed? No thank you. I live in a very, very privileged  neighborhood, far from the southern suburbs. After the evacuation of foreign  nationals (and bi-nationals) is complete, everyone is expecting doom and if  Israelis decide to give us a dose of tough love as they did in the southern  suburbs my life will probably be in serious danger as my family's and everyone  who has decided to stay here.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;3. Can you say something about yourself -  like what you do for living, if you can say.&lt;br /&gt;I organize cultural events and I  am a free-lance writer. I used to live in New York city and moved to Beirut  Tuesday July 11th. I have no life at the present moment. I try to do a few  things over the internet, but that's increasingly difficult.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;4. Are you  Lebanese or Palestinian?&lt;br /&gt;Both and it gets more complicated I have Syrian  blood too. And Turkish and Bosnian. I am the product of the Ottoman empire, and  I say it with pride. I know it ires a lot of people. But I am VERY proud to  claim my lineage. My father was expelled from Jerusalem in 1948, he and his  family lived in a gorgeous home in Talbiyeh. I think it is a day care school  now. We own property in old Jerusalem as well and the Atlantic Hotel which was  bombed by your "valiant" paramilitary pre-national militias in 1946.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;5.  In Israel our leaders think that by targeting Hezbollah and other places in  Lebanon will make the rest of the local population against them. Is this  true?&lt;br /&gt;It is pure folly, but even if it were true it is a terrible strategy,  an imploded Lebanon is a nightmare to all, not only the Lebanese but to  everyone, does Israel want an Iraq at its doorstep? There seems to be consensus  now in Israel over the military campaign. It is because Israelis are not yet  pressing their leadership and military the smart questions. Do you actually  believe it would be possible to eliminate the Shi'i sect from Lebanon, and that  it would go down easy in the region? If the Americans are advising you, duck for  cover or move. Need I list their record of wisdom and foresight recently?  Vietnam, Central America, Somalia, Afghanistan, Iraq. If you need to listen to  imperialists, find less idiotic ones, at least who have a sense of history. Gold  help us all if Rumsfeld is also in charge of your well-being. This war will  bring doom to all. Stop, cut everybody's losses. Wars can be stopped before the  body count is "intolerable" or an entire country has been reduced to rubble.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;6. What is the atmosphere in the streets of Beirut, if you can  tell.&lt;br /&gt;Beirut is quiet, dormant, huddled. We are caged, but there is tenacious  solidarity. You have to understand that we see ourselves under an unwarranted  attack from Israel. The capture of two soldiers DOES NOT justify Israel's  response. There has been a status quo for the past 6 years that was well  managed. Hezbollah was not in an impasse, the Olmert government was in an  impasse. He ran on a campaign to solidify the "new" (illegitimate) borders,  finish the wall and finalize the enclave and withdraw into the boundaries of  that enclave. The Olmert government did not have the maturity or intelligence to  know how to deal with the Hamas government. Your government was guided by  arrogance. We, you and us, are here today because your political class is not up  to the challenge. I am sorry, but the Hamas government was elected  democratically, and there were myriad ways to deal with them. MYRIAD. But this  is the stage of your destiny that you have reached, you build walls around  yourselves (you to whom the Massada is a foundational trauma/myth!), and you  chase barefoot, toohtless, illiterate, hungry people with state of the art  military arsenal. And you insist that you are victims, and you insist that you  are on the right side of history. All this bulllshit will catch up with  you.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;7. What is the atmosphere among your friends?&lt;br /&gt;The consensus is  solidarity. Our country is under attack. Otherwise, we are an exceedingly plural  society every one has a theory and a point of view, and we co-exist. Humoring  one another. What do you do when you are under siege? Do you eat one another,  cannibalize on one another, or stand in solidarity to weather the  storm?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;8. Can you go to work, or do you have to stay home? (because some  of the workers in the north of Israel did not go to work today)&lt;br /&gt;The largest,  largest majority do not go to work. Although it is a form of resilience. If the  war goes on for longer, life will have to evolve a different routine. A large  part of the work force is impaired from movement. And then there is the random  shelling, it's also dangerous to go out. This has gone on from the first day of  the siege. The south is now sinking in a humanitarian crisis. Beirut will soon.&lt;br /&gt;(The new regulation by your glorious IDF this morning is to shoot at all  moving vehicles larger than SUVs. One was just shelled in Ashrafieh. New danger,  new things to look out for.)&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;9. Whatever crosses your mind.&lt;br /&gt;Let's not  go there... It's dark now, and I am too traumatized. I just want this to be  over. I am waiting for a ceasefire. Are you? Is that too unmanly for your  society? What do you need to see before you cease your fire? You want to hear me  expire? You take down Hezbollah, and I am going down with them. Do you know when  Hezbollah was born? 1982. Where were you? Was it an exciting summer for you?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;10. I, for example, went to my gym class this morning. I am at home now,  listening to the radio on one side, writing mails on the other side.  Air-condition is on, since it is extremely hot and humid in Tel Aviv. I live in  the center of the city. Later I will go to the office. I think life in my city  continues but in a lower volume.&lt;br /&gt;Life as it were, or as previously  understood, in my city has stopped. No gym classes, and I am accumulating  cellulite, hence chances of finding second husband are lessened (can I make the  IDF pay for that?). Air-conditioning is dependent on electricity or generator  working. Power cuts are the rule now and the generator works only on a schedule.  I like it when Israelis report their weather, it ought to have some cathartic  virtue, because it's like a reality check one of the few reminders they are in  this region and not in Europe. So yes, without air-conditioning and with power  cuts, my "semitic" curls produce unruly coiffe and I have to admit, I am  enduring siege with bad hair.&lt;br /&gt;I am on email, but that's intermittant between  two bouts of "breaking news".&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I hope you will wake up to the nightmare  you have dragged us into. I hope you will want to have fire ceased as soon as  possible. I hope you will deem our humanity as valuable as your  own.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Best, Rasha.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31447542-115355913051575748?l=beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/feeds/115355913051575748/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=31447542&amp;postID=115355913051575748' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115355913051575748'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115355913051575748'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/2006/07/day-6.html' title='Day 6'/><author><name>Rasha</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31447542.post-115355907322972818</id><published>2006-07-22T02:04:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2006-08-01T05:59:48.260-07:00</updated><title type='text'>Day 5 -Part Two</title><content type='html'>&lt;span style="font-family:arial,helvetica;"&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Geneva;font-size:85%;"  &gt;Day 5 of the Siege part 2.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It's 3:30 am. Perhaps past  that time, I don't know. I could not sleep from the shelling. It's not the  intense quantity of shells falling, no, it's 10 to 12 shells every hour or hour  and the half. They augment the nerve-wrecking aspect: they don't focus shelling  one one zone, with one objective. It's wounds inflicted over time and time, the  length of a week...&lt;br /&gt;It's been a really, really rough night. Where do I begin  with what you will not hear? With what you will not know and what will be hidden  from your ears?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The air raids over the Beqaa did not really stop all day  today. The raids and shelling over Tyre were also really bad. Saida was shelled  and bridges and roads leading to the south. The mountains were shelled as well,  specifically bridges.&lt;br /&gt;There seemed to be a lull of sorts in the late  afternoon. But as soon as the sun set, the air raids over the southern suburbs  returned. By now the IDF knows that there are only civilians, that the Hezbollah  leadership is elsewhere in hiding. But they have express missive from the US to  kill Hassan Nasrallah (according the largest circulating Israeli daily,  Maariv).&lt;br /&gt;At night, the Jamhour area was targetted. It is where the Lebanese  Ministry of Defense is located, the Military School, and the power station  feeding Beirut and its surrounding mountains. The power station was targetted  and hit, but there was a "mistake" and the shells reached the Military School  and barracks surrounding it. 100 soldiers are now injured, a dozen are dead. The  power station was hit and the larger share of Beirut is under the cover of  darkness.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Air raids are also shelling the Beqaa valley. However, the most  horrific news is that the inhabitants of 'Ayta el-Shaab (the first village where  the IDF tried to make a land incursion but was swiftly defeated by Hezbollah)  are being told by loudspeakers and other means that they should evacuate their  village by dawn or else they will all be crushed by airplanes, tanks and  shelling. It's like 1948 again... They want everyone out. The village has now  3,000 people still left. The elderly and the wounded have been evacuated to  another village. It's the "buffer zone" they want to "clear". Most don't have  cars to evacuate.&lt;br /&gt;If you want to see a replay of the 1948 expulsion of  peasants under fire, tune in to Lebanon. If you don't scream your outrage and  make sure some things are NOT acceptable.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Love, Rasha.&lt;/span&gt;  &lt;/span&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31447542-115355907322972818?l=beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/feeds/115355907322972818/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=31447542&amp;postID=115355907322972818' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115355907322972818'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115355907322972818'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/2006/07/day-5-part-two.html' title='Day 5 -Part Two'/><author><name>Rasha</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31447542.post-115355903630776625</id><published>2006-07-22T02:03:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2006-08-01T05:59:32.500-07:00</updated><title type='text'>Day 5 - Part One</title><content type='html'>&lt;span style="font-family:arial,helvetica;"&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Geneva;font-size:85%;"  &gt;Dear All,&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;A quiet night in Beirut, more or less,  compared to what the inhabitants of Tyre and the south and the Beqaa and Tripoli  experienced. They were shelled from the air and sea with little respite. Tyre is  in tragically dire situation. 30,000 displaced, the mayor was on TV screaming  for help, his voice choking with despair. They are out of supplies, they have  more wounded than they can handle and the city's reserves in fuel and other  basic amenities are pretty much depleted.&lt;br /&gt;(The IDF wants to "clear" three  provinces in the South: Tyre, Marja'uyun and Bin Jbeil, in preparation for the  "20 km buffer zone")&lt;br /&gt;The port of Tripoli was bombed, the port of Beirut was  bombed. The range of targets has expanded to new zones of hurt: civilians,  civilians, civilians, and reservoirs of fuel (Jiyyeh, power station feeding the  south, and the airport again), storage facilities of vegetables and fruits in  Taanayel (Beqaa) and in the south, and Lebanese army barracks. The roster of  martyrs of this war now includes poor soldiers, reservists who were stationed in  their posts, watching idly the country go up in flames.&lt;br /&gt;The intention?  Probably to cripple the population even further, to make survival harder and  harder and to corner the Lebanese army.&lt;br /&gt;The promise of "scorched earth" did  not really happen yesterday, I mean the inhabitants of the south were served a  good dose of Israeli virility, but not to the level of "shock and awe". Maybe it  will come in small calculated doses (The IDF are a "calculating" military, not  like us, rogues, we don't calculate). Who knows? Who the fuck knows? What makes  sense anymore...&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Dementia is slowly creeping in... Slowly,  surreptitiously. At the rate of news flashes. This is how we live now, from  "breaking news" to "breaking news". A sampling: I have been in the cafe for one  hour now. (The cafe is an escape from home, but in itself another island of  insanity... will get to that later at some point).&lt;br /&gt;OK, I have been in the  cafe for one hour now. This is what I have heard so far:&lt;br /&gt;    1) A text  message traveled to my friend's cell phone: A breaking news item from Israeli  military command. If Hezbollah does not stop shelling Galilee and northern  towns, Israel will hit the entire electricity network of Lebanon.&lt;br /&gt;    2)  Hezbollah shells Haifa, Safad, and colonies in south Golan.&lt;br /&gt;    3) A text  message traveled to my other friend's cell phone, from an expat who left to  Damascus and is catching a flight back to London. "All flights out of Damascus  are cancelled. Do you know anything?"&lt;br /&gt;    4) Israeli shell fell near the  house of the bartender, his family is stranded in the middle of rubbble in  Hadath. He leaps out of the cafe and frantically calls to secure passage for  them to the mountains.&lt;br /&gt;    5) Hezbollah down an F-16 Israeli plane into  Kfarshima (near Hadath). Slight jubilation in a cafe that thrives on  denial.&lt;br /&gt;Does the world make sense to anyone? It's not supposed to, I know,  but these "surgical" military tactics are supposed to make sense to at least 15  people. And out of these 15 people, at least 14 disseminate the news, and since  the world is about 6 degrees of separation removed, at some point, somebody has  to know something...&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I started writing these diary notes to friends  outside Lebanon to remain sane and give them my news. I was candid and  transparent with all my emotions. The ones I had and the ones I did not have.  They were more intended to fight dementia at home, in my home and in my mind, to  bridge the isolation in this siege, than to fight the media black-out, racism,  prejudice and break the seal of silence. Friends began to circulate them (with  my approval). By the third diary note, I was getting replies, applause and  rebuke from people I did not know who had read them. It's great to converse with  the world at large, but I realize now that candor and transparency come with a  price. A price I am more than happy to pay. However, these diary notes are  becoming something else, and I realize now that I am no longer writing to the  intimate society of people I love and cherish, but to an opaque blogosphere of  people who want "alternative" news. I am more than ever conscious of a sense of  responsibility in drafting them, they have a public life, an echo that I was not  aware of that I experience now as some sort of a burden. I have been tortured  about the implications of that public echo. Should I remain candid, critical,  spiteful, cowardly, or should I transform into an activist and write in a wholly  different idiom? There is off course a happy medium between both positions, but  I don't have the mental wherewithalls to find it now. And I don't want to  sacrifice candor, transparency and skepticism at the risk of having my notes  distorted to serve some ill-intentioned purpose, or in the vocabulary of  official rhetoric, "give aid and comfort to the enemy". The enemy does well  without the aid of my rantings (they have a nuclear bomb, a hero soccer player  form Ghana, the gift of democracy, fantabulous drag queens, and a right wing  freak whose first name is BiBi). Notes from a hapless stranded thirty-something  caged in Ras Beirut (ie the privileged of the privileged), I believe, will not  really make a difference.&lt;br /&gt;I am reminded of the many, many, many e-diaries  that Palestinians send when the Israelis want to secure peace and give them a  virile dose of justice with sieges, shelling, checkpoints, sniping, maiming,  beating, and all that Israel has developped in the vein of practices to  strengthen its democracy and territory and off course contribute to the  blossoming of the peace process. Well my rantings are far from the emails of my  Palestinian brethren. They are charged with ambivalence and anti-heroics. In  Palestine things are less complex, less dirty, more starkly contrasted and  clear. What Israel is now administering to Lebanon is a small dose of what it  delivers to Palestinians. Intense, condensed, but a small dose. However the  complications of Lebanon's internal politics and the very, very complicated  imbrications of Lebanon with regional politics renders enduring, witnessing,  documenting this war more confusing. So bear with me. It's lonely being an  anti-hero.&lt;br /&gt;My Palestinian friends are protesting that the Israeli campaign in  Gaza has been eclipsed from the world's attention and concern. Beirut is now  attracting attention. Don't look away from Gaza. The same canons are firing. The  same children are orphaned, the same people are being displaced, shoved outside  history and the attributes of humanity, rendered to integers in the logs of NGOs  for donations of bags of flour and sugar. The same.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;By Day 5 of the  Siege, a new routine has set in. "Breaking news" becomes the clock that marks  the passage of time. You find yourself engaging in the strangest of activities:  you catch a piece of breaking news, you leap to another room to annoounce it to  family although they heard it too, and then you txt-message it to others. At  some point in the line-up, you become yourself the messenger of "breaking news".  Along the way you collect other pieces of "breaking news" which you deliver  back. Between two sets of breaking news, you gather up facts and try to add them  up to fit a scenario. Then you recall previously mapped scenarios. Then you  realize none works. Then you exhale. And zap. Until the next piece of breaking  news comes. It just gets uglier. You fear night-time. For some reason, you  believe the shelling will get worse at night. When vision is impaired, when  darkness envelops everything. But it's not true. Shelling is as intense during  the day as it is during the night.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;There has been "intense" diplomatic  activity between yesterday and today. UN envoys, ambassadors, EU envoys, all  kinds of men and women coming and going carrying messages to the Lebanese  government from the "international community" and the "Israeli counterpart".  Officially they have led to nothing. But we are told, officially on the news,  that the "secret" channels have started working, and these are the ones that  work. The secret channels were launched when the Lebanese Prime Minister met  with the US ambassador and the Lebanese head of parliament in a closed door  meeting at the head of parliament's home. There is supposed to be some sort of  press conference after that. And Jacques Chirac (Lebanon holds a special place  in his heart) is sending handsome Dominique de Villepin to Lebanon this  afternoon. He is scheduled to arrive at 5:00 pm. He's the genius who created the  CPE, the genius who finally "listened" to the dark-skinned and maladjusted  children of France during the last round of riots. I guess we should be glad  he's not sending Sarkoczy? Or is the ugly Pole going to Israel? In the final  count, we are a "banlieue" of France, the bad boys are at it again, burning cars  and breaking the "fragile" status quo in the region. When de Villepin is here,  we could have a lull in the shelling. Maybe. Maybe that's when they'll evacuate  the "foreign nationals".&lt;br /&gt;The foreign nationals are a new issue now. With so  many expats visiting for the summer, and with so many Lebanese holding dual  nationality, it's been tough for the G8 to plan their evacuations. Two hundred  thousand Canadians (8 of whom perished yesterday in the south)! Fifty thousand  Frenchmen... What to do with all these bi-nationals? Create categories. Category  A are the real, genuine, white-skinned, tax-paying valuable natives, Category B  are the recently integrated, recently assimilated, brown-skinned, tax-paying not  so valuable natives.&lt;br /&gt;The best evacuation plan is the American. They are  directing their "nationals" to a website (ha! with electricty power cuts it's  kinda funny) where they promise an airlift from the airport (although the air  strips have been destroyed) to Cyprus. But the seriously unfunny part is that  there is an evacuation fee. And for those with no money, the US government  generously offers a loan. Isn't that brilliant? Loans and fees are processed in  Cyprus.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;There are ultra-secret channeling mediated by the Germans too.  The Germans negotiated the last round of prisoner exchange between Hezbollah and  Israel. "The Germans know their way with Hezbollah" noted a newscaster. Isn't it  funny how these conflicts find their interlocutors and negotiators.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I am  obsessively thinking about these negotiators and diplomats. How they go through  their day. How they initiate conversations, how they end them. Top on my list is  Amr Moussa, Egypt's star diplomat and gift to the Arab League. His handling of  the Lebanese crisis is stellar, and comes after his handling of the assault on  Gaza and perhaps his crowning achievement is his handling of Darfur. How do  these people receive dispatches that hundreds of people are dead and decide not  to act? I am fascinated by how they structure their consciousness. Not  conscience, consciousness. I guess they become numb. I guess they believe that  the sweep of history spares them. They probably see the world in a different  way, that some people are condemned to be in Gaza or in Tyre and they are  supposed to live meaningless lives and die anonymous deaths. They don't. They  believe they fashion history writ large. They go through their day, enjoying  sleep and meals. Air-conditioned cars, private jets, tailored suits, who's  coming to dinner, where to spend summer vacation. They are never to be held  accountable for whatever they say or do.&lt;br /&gt;How did Amr Moussa go through the  conversation with the Saudi envoy, for example? The tall Saudi minister of  foreign affairs was firm, emboldened with an unusual surge of virility, he must  have said to him, "Screw the Lebanese, the Hezbollah have to pay. We support the  Lebanese government but we should publically condemn Hezbollah and demand a  cease-fire. And Amr Moussa said what? "I agree with you." And felt good about  agreeing with the Saudis. Did his stomach not writhe with a hint of an ulcer  when he hung up? Did he not press on and say, "But the Arab League should take a  vanguard role in ending this crisis as soon as possible and impose a  cease-fire?" Off course his president, Hosni Moubarak had his own pep talk with  the press. And it was inspiring. I think it's easier being Hosni Mobarak because  he's senile. Senility is his understanding of freedom. He's a few inches away  from absolute freedom. Egypt is waiting with abated breath when he comes out and  dsiplays the joys of having absolutely not a single hint of remembrance or  cognitive perception of the world around him.&lt;br /&gt;Meanwhile Lebanon was being  shelled to rubble. And Amr Moussa must have felt "pressured" to offer something  to the "Arab street" (aaah that elusive demon). The foreign ministers agreed in  unanimity that the best course of action would be to raise the question at the  UN security council meeting in September. To the embarassingly weepy mother of  the decapitated child, to the embarassingly nagging child of the charred mother,  to the "steadfastly valiant" Palestinians in Gaza and the "hapless" Lebanese in  the south, they figured they owed them something, a statement to relieve them  from their grief. And the groundbreaking insight said that "the Arab league  officially deemed the "peace process to be dead." No one, no one expected such  enlightening wisdom from the council of foreign ministers. I am still enraptured  in its profundity.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Breaking News: It's not clear Hezbollah downed a  plane. The al-Manar TV is now describing it as a "foreign body". Will the  Israelis add it to their list of casualties?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Day 5 of the Siege is  promising to be more enthralling. More mad ramblings tonight...&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Love to  all, Rasha.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31447542-115355903630776625?l=beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/feeds/115355903630776625/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=31447542&amp;postID=115355903630776625' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115355903630776625'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115355903630776625'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/2006/07/day-5-part-one.html' title='Day 5 - Part One'/><author><name>Rasha</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31447542.post-115348152517921729</id><published>2006-07-21T04:31:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2006-08-01T05:58:51.440-07:00</updated><title type='text'>Day 4</title><content type='html'>&lt;span style="font-family:arial,helvetica;"&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Geneva;font-size:85%;"  &gt;Dear All,&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Things seem to heating up. Missiles hit  Haifa and the shelling on the south and southern suburbs is  unrelenting.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Scorched Earth Policy&lt;br /&gt;Ehud Olmert promised scorched earth  in South Lebanon after missiles hit Haifa. Warnings have been sent to  inhabitants of the south to evacuate their villages, because the Israeli  response to Hezbollah will be "scorched Earth". As major roads are destroyed and  the south has been remapped into enclaves, it is not clear how these people are  supposed to evacuate. And where to. It seems the "sensitivity training" that the  IDF went through for evacuating the settlers from Gaza is really paying off,  even on the "civilians" because Ehud Olmert offered the hapless inhabitants of  the south shelter in Israel. Now that's leadership! Will they be sprayed by DDT  as did the jewish populations shuttled from Iraq, Morocco and Egypt in the 1950s  and 1960s? Will there be Maabarot (transit camps) ready for them?&lt;br /&gt;They want  the 20 kilometers buffer zone and they will burn, destroy and maime to get it.  Maybe they should build another wall?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Video-Clip&lt;br /&gt;Al-Manar TV has a  video-clip of possible, potential hits to Haifa. Impressive. A missile is  loaded, the camera travels over arial views of occupied Palestine and stops at  Haifa. The port. Zoom on the petro-chemical reservoirs. Cut to a hand pressing  on a green button. The images are accompanied with text in Arabic and in Hebrew.  They are conducting their war in images and video-clips.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Proud to be an  Arab&lt;br /&gt;I am still in awe with the response from Arab regimes, how utterly proud  I am to be an Arab. From Abou Mazen, to the several moral and physical dwarf  kings and queens (the Abdullahs and whatevers) to the un-democratically elected  representatives, "chapeau"...&lt;br /&gt;I think of all the streets, those who are  watching Gaza, Iraq, and now us. Do we not deserve their outrage? Do we not  deserve mass mobilizations? Should not Moubarak, and his band of bandits and  thieves deserve to be put to shame for their endorsement of the Israeli  response.&lt;br /&gt;How does it feel, my beloved friends, Arabs and non-Arabs to watch  Beirut go up in flames?&lt;br /&gt;Meanwhile wall-to-wall coverage is only from  al-Jazeera, al-Arabiya and the Lebanese TV stations. The "war" is only a news  item on Abou Dhabi, MBC, and the other Arab stations...&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The Lebanese  predicament&lt;br /&gt;So Hezbollah dragged us without asking our opinion into this  hell. We are in this hell, caught in this cross-fire together. We need to  survive and save as many lives as possible. The Israelis are now betting on the  implosion of Lebanon. It will not happen. There is UNANIMITY that Israel's  response is entirely, entirey, UNJUSTIFIED. We will show the Arab leadership  that it is possible to have internal dissent and national unity, pluralism,  divergence of opinion and face this new sinister chapter of the Arab-Israeli  conflict.&lt;br /&gt;Dictatorships produce mute sheep and sheepherders and radical  ideologies.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Rasha.&lt;/span&gt;  &lt;/span&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31447542-115348152517921729?l=beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/feeds/115348152517921729/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=31447542&amp;postID=115348152517921729' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115348152517921729'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115348152517921729'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/2006/07/day-4.html' title='Day 4'/><author><name>Rasha</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31447542.post-115348137475947819</id><published>2006-07-21T03:29:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2006-08-01T05:58:39.976-07:00</updated><title type='text'>Day 3</title><content type='html'>&lt;span style="font-family:arial,helvetica;"&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Geneva;font-size:85%;"  &gt;Dear All,&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It is now night time in Beirut. The day was  heavy, busy with shelling from the air and sea, but so far the night has been  quiet in Beirut. We are advised to be bracing ourselves for a bad night,  although most analysis is more reading tea leaves at this stage.&lt;br /&gt;I received a  wide array of comments regarding my email yesterday. The comments stayed with me  all day. I visited friends this morning at their house, people now gather in  homes, most cafes In "West Beirut" are closed, streets are quiet. In times like  these, the city huddles on its neighborhoods, main thoroughfares are avoided,  side roads and back streets are trekked. Gatherings shift to the house of the  member of the group whose neighborhoods has electricity, whose elevator works,  and who has elusive enough familial obligations to house an antsy crowd eager  for social exchange.&lt;br /&gt;Amongst that group, I was the only one who seemed to  have experienced the weariness, to be genuinely frustrated with having to face  another round of the Arab-Israeli conflict. Everyone seemd resigned to endure  this dark and sinister moment. Everyone was busying themselves with analysis,  speculation. Mind games, fictions, chimeras. I regretted expressing my weariness  with the fight, with having to summon the energy to face Israel and defy the  destruction of Lebanon. I felt I betrayed a principle, a value, disrespected  people's pain and suffering. I know a great great number of people in Lebanon  share my sentiments, and the political debates on TV seem to return to the  question tirelessly. But still, I felt "smaller" than the historical moment  demanded.&lt;br /&gt;I wanted to write this, I needed to come clean to you all. I need  to let you know that if you were intrigued/discomforted by the pettiness of my  spirit. The cause of this is partly my refusal to acknowledge the gravity of the  moment. I don't feel I am strong or courageous enough to face it, to take it all  in.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Last night something quite fantastical happened. By this morning, the  mood in the country and city was palpably changed. Sometimes it is hard for me  to believe that the leadership of Hezbollah are not acquainted with "The Society  of the Spectacle".&lt;br /&gt;Last night was a turning point in the confrontation  between Hezbollah and the Israeli army. I ought to have drafted a note right  after that moment, but I could not find the mental energy to do it. I was so  scared and anxious that I became sucked into the pull of minute by minute news  reporting and finally succumbed to exhaustion.&lt;br /&gt;You probably all heard about  the Israeli warship that was drowned. I am convinced that all of you not privvy  to Arab media missed the spectacular staging of the drowning of that warship.&lt;br /&gt;The "showcase" began with Israeli shells targetting Hassan Nasrallah's home  in the southern suburbs. As soon as the shells exploded, the media reported them  and waited to confirm that he and his family had survived. About half an hour  later, the newscaster announced that Hassan Nasrallah planned to adress the  nation and the Arab world by phone.&lt;br /&gt;I never thought he was charismatic. A  huge majority of people do. He's very young to hold the position of leadership  that he does. He's a straight talker, not particularly eloquent, but speaks in  an idiom that appeals to his immediate constituency in Lebanon  but is also  compelling to a constituency in the Arab world that harbors disillusionment,  despondency and powerlessness with the failed promises of Arab nationalism to  defeat Israel and restore dignity. He is not corrupt, he lives simply, and  displays a bent on spartan ascetism. Although he's neither charismatic nor  captivating, he has cultivated an aura of sorts, particularly since his son was  martyred at age 18 in a commando operation in south Lebanon when it was occupied  by the Israeli military. He survived the Israeli attempt on his life last night,  and addressed the nation by phone, thirty minutes later. His speech was  pragmatic, again spoken in his habitual simple (almost simplistic) idiom from  within the Hezbollah rhetoric, obviosuly. The speech was intended to deliver a  number of specific messages, answer back to pronouncements by regional leaders  and clarify Hezbollah's strategy in the face of the unexpectedly barbaric  Israeli attack.&lt;br /&gt;He began by declaring an open war to Israel's assault. He  summoned the Lebanese people to unite in this moment of confrontation, transcend  petty divisions and rise to the occasion. He promised to deliver victory, based  on the long record of victories by Hezbollah. Most powerful and compelling was  his response to the Saudi, Jordanian and Egyptian statements issued earlier that  day, blaming Hezbollah for bringing the tragedy on Lebanon. The Saudi statement  had referred to Hezbollah's actions as "adventurous", the Jordanian as  "irresponsible" and the Egyptian as something in both these veins. All three had  invoked the pressing need to act reasonably. Nasrallah's response basically said  that he is the leader of the only Arab and Muslim political movement to have  defeated Israel militarily and forced it to withdraw, the only Arab leader to  have been able to shell Israel and pose a serious military threat from without  its borders. If his actions were "adventurous" he argued, they were certainly  reasonable, but they did not comply to the reason that guides Arab leaders and  Arab regimes, rather the reason that animates the common folk on the streets,  the reason that defies defeat, the reason that brings victories, saves dignity  and does not fear the enemy no matter how powerful his arsenal and allies. He  called onto the Arab and Muslim world to stand in solidarity with the Lebanese  as they faced, once more, the savagery of the Zionist machine.&lt;br /&gt;His third  message was to the "Zionist enemy". He reiterated that Hezbollah did not fear an  open war. That they have long been prepared for this confrontation.  Interestingly, he claimed that they possessed missiles that could reach Haifa,  and "far beyond Haifa, beyond, beyond Haifa", thereby admitting that it was  Hezbollah that fired the missile fired to Haifa (until then they denied having  fired them). It is not clear what he meant by "far beyond Haifa". Did he mean  Tel Aviv? It was not THAT far from Haifa. Did he mean Israeli interests and  missions abroad? It was not clear. More terrains for speculators.&lt;br /&gt;His  conclusion was all about the showcase... In his message to the Zionist entity,  he reminded his audience that he had promised to deliver many "suprises". And  now the time has come for the first of the many surprises they have in store for  the Zionist enemy, namely the warship that had bombed the southern suburb the  night before and was casually sailing in the bay of Beirut was now in flames and  its personel was drowning. "Look at it!", he said, this is one of the many  surprises we have saved for the Zionist army... And he fell silent.&lt;br /&gt;There is  no film footage of the warship being hit because all the cameras had their  lenses directed inland, focused on scouting for shells, destruction, victims and  tragedy writ large. By the time he had spoken his words, it was too late to  catch sight of the warship being hit, all that cameras captured was a huge ball  of fire in the open sea, but not much else was clear. Rescue flares flew into  the sky from around the ship. Ultimately, it would turn out that all except for  4 from the crew would be rescued/recovered.&lt;br /&gt;The Israeli media began by  denying the report, then confirming the warship had been hit, then claiming  there were no losses, then admitting four sailors were missing, then claiming  the ship was towed to the Haifa port, then admitting it had sunk in the sea  where it was hit. This morning one of the three bodies was uncovered by  Hezbollah.&lt;br /&gt;The news of the downed warship spread fear in our hearts. We were  sure the retaliation would be numbing in violence. Then Hezbollah fired rockets  on some settlements in the Galilee and we were all bracing ourselves for a night  of hell. Nothing happened in Beirut. The south was shelled, the north was  shelled the Beqaa was shelled. Surgical assaults on roads, bridges and the  communication network. Slowly but surely, in cold blood the country was being  dismembered, ligament after ligament, inland, on the coast, and in the  mountains.&lt;br /&gt;In Beirut, the night was quiet. I could not understand how one  downed Israeli warship could throw disarray into a military as powerful as the  Israeli military.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Nasrallah's calls for solidarity resonnated loudly the  next day. Immediately after the spectacular showcase, Hezbollah television was  showered with phone calls from Saudi Arabia expressing their support. There were  protests supporting him and his mission in almost every Arab city. They  contrasted sharply with the reactions from Arab officialdom. He had won his  first round against Israel and against the slothful, debilitated and stunted  Arab leaderships.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Day 3 of the Siege&lt;br /&gt;Today was a bad day. The shelling  started from the morning countrywide and has not let until now. It was  particularly brutal in the south. Marwaheen, a village in the south that had  been under siege was showered with leafets from airplanes urging its inhabitants  to flee because it would be bombed to the ground two hours later. As people  gathered up stuff and began to flee, a few were not spared from the shelling, 12  children perished, burned alive on the road walking out of the village. A group  amongst the fleeing villagers panicked and saught refuge at a UNIFIL (UN  peacekeeping force) base on their road out of the village run by French army  volunteers, but they were refused shelter and turned back. I don't know how  unprecedented this is but it is certainly shocking.&lt;br /&gt;Nearly all Lebanese ports  were shelled today, Beirut, Tripoli, Sidon, Tyre, Amshit and Jounieh. Christian  areas are not being spared. The alternative road to Syria (via Tripoli and Homs)  was shelled. Bridges in the north of the country and the south of the country  were shelled and rendered unusable.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Tonight the shelling is again focused  on the southern suburbs, Haret Hreyk and Bir el-Abed. The first neighborhood is  where the headquarters of Hezbollah are located. They have been targetted  several times and there is extensive damage. The leadership has not been harmed.  A great number of the inhabitants have been evacuated, but the afternoon  shelling targetted residential areas. I am up, anxious, writing. As if it served  a purpose of sorts.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Foreign diplomatic missions are making plans to  evacuate their nationals. They had planned to evacuate people by sea, but after  today's shelling of the ports, they may have to rethink their strategy. Should I  evacuate? Does one turn their back on a "historic" station in the Arab-Israeli  conflict? If there is no cause that animates me, how do I endure this? (I could  not give two rats' ass about the Iranian nuclear bomb or Hezbollah's negotiating  power). I was shamed this morning for having these thoughts... And now, at 1:30  am, as the Israeli airplanes fill up my sky, I am writing them  again.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;There was much diplomatic activity today, almost all of it secured  moral high ground for Israel to proceed with "scorched earth" policy, re-occupy  the south to secure its own borders, and disarm Hezbollah after a fatal blow.  The meeting at the UN security council yesterday provided Israel with a green  light to pretty much do whatever it wished in this country. (My favorite was  Bolton, who was focused on the necessity to "take down" Khaled Masha'al -Hamas  representative- in Damascus.)&lt;br /&gt;Then there was an emergency Arab League meeting  that pretty much determined that the peace plan of the Quartet was defunct and  the region was at the brink of an explosion and that they will call for a UN  security council meeting at once. If international law was not respected, then  the Arab League would resort to other means (and "arms" was not eliminated as an  option). Did the Arabs declare war? We don't know, did they intimate war? It  would be the most prudish, skiddish, repressed intimation ever in the history of  wars.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;For now it seems that the battle will take about two to three  weeks to wane. There are stated aims and they are within the paradigm of 1559,  namely that Hezbollah should give up its arms, and the southern Lebanese border  with Israel be secured by the Lebanese army. Hezbollah are not suicidal, unlike  the Bin Ladens of the world and other radicals, they want to negotiate a bigger  share of the pie in Lebanon. They are aware that in the final count, they will  have to give up something, so until a cease-fire seems like an amenable solution  to them, they need to register as many victories as possible. The rockets that  can reach Haifa is one such victory, because Haifa is an important  petro-chemical base in Israel. The Israeli Patriot missiles planted on Haifa  that seem not to work are also another small victory for Hezbollah. The drowned  warship is another victory.&lt;br /&gt;Israel's strategy is not only to dismember this  country and cripple communication, but also to challenge internal support for  Hezbollah. People like me for example, complaining about how my life is a small  hell and I can't take it anymore, yesterday and maybe a little bit today, well I  was an agent of Israel. I was executing the Israeli strategy to break the spirit  of the valiant Arabs. In fact the Israeli ambassador to the UN quoted two  Lebanese MPs citing how little support for Hezbollah there is in Lebanon. This  is the rhetoric. But in point of fact it is true, that Israel has not spared an  area at this stage, whether Hezbollah stronghold or not and they want to make us  pay for housing Hezbollah in our parliament. Maybe they prefer an Iraqi  scenario?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I am clearly losing my mind. I need to end this long diary  entry. I would like to end it by congratulating the president of Iran, to whom a  nuclear bomb (like the president of Pakistan) is by far more important than his  people walking barefoot, illiterate and hungry. But the kind and generous  president of Iran "assured" the world that if Israel hit Syria, Iran would show  them hell. Never mind Lebanon burning!&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Until Day 4 of the  Siege.&lt;br /&gt;Love, R.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31447542-115348137475947819?l=beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/feeds/115348137475947819/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=31447542&amp;postID=115348137475947819' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115348137475947819'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115348137475947819'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/2006/07/day-3.html' title='Day 3'/><author><name>Rasha</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31447542.post-115347777770664141</id><published>2006-07-21T03:28:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2006-08-01T05:57:58.616-07:00</updated><title type='text'>Day 2</title><content type='html'>&lt;span style="font-family:arial,helvetica;"&gt;&lt;span family="SANSSERIF" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Geneva;font-size:85%;"  &gt;Dear All,&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I am writing now from a cafe, in West  Beirut's Hamra district. It is filled with people who are trying to escape the  pull of 24 hour news reporting. Like me. The electricity has been cut off for a  while now, and the city has been surviving on generators. The old system that  was so familiar at the time of the war, where generators were allowed a lull to  rest is back. The cafe is dark, hot and humid. Espresso machines and blenders  are silenced. Conversations, rumors, frustrations waft through the room.&lt;br /&gt;I am  better off here than at home, following the news, live, on the spot  documentation of our plight in sound bites.&lt;br /&gt;The sound of Israeli warplanes  overwhelms the air on occasion. They drop leaflets to conduct a "psychological"  war. Yesterday, their sensitivity training urged them to advise inhabitants of  the southern suburbs to flee because the night promised to be "hot". Today, the  leaflets warn that they plan to bomb all other bridges and tunnels in Beirut.  People are flocking to supermarkets to stock up on food.&lt;br /&gt;This morning, I  wrote in my emails to people inquiring about my well-being that I was safe, and  that the targets seem to be strictly Hezbollah sites and their constituencies,  now, I regret typing that. They will escalate. Until a few hours ago, they had  only bombed the runways of the airport, as if to "limit" the damage. A few hours  ago, four shells were dropped on the buildings of our brand new shining  airport.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The night was harrowing. The southern suburbs and the airport  were bombed, from air and sea. The apartment where I am living has a  magnificient view of the bay of Beirut. I could see the Israeli warships firing  at their leisure. It is astounding how comfortable they are in our skies, in our  waters, they just travel around, and deliver their violence and congratulate  themselves.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The cute French-speaking and English-speaking bourgeoisie  has fled to the Christian mountains. A long-standing conviction that the  Israelis will not target Lebanon's Christian "populated" mountains. Maybe this  time they will be proven wrong? The Gulfies, Saudis, Kuwaities and other  expatriates have all fled out of the country, in Pullman buses via Damascus,  before the road was bombed. They were supposed to be the economic lifeblood of  this country. The contrast in their sense of panic as opposed to the defiance of  the inhabitants of the southern suburbs was almost comical. This time, however,  I have to admit, I am tired of defying whatever for whatever cause. There is no  cause really. There are only sinister post-Kissingerian type negotiations. I can  almost hear his hateful voice rationalizing laconically as he does the  destruction of a country, the deaths of families, people with dreams and  ambitions for the Israelis to win something more, always more.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Although  I am unable to see it, I am told left, right and center that there is a rhyme  and reason, grand design, and strategy. The short-term military strategy seems  to be to cripple transport and communications. And power stations. The southern  region has now been reconfigured into small enclaves that cannot communicate  between one another. Most have enough fuel, food and supplies to last them until  tomorrow, but after that the isolation of each enclave will lead to tragedy.  Mayors and governors have been screaming for help on the TV.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;This is all  bringing back echoes of 1982, the Israeli siege of Beirut. My living nightmare,  well one of my living nightmares. It was summer then as well. The Israeli army  marched through the south and besieged Beirut. For 3 months, the US  administration kept dispatching urges for the Israeli military to act with  restraint. And the Israelis assured them they were acting appropriately. We had  the PLO command in West Beirut then. I felt safe with the handsome fighters. How  I miss them. Between Hezbollah and the Lebanese army I don't feel safe. We are  exposed, defenseless, pathetic. And I am older, more aware of danger. I am 37  years old and actually scared. The sound of the warplanes scares me. I am not  defiant, there is no more fight left in me. And there is no solidarity, no real  cause.&lt;br /&gt;I am furthermore pissed off because no one knows how hard the postwar  reconstruction was to all of us. Hariri did not make miracles. People work hard  and sacrifice a lot and things get done. No one knows except us how expensive,  how arduous that reconstruction was. Every single bridge and tunnel and highway,  the runways of that airport, all of these things were built from our sweat and  brow, at 3 times the real cost of their construction because every member of  government, because every character in the ruling Syrian junta, because the big  players in the Hariri administration and beyond, were all thieves. We accepted  the thievery and banditry just to get things done and get it over with. Everyone  one of us had two jobs (I am not referring to the ruling elite, obviously), paid  backbreaking taxes and wages to feed the "social covenant". We faught and faught  that neoliberal onslaught, the arrogance of economic consultants and the greed  of creditors just to have a nice country that functioned at a minimum, where  things got done, that stood on its feet, more or less. A thirving Arab civil  society. Public schools were sacrificed for roads to service neglected rural  areas and a couple Syrian officers to get richer, and we accepted, that road was  desperately needed, and there was the "precarious national consensus" to  protect. Social safety nets were given up, healthcare for all, unions were  broken and coopted, public spaces taken over, and we bowed our heads and agreed.  Palestinian refugees were pushed deeper and deeper into forgetting, hidden from  sight and consciousness, "for the preservation of their identity" we were told,  and we accepted. In exchange we had a secular country where the Hezbollah and  the Lebanese Forces could co-exist and fight their fights in parliament not with  bullets. We bit hard on our tongues and stiffened our upper lip, we protested  and were defeated, we took the streets, defied army-imposed curfews, time after  time, to protect that modicum of civil rights, that modicum of a semblance of  democracy, and it takes one air raid for all our sacrifices and tolls to be  blown to smithereens. It's not about the airport, it's what we built during that  postwar.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;As per the usual of Lebanon, it's not only about Lebanon, the  country has paradigmatically been the terrain for regional conflicts to lash out  violently. Off course speculations abound. There is rhetoric, and a lot of it,  but there are also Theories.&lt;br /&gt;  1) Theory Number One.&lt;br /&gt;This is about  Syria, Hamas and Hezbollah negotiating an upper hand in the negotiations with  Israel. Hezbollah have indicated from the moment they captured the Israeli  soldiers that they were willing to negotiate in conjunction with Hamas for the  release of all Arab prisoners in Israeli jails. Iran is merely providing a back  support for Syria + Hamas.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;  2) Theory Number Two.&lt;br /&gt;This is not  about solidarity with Gaza or strengthening the hand of the Palestinians in  negotiating the release of the prisoners in Israeli jails. This is about Iran's  nuclear bomb and negotiations with the Europeans/US. The Iranian negotiator left  Brussels after the end of negotiations and instead of returning to Tehran, he  landed in Damascus. Two days later, Hezbollah kidnapped the Israeli soldiers.  The G8 Meeting is on Saturday, Iran is supposed to have some sort of an answer  for the G8 by then. In the meantime, they are showing to the world that they  have a wide sphere of control in the region: Afghanistan, Iraq and Lebanon. In  Lebanon they pose a real threat to Israel. The "new" longer-reaching missiles  that Hezbollah fired on Haifa are the message. The kings of Jordan and Saudi  Arabia issued statements holding Hezbollah solely responsible for bringing on  this escalation, and that is understood as a message to Iran. Iran on the other  hand promised to pay for the reconstruction of destroyed homes and  infrastructures in the south. And threatened Israel with "hell" if they hit  Syria.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;  3) Theory Number Three.&lt;br /&gt;This is about Lebanon, Hezbollah  and 1559 (the UN resolution demanding the disarmement of Hezbollah and  deployment of the Lebanese army in the southern territory). It stipulates that  this is no more than a secret conspiracy between Syria, Iran and the US to close  the Hezbollah file for good, and resolve the pending Lebanese crisis since the  assassination of Hariri. Evidence for this conspiracy is Israel leaving Syria so  far unharmed. Holders of this theory claim that Israel will deliver a harsh blow  to Hezbollah and cripple the Lebanese economy to the brink of creating an  internal political crisis. The resolution would then result in Hezbollah giving  up arms, and a buffer zone between Israel and Lebanon under the control of the  Lebanese army in Lebanon and the Israeli army in the north of Galilee. More  evidence for this Theory are the Saudi Arabia and Jordan statements condemning  Hezbollah and holding them responsible for all the horrors inflicted on the  Lebanese people.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;There are more theories... There is also the Israeli  government reaching an impasse and feeling a little wossied out by Hezbollah and  Hamas, and the Israeli military taking the upper hand with Olmert.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The  land of conspiracies... Fun? I can't make heads or tails. But I am tired of  spending days and nights waiting not to die from a shell, on target or astray.  Watching poor people bludgeoned, homeless and preparing to mourn. I am so  weary...&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Rasha.&lt;/span&gt;  &lt;/span&gt;&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/31447542-115347777770664141?l=beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/feeds/115347777770664141/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=31447542&amp;postID=115347777770664141' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115347777770664141'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/31447542/posts/default/115347777770664141'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://beirutsiege2006.blogspot.com/2006/07/day-2.html' title='Day 2'/><author><name>Rasha</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry></feed>
