‘De-urbanising’ the city: One year after the blast, Beirut’s residents head for the countryside

‘De-urbanising’ the city: One year after the blast, Beirut’s residents head for the countryside
One year later, many who fled Beirut’s Port explosion have yet to return. speaks with ex-residents of Beirut, the reasons why they left and how the tribulations of life in Lebanon continue to follow them, wherever they go.
6 min read
04 August, 2021
Residents are leaving Beirut in search of better living conditions, and cheaper rents [Will Christou/]

Whenthe Beirut port exploded on August 4, 2020, Yehya Abbas .

His apartment, located in the neighbourhood ofZuquqal-Blat directly adjacent to the port, was rendered , the exterior walls all but shattering from the force of the shockwave.

Staying in the houseand waiting for repairs was unthinkable, asAbbas and his wife already had months ofrent accumulated before the blast. Finding another apartment in the city was also unlikely – Abbaslost his job as a chauffeur six months ago and rents had only risen since.

Luckily, a school time friend of his heard about their predicament and told them they could stay on his property in the town ofBalouneh, about an hour’s drive out of the city, tucked up in the green of Mount Lebanon.

Beirut is a citydefinedby displacement. It hasbeen ahaven for refugees from all over the country and regionsinceit fell out of Ottoman control in the early 20thcentury

They were put up in a narrow, two-room shack on the edge of their friend’s property. The wallsaremade ofstacked, unpainted cinderblocks and the corrugated tin roofsitsloosely on top, with gaps wideenough to fit a hand through. One of the two rooms hasa gaping hole in the floor, where old tyreswere stacked to form something of a surface.

“It’s hot in the summer, and freezing in the winter,” Yehya Abbas told.“There’s barely anything in the fridge, not even a loaf of bread. I never thought I would live in a place like this....”

The residence of Yahya Abbas and his wife in Balouneh, Lebanon. (TNA)
The residence of Yahya Abbas and his wife in Balouneh, Lebanon

“De-urbanisation” of the city

In some ways,Beirut is a citydefinedby displacement. It hasbeen ahaven for refugees from all over the country and regionsinceit fell out of Ottoman control in the early 20thcentury.

The , with the capital city populated by Lebanese hailing from the more urban, coastal areas and the southern rural periphery, in addition to Armenians, Syrians, and Circassians.

Its physical layout has also quite literally been shaped by the various crises which have buffeted the country and its neighbours, .

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Beirut’ssouthern suburbs,al-Dahiya,was populated by waves of Lebanese fleeing Israel’s offensives, and later occupation, of southern Lebanon in the 70s and 80s. Itsdensely-packedArmenian quarter, Burj Hammoud, started as a collection of shacks for those Armenians fleeing the Armenian genocide in 1917 – eventually, the quarter became formalised and gained its own municipal structure in the 1950s.

Beirut is also dotted with Palestinian refugee camps, some, like BurjBarajnehin southern Beirut, which was founded to shelter Palestinians fleeing theNakbain 1948.Though initially meant to be temporary,the .

However,after the port explosion, Beirut has become a place to escapefrom, rather thanescapeto.

In the days and weeks after the Beirut blast, the towns of Mount Lebanon, which overlook Beirut from above, . Schools were turned into shelters overnight, and facilities were set up to house the displaced.

In one of those towns,Aramoun, just 20 kilometres outside of Beirut,residents say that many who were displaced from the blast never left – and increasing numbers of residents from Beirut were coming in search of cheaper living conditions.

“I’ve livedinAramounfor 50 years, and in those fifty years the town was full of empty villas and houses – but now, because of all those left , you can’t find an empty house here,” AhmadBarboor, the official (themukhtarin Arabic) inAramounresponsible forcivildocumentation and registration, told.

“I left Beirut to move to a calm place, now with all the traffic and movement here, you would think we’re back in Beirut,”Barboorsaid.

"The isolation of living in a town unfamiliar to one'sown and the stress of a lack of income has created tremendous psychological pressure"

Some residents, like Abbas, left Beirut in the immediate aftermath of the Beirut port explosion and are unable to find their way back, .

Others, like Wael Saab, a50-year oldLebanese man who leftBeirut forAramounin April 2021,were not pushed out of Beirut by the blast, but bythe .

“What’s the point of staying in the cityand paying rentif there’s no work?” theelectricalengineer said to. “I had a company with three employees; now there’s no one but me. I haven’t had a project in six months.”

Waal Saab poses for a picture in a small grocery store in Aramoun, Lebanon. (TNA)
Waal Saab poses for a picture in a small grocery store in Aramoun, Lebanon

Saabrelied on his family ties to leave Beirut, moving to an apartment his sister bought inAramoun15 years prior, where he does not need to pay rent. “The only thing getting me through this is the connection I have with my family,” Saab said.

He adds that he has no plans to return to Beirut and has advised his son not to return either.His wife has already left Lebanon for her native Russia, and his only son now lives and works in Cyprus.

To Saab,the departure from Beirut is just a stop along the wayon what heto be a final exodus from the country.

“The number one thing people come into my office for these days is to get a passport,so they can leave,”Barboor,Aramoun’smukhtar,said.

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Where to next?

Though they are free from Beirut’s congested streets and its ever-rising rents, life outside the city is far from easy.

InBalouneh,Abbas has taken to begging to make ends meet.While he does not have to pay rent for the house he lives in, he does have to cover electricity and water,of which he owes around200,000 lira (around $2.50) per month. The owners of the house have threatened to kick him out of the house if hecannot come up with the money by the end of the month.

Though he has searched for more suitable work, the opportunities available to him require him to travel far outside the village. The trip to and from the worksite would exceed whatever payment he got for a day’s work.

“There’s no work here, what can I do? Should I steal?Be homeless? Tell me, what can I do?” Abbas said.

"The only silver lining I have right now is the prospect of leaving Lebanon—I don’t see any future here"

The isolation of living in a town unfamiliar to his own and the stress of a lack of income has created tremendous psychological pressure on Abbas and his wife. With nothing to do but sit and ponder their dismal situation, neither is hopeful for a positive resolution of their predicament.

“What future is there for us?” Abbas said. “ We’re dying where we’re standing.”

Saab also feels isolated, uprooted from the way of life he was used to in his native Beirut and far from his friends and family. To cope, he tries to stay home as little as possible, going on walks, or visiting old school friends, or even lending his engineering expertise to a friend renovating his supermarket.

“The only silver lining I have right now is the prospect of leaving Lebanon – I don’t see any future here,” Saab said.

William Christou is 's Levantine correspondent, covering the politics of the Levant and the Mediterranean. William is also a researcher with the Orient Policy Center. Previously, he worked as a journalist with Syria Direct in Amman, Jordan.

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