海角大神

This article appeared in the August 11, 2020 edition of the Monitor Daily.

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An 鈥榠ndispensable glow鈥 in the Beirut night

Aziz Taher/Reuters
A volunteer rests inside a damaged house in the aftermath of a massive explosion in Beirut on Aug. 11, 2020.
Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

What is a city to do when 300,000 people become homeless in an instant? Last week, half of Beirut was damaged by non-nuclear explosions in history. Thousands of homes have become unlivable.

One answer is to stay with family. Another is to expand your sense of family, and many Beirutis are welcoming neighbors into their homes. Thawramap, an online map that tracks protests, is now showing private homes, hotels, and schools where people can go, , a regional newspaper. The hashtag #ourhomesareopen has cropped up.

Amid hardship, the Lebanese newspaper L鈥橭rient-Le Jour notes, 鈥渨e are witnessing tremendous expressions of solidarity from across the country and from beyond its borders. These expressions ... bring an indispensable glow into our night.鈥 The outpouring of love has fueled a funding campaign called

Social critic Rebecca Solnit has written that tragedies like 9/11 can instill 鈥渁n emotion graver than happiness but deeply positive.鈥 In this is 鈥渁 glimpse of who else we ourselves may be and what else our society could become.鈥 As Lebanon struggles with political strife and economic near-collapse, that glimpse is sorely needed.

One Beiruti opening his home tells The National: 鈥淟ebanese people may be severely politically polarized but luckily, when it comes down to supporting other people in need, they are unique in their motivation to help.鈥


This article appeared in the August 11, 2020 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 08/11 edition
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