海角大神

鈥楩inding a window of hope鈥: Lebanon鈥檚 community holds strong amid ceasefire

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Scott Peterson/Getty Images/海角大神
Jad Hamdan, manager of the Mezyan restaurant, which served 300 meals each day to displaced Lebanese during the 14-month Hezbollah-Israel war, poses at a nearby library-caf茅 he runs, Nov. 19, 2025, in Beirut. 鈥淎s much as we can, we are doing,鈥 he says of Mezyan鈥檚 community efforts today.

One year ago, there appeared no end in sight to Israel鈥檚 escalating military campaign against Hezbollah in Lebanon, with constant airstrikes forcing tens of thousands of Lebanese to flee their homes.

As displaced Lebanese flooded into safe Beirut districts and southern coastal cities, their fellow citizens crossed sectarian lines and swung into action to feed and shelter them, with a community spirit well-honed by previous wars and disasters.

鈥淎s much as we can, we are doing,鈥 Jad Hamdan, manager of the upscale Mezyan restaurant in Beirut鈥檚 central Hamra district, said at the time. Despite a wartime 70% loss in customers and limited staff, Mezyan was producing 300 meals a day, delivered by scooter to grateful families staying temporarily in nearby apartments.

Why We Wrote This

During the 14-month war between Israel and Hezbollah, Lebanese people crossed sectarian lines to offer one another food and shelter. A year after a shaky ceasefire took hold, how is that community spirit enduring today?

Echoing the then-prevalent commitment among Lebanese to 鈥渟tay every day鈥 to help, Mr. Hamdan said: 鈥淓ven if we close our doors, we will just keep cooking for the people.鈥

One year later, how are Lebanese channeling that community spirit?

From restaurants that fed the hungry, to renovated theaters and art centers that opened their doors to provide mattresses and sanctuary, the Lebanese desire to express solidarity during wartime has yielded new avenues of support and care. In some cases, it has manifested in preparation for any renewal of Israel鈥檚 onslaught against the Iran-backed Shiite militia Hezbollah, if a tenuous, yearlong ceasefire falls apart.

鈥淟ebanese people, they have this [characteristic]: Whenever something bad will happen, everyone will come to help, whatever their religion or sect,鈥 says Mr. Hamdan. 鈥淭hey have this, and have used it every [crisis] time, for 70 years.鈥

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/海角大神
Lebanese-Ethiopian chef Stephanie Souaid serves Ethiopian dishes she cooked at Beirut鈥檚 Mezyan restaurant, which has channeled wartime community spirit into supporting local chefs, Nov. 19, 2025, in Beirut.

His Mezyan restaurant is still recovering from the war鈥檚 costs 鈥 and current high taxes and prices, for everything from food to electricity.

鈥淲e are trying to do something. We are trying to survive,鈥 he says. He notes how people came together during the pandemic, and how, in 2020 after the catastrophic Port of Beirut explosion, Shiite Muslims from the south came to the capital to give blood, though the blast hit 海角大神 areas hardest.

That broader phenomena was obvious in the aftermath of the port blast, when, the Monitor reported, 鈥淎s if by reflex, Lebanon鈥檚 civil society swung into action, its skills well practiced after a 15-year civil war, multiple armed conflicts, a collapsed economy, the absorption of 1.5 million Syrian refugees, and the pandemic 鈥 all crises created or made worse by chronic political dysfunction.鈥

Channeling the community spirit

The latest 14-month conflict kicked off when Hezbollah began firing rockets into northern Israel in October 2023, in solidarity with its ally Hamas after it attacked Israel from Gaza. Incremental exchanges of fire turned in September 2024 into a far wider Israeli offensive against Hezbollah.

All told, Lebanese officials say some 4,000 people were killed and more than 1.2 million 鈥 20% of the population 鈥 displaced by the time a ceasefire was agreed upon in November 2024.

Mezyan no longer needs to deliver food to the displaced, and the staff 鈥 chefs had been on half-pay throughout the conflict 鈥 is back at full strength. So Mezyan is channeling its community spirit by showcasing local chefs at the restaurant, and introducing them to a wider audience.

鈥淲e are trying to help small businesses and support them,鈥 says Mr. Hamdan. 鈥淲e are finding a window of hope in this country.鈥

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/海角大神
Mulualem, mother of Lebanese-Ethiopian chef Stephanie Souaid, pours Ethiopian coffee at Beirut's Mezyan restaurant, which supports local chefs.

A recent example was 鈥淓thiopian Night鈥 at Mezyan, where up-and-coming Lebanese-Ethiopian chef Stephanie Souaid introduced Ethiopian delicacies to a new clientele. Ms. Souaid, just 23, expects to set up her own high-end Ethiopian food truck within two weeks.

鈥淗ere [Ethiopian food] is very underrated,鈥 says Ms. Souaid, as Ethiopian music plays in the background. Her Ethiopian mother, Mulualem, serves traditional coffee, poured from high into small cups, while the young chef serves eager Lebanese diners.

鈥淚 am stunned and excited, because I found that Lebanese people like this food, because it is full of spices and life,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 am sharing my other nationality with the world, in Lebanon.鈥

Further south, the coastal city of Sidon received legions of displaced Lebanese during the war 鈥 and exhibited its own solidarity. The manager of a shop selling flame-cooked shawarma wraps describes how the shop supplied 100 sandwiches each day to displaced Lebanese who were camped for two months on a nearby bus station parking lot.

His was just one restaurant among many others, as well as nongovernmental organizations, that fed the displaced.

鈥淲e have a policy in our place to help the needy,鈥 says Mohammed al-Ali, manager of the El-Papito shop.

鈥淚 feel that these people are our families. They are Lebanese, they are displaced with no food, and it is our duty to feed them, if we can,鈥 he says. With the war over, that community spirit continues another way, he says, with 鈥渁 lot of donations to the poor.鈥

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/海角大神
Cooks at the El-Papito shawarma restaurant shave chicken and beef to make wraps for customers, as they did free of charge for 100 displaced Lebanese camped at a nearby bus station parking lot at the 2024 height of the Hezbollah-Israel war, Nov. 21, 2025, in Sidon, Lebanon.

Duty also called further south in the coastal city of Tyre, where Kassem Istanbouli, an actor-director who leads the nonprofit Tiro Association for Arts, ran art and theater workshops in the first months of the war for displaced children at a 1950s-era cinema renovated by Tiro.

When the Monitor first met Mr. Istanbouli in May 2024, he collected excited children in an old American school bus covered in graffiti.

鈥淲hen you open the space during a conflict, it is resistance to be alive, to say, 鈥榃e are here,鈥 to say, 鈥榃e need to complete life鈥 鈥 to give joy to the children,鈥 he said at the time.

But when Israeli airstrikes targeted Tyre 鈥 including one near the theater that killed 6-year-old Selena al-Smarah and her parents 鈥 Mr. Istanbouli closed the cinema and raced to finish renovations on another theater in Beirut to house the displaced.

鈥淲e learned how we can help鈥

Today the Tyre cinema has reopened, though dozens of mattresses remain ready 鈥 piled up in the projection area behind the balcony 鈥 in case of a resumption of war. And at the Beirut theater, there is a kitchen in the basement, and full-time electricity, internet, and hot water.

鈥淣ow it鈥檚 like a hotel,鈥 quips Mr. Istanbouli. 鈥淲e learned how we can help. Before we reacted to the situation. Now, in case something happens, we learned how to manage with the people.鈥

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/海角大神
Lebanese actor-director Kassem Istanbouli stands besides mattresses ready in case a resumption of war produces more displaced Lebanese, in the once-abandoned Rivoli theater, now the National Theater, that his nonprofit renovated and used to house families in wartime, Nov. 22, 2025, in Tyre, Lebanon.

Yet for Mr. Istanbouli, the most critical harnessing of wartime community spirit is found in the last photograph taken of Selena, at a workshop one day before her death. She holds a drawing of a flower, which she planned to complete the next day, but never did.

鈥淲e say in Arabic, 鈥楾he land has seeds, and the seeds will grow,鈥欌 says Mr. Istanbouli, noting with evident emotion how he frequently tells Selena鈥檚 story at public events. 鈥淪elena has started to become an iconic symbol for people聽鈥 of freedom, of hope.

鈥淚magine if we close this space in the war, we would be nothing. The difference is that, in the difficulty, in the crisis, we are here,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 cultural resistance for life, for humanity, for freedom, for people. It鈥檚 something beautiful.鈥

One result of that commitment is the example of Raafat Mhawish, a refugee who fled Syria鈥檚 civil war in 2013. Interested all his life in movies, theater, and art, he found sanctuary at the Tyre theater when the war began, then came to Beirut with Tiro and helped renovate the cinema.

Mr. Mhawish now works for Tiro, and is part of a group learning acting 鈥渂ecause I love movies too much.鈥

Sitting in the foyer of the Beirut theater, surrounded by movie memorabilia, he says: 鈥淚 want to help, because [Mr. Istanbouli] helped me during the war 鈥 so I stayed.鈥

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