(6:17 am, Monday, August 14. I got awakened a few minutes ago by two
massive blasts. They sounded very close, but they were probably coming from
South Beirut. I am in Central Beirut. With the ceasefire due to take
effect in less than an hour, the Israelis are bombing up till the last
minute. These guys are unbelievable. Then I remember I have to file a
story on what happened the day before, August 13.)
"We could have been there", Rep. Mujiv Hataman of Mindanao remarks quietly
after it is confirmed that the blasts we heard just moments before were
those of Israeli shells falling on the Shia neighborhoods in South Beirut
that we visited just two hours ago.
The images of flattened buildings and still smoldering ruins and crushed,
dust-covered cars are still fresh in our minds. I also remember the teddy
bear, the child stroller, and the books I saw as I clambered over the ruins
of a 12-story building at the neighborhood of Haret Hreik.
"The Most Dangerous Day"
"Today is the most dangerous day in this war", the restaurant manager tells
us as the delegation sits down for lunch thankful for our good luck but also
very angry at the Israelis. "They know that people will let down their
guard now that a ceasefire has been agreed to. But they want to make thing
uncertain for us until the very last minute."
Nahla Chahal, the Lebanese activist coordinating the visit of our 12-person
Civil Society-Parliamentary Delegation, agrees: "They can't accept the fact
that they¹ve not been able to beat Hezbollah, so they'll terrorize the
civilian population till the very end."
After walking though the ruins of South Beirut earlier in the day, we move
on to Beirut University General Hospital. We briefly visit Firas Chahal, a
27 year old man suffering internal and external wounds after being thrown
out of a minibus when an Israeli jet bombed the bridge at the Casino du
Liban that we had to take a detour around on the way to Beirut. Confined at
a nearby room is Khaleek Mahmoud, a 68 year old grandmother whose legs were
shattered after the roof of her house collapsed on her when Israeli
warplanes pounded her village in South Lebanon. "Israel is a tyrannical
state", she tells us. "You should go down there and see for yourselves."
Children of War
After visiting the hospital, we hurry to the Ecole El Ghoul in downtown
Beirut, which serves as temporary quarters for 355 people from 66 families
from the South. One million Lebanese have been displaced by the war, so the
conditions of the people we meet are typical of those of a full third of the
country. "The integration of the refugees into old neighborhoods brings its
share of problems", says Nahla Chahal. "The Hezbollah, however, is trying
its best to provide the social services to support the people in this
school."
Children and adolescents fill the courtyard and greet our delegation with
glee, taking advantage of every photo opportunity. For a few moments,
confronted by this sea of smiles, the war seems far away. The younger ones
readily break out into cheers when Vijaya Chauhan, one of our delegation
members who has worked with women and children in India, waves and talks to
them. Then they break out into a chant that invokes the name of Hezbollah
leader Hassan Nasrallah that translates roughly into "Nasrallah, we're with
you/ You can bomb Tel Aviv."
A Stoic People
After the lunch disrupted by the sound of Israeli bombs falling in South
Beirut, we spend most of the afternoon with Lebanese NGOs assessing the
scale of the humanitarian and ecological disaster and looking ahead to
post-cease fire cooperation. Two massive blasts interrupt our discussion,
but our Lebanese hosts continue talking, assuring us that the sounds came
from Israeli Navy boats shelling South Beirut a few miles away.
At dinner at a restaurant later that evening, the sound of explosions in
South Beirut does not deter people at a nearby table from continuing to
carouse loudly. The Israelis are bombing up till the last minute to
terrorize the Lebanese. It¹s not working. These people are very angry, but
they¹re used to war and are not about to let it get in the way of living
their lives. These are brave, stoic people.
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