Colin Sheridan: To live in Beirut is an act of love

Flames and smoke rise over the remains of destroyed buildings after the Israeli airstrike in central Beirut last Thursday Picture: Bilal Hussein/AP
"Beirut is a woman, storms feed at her fingers.” — From “Letters to an Israeli soldier,” Mahmoud Darwish & Muin Baso, Beirut, 1982
Having spent a reasonable amount of my adult life both in Lebanon and its capital city Beirut, there are only two things I am unequivocally certain of.
The first is complex in its confession, as it points to personal naivety and a little ignorance.


Riddled with PTSD, both remote and now, very sadly current, it strives to convince it knows much better than you, while simultaneously doing unto others what it understandably hates been done unto itself.

To live in Beirut is an act of love. I truly believe this. Whether you were born in Badaro or exiled to Shatila during the Nakba or displaced by the Syrian Civil War. Whether you are 20-year-old Eritrean girl sleeping in a utility room in Bourj Hammoud. Whether you are a privileged white Irishman driving a UN jeep or a foreign journalist half-hoping for a war to start. To live in that city — to breathe its dirty air and eat its batata harra — is to be a living part of a perpetual history.