August 4th, 2021
This morning feels eerily quiet, from where I am. The sunlit stillness and greenery and faint city soundtrack and gentle chirpings outside my intact glass windows - are at once lulling and foreboding, like I’ve landed in this illusively pristine post-apocalyptic bubble away from it all. Like waking up from a hazy dream sequence and fighting to recall the unsettling details, that linger indefinitely.
The physical distance is at once arbitrary, ‘lucky,’ and vividly, remorsefully imposed - I was never meant to grow up here. So many of us weren’t.
Today is a warped day of mourning - the numbers, the individual lives turned mass-groupings, the ‘tragic’ that transcends any tangible grasp on tragedy, the sensational surrealism of nightmarish lows somehow prescribed to millions as acceptable ‘real life,’ the insomnia amidst the rubble of family heirlooms turned crystalline weapons of war, the casually heinous state-sanctioned escape from even the tiniest morsel of accountability or bare-minimum humanity, the infuriating descent into deeper hellscapes ever since…the preventability of it all.
They knew.
Here in the diaspora, we carry the ill-defined, numbing, yet gut-punching ache of each massive blow. The privileged guilt and crushing obligation of ‘leaving home’ is in our bloodlines, but the unconditional attachment we feel for all things Lebanon is unspoken, and ever-present, for a reason.
Today I’m thinking of the immeasurable collective grief and rage and exhaustion and perpetual heartbreak and integrity of those taking to the streets of Beirut and beyond…and those tending to each and every layer of loss, in its personal and external vastness, from wherever they are. I know I am.
Lebanon deserves our attention, and thank you for hearing our stories.
- Leila