|
|
- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
Coming Back to Life
Beirut rebuilds, but old wounds are slow to heal
The flower shops are open again, with their carnations and birds of paradise spilling out of the open stalls and onto the sidewalks. Fruit and vegetables are once more being hawked on nearly every street corner, and coffee wagons have again sprouted their gaily colored umbrellas along the avenues. The sound of a car backfiring is likely to be exactly that and not the blast of gunfire. And early every morning, joggers of every descriptionLebanese and foreigners, students and businessmen, paratroopers and housewivesswarm along the Avenue de Paris, popularly known as the Corniche.
Beirut, slowly, is coming back to life. It is a remarkable feat, considering what the city has endured. For most of the summer Beirut was a bloody battleground for Israeli troops and Palestinian guerrillas. By the time both sides finally withdrew, there was no euphoria, only relief that it was over. No one knows how badly Beirut was damaged, but one Lebanese businessman places the cost of rebuilding the city at more than $10 billion. Though it is possible to drive safely from East to West Beirut, passing only the occasional Lebanese army checkpoint, the years of division have left their wounds. It is as if the people still cannot believe their luck in having survived at all.
Nonetheless, recovery has begun. Aside from the gradual revival of commercial life, an extraordinary transformation has taken place in the shattered western section. Every day dozens of bulldozers clear away rubble, and convoys of trucks cart off debris. Shell craters have been filled, sidewalks repaired. The result: West Beirut is cleaner than at any time since the beginning of the civil war in 1975. The Corniche Mazraa, site of some of the war's heaviest shelling and once littered with broken masonry, is well groomed, and the four-lane high way to the airport has been repaved.
Most of the credit for the cleanup operation belongs to Rafiq Bahaeddine al Hariri, a wealthy Lebanese businessman from Sidon. Owner of a construction firm called Oger, which has headquarters in Paris, Hariri has donated the services of hundreds of workers and a small army of equipment, including 40 bulldozers, 60 trucks, ten garbage trucks, five excavators and a pair of cranes, each able to hoist up to 40 tons. The estimated tab so far: $7.5 million, all of it paid by Hariri.
The siege has also created a chance to rebuild the old city center, which was reduced to rubble during the 1975-76 civil war. By cleaning up this section, Hariri hopes to bring life back to a no man's land that most people in Beirut did not dare visit for seven years. According to the governor of Beirut, Mitri Nammar, work on restoring the heart of the city will begin as soon as officials are satisfied that all land mines have been removed from the area. The estimated cost: as high as $3 billion. "The destruction has opened up new opportunities for us that we never dreamed of before," observes Nammar. "It was probably a blessing in disguise."
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- Jenny Sanford: The Savviest Spurned Wife in History
- Can Golf Survive Without Tiger Woods? And Vice Versa?
- Israel vs. Hizballah: Drumbeats of War
- The Growing Backlash Against Overparenting
- The Top 10 FAILs of 2009
- Five Things the U.S. Can Learn from China
- The Alleged Chicago Jihadi: Key Role in the Mumbai Attacks?
- Disney's Princess: A Breakthrough for Curly Hair
- Essay: IN PRAISE OF MAY-DECEMBER MARRIAGES
- Europe vs. Google: The Next Chapter
- Jenny Sanford: The Savviest Spurned Wife in History
- How Tiger Woods Can Survive the Scandal
- After a Court Ruling, Berlusconi's Legal Woes Resume
- Parents' Sex Talk with Kids: Too Little, Too Late
- The Alleged Chicago Jihadi: Key Role in the Mumbai Attacks?
- Can Golf Survive Without Tiger Woods? And Vice Versa?
- The Pros and Cons of Expanding Medicare
- Will Fashion's Biggest Names Kiss the Runway Goodbye?
- Rick Warren Denounces Uganda's Anti-Gay Bill
- Europe vs. Google: The Next Chapter





RSS