Beirut mayhem-mek by Tarek Chemaly part III:
21
It
was true, I could not imagine what was going on back there. Every war is
different, maybe everything is déjà vu, as we grow blasé of CNN reporting. How
long can one put up with a developing story that’s eight hour long with the
title at the bottom of the screen: “Developing story, loud explosions heard in
Beirut.” Back when the news got concentrated in the 8 o’clock version, one
would feel that things were happening, something was shifting, an action was
taking place. Nowadays news feels like watching paint dry.
22
“We
are the best, but it’s still wet paint! Miller Co.” said the signs plastered at
the ramps of the Vollum hall in Reed College – Portland. As I looked amused at
them, a plane heading towards Portland Airport made its path above me: My
natural reflex was to expect either one or two loud bangs: One was for a bomb
being dropped, two for a sonic boom. But all of this never feels real, but
rather it seems like Roy Lichtenstein’s “Whaam!” – I could almost hear the
pilot above “I pressed the fire control… And ahead of me rockets blazed through
the sky” the pilot of course being Tom Cruise (Not in action, but rather his
image on the poster of “Top Gun” with Kelly McGillis putting a confident arm
around his sturdy shoulders).
23
Remembrances
of war do not come the way people expect them to come. Sure, we time the war by
the major timelines such as “this happened two days before Bashir Gemayel died”
(August 8th 1982), or “It was three weeks after the “harb el tahrir”
(Liberation was against Syria launched by General Michel Aoun in 1989, then
head of the state due to lack of consensus on the presidential seat), but it
mostly the personal remembrances that end up triumphing.
24
Every
night, at the shelter in Achrafieh – almost the heart of Beirut – that woman
would go on to recount what happened to her and her family on April 2nd
1982, the day of the Israeli invasion (Or rather the second Israeli invasion,
to be more precise, as the first happened in 1978).
25
And
every night she would go on in the same boring detail recounting the details,
which always remind me of my own April 2nd. My vivid memory of that
day was our mother furtively opening the drawers of the wooden chest and taking
all possible pairs of white underwear, a cigarette in her mouth as I stood next
to her. Then – with absolutely no transition – I could see the whole family
packed in my father’s white Volvo 144 as we cruised through the Dbayeh highway
with some smoke starting to transpire from the visible Beirut. We left our
school bags in the classroom that day because we were told to evacuate
immediately.
26
For
a long time, I lived with the impression that the events of April 2nd
happened because someone at school said “tomorrow, there will be bombings
again” as an April fool’s lie – maybe the kid had overheard his parents, but I
have always taken it to be an April fool’s that happened for real. And since, I
grew extremely cautious of all April fool’s lies out of fear of them
materializing on the morning of the next day.
27
Yesterday
I came across Borges’ statement that “the original is not faithful to the
translation,” and it made me smile for treacherous memory can be. In my current
memory of that day, mother would be “furtively opening the drawers…” of a white
painted chest that’s on the left of the door of our bedroom, but back in 1982,
the chest was still in its original blue and was on the right of the door.
Through the process of time, memories get actualized and current images get
projected onto that distant past, helping bridge it to our neurons that barely
cling to it like some Christmas tree lights that gave up flickering long ago.
28
“What
is the profession that got hit most severely in the current war in Lebanon?”
“Dentists.
Everyone’s afraid to put a bridge, because Israel might blow it up!”
95%
of all Lebanese bridges have been bombed. 80% of the highways. It is easy to
lie with statistics, I know, but it is easier to lie without them. Still, I am
being told the magnitude of the damage is beyond the scope of imagination.
“Nothing will prepare you for what you are going to see.”
“No two countries
that both have a McDonald’s have ever fought a war against each another” was
Tom Friedman’s thesis. Lebanon and Israel have just proved him wrong.
29
“And how are you holding on?”
“Fine. I don’t know what to answer when I get asked that
question.”
“Me neither. It’s strange isn’t it?”
“I didn’t know you were in France. Mother told me that
you were due to fly the day the hostilities broke out.”
“Yes, I managed to catch the last plane out of Beirut. I am not sure if it’s good luck or bad one. But now I know what kept our parents from immigrating during the war. This sense that it would soon be over. Had they known it would last seventeen years the first time around, they’d have gotten there quick.”
“Yes, I managed to catch the last plane out of Beirut. I am not sure if it’s good luck or bad one. But now I know what kept our parents from immigrating during the war. This sense that it would soon be over. Had they known it would last seventeen years the first time around, they’d have gotten there quick.”
“I see where you come from. I remember this one time
father spoke about how easily people were going to Sweden and getting
immigration there, and it fuelled up my mind. But then after his nap in the
afternoon no one talked about it anymore.”
“I feel like I am Sisyphus. Every time you go back to
that gun barrel of a country, rebuild everything from scratch and then when
you’re way up, you have to come back from the very beginning. And do it all
over again, and again. I am seriously contemplating establishing my practice
here in France. But I have to come back.”
“What for an encore? A final reverence? Me, I am like Ella Fitzgerald in that department – I keep coming back to the scene a million times, hooked on the adrenaline of the applause.”
“What for an encore? A final reverence? Me, I am like Ella Fitzgerald in that department – I keep coming back to the scene a million times, hooked on the adrenaline of the applause.”
30
“How much is your life worth?”
“Not much.”
“I will kill you anyway.”
But I hear not gunshots. But both of them do.
In their headphones, and the dead man suddenly springs
from his chair slurring insults at the other. He is not serious, just pissed
that he got beaten at “Counter strike” – for internet cafes also allowed game
playing and were a popular hangout for youths.
“How much is my life worth?” I think. Not much maybe.
Israeli jet planes air raided a safe house in Qana, ten
years after the “grapes of wrath” operation which hundred or so people back
then, and I could hear the pilots’ words in Hebrew (With an English subtext on
the screen):
“How much is their life worth?”
“Not much”
“How much is their life worth?”
“Not much”
“We will kill them anyway”
Among the dead an infant not even a day old. Thrirty
three other children. Thirty four if you do the math. Sixty people including
men and women. Do the pilots hear some Atariesque synthesizer bleeping in their
helmets, or see a cumulative digitalized set of points that allow them an extra
missile once they get to a certain threshold?
They don’t count. The people who are dead. Or rather, if
they do, they only count by numbers – never in value. Never as individuals.
Never as people who once held names.
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