There were messages from friends, colleagues, acquaintances from all over the world. The news had traveled far and fast, another measure of its horror.
My husband spoke to his uncle in New York; I surveyed the damage in the kitchen. Glassware had flown out of the cupboards. I pulled out the broom and began sweeping. The night was filled with the dissonant music of broken glass and in the distance, sirens.
Growing up in Lebanon taught me that an explosion resonates across time, that the shock reverberates forward into your life, and the pressure reconfigures the landscape of the mind. I know that it comes to shape everything you think you deserve from the world. The people of Beirut have been shaped by the bombs that reconfigured this country.
We haven’t even begun to assess the damage that this bomb has done to us, to our city. At least 135 dead and 5,000 injured. And then there is the loss of the port, a lifeline for a country that imports nearly everything it consumes. We were already facing food shortages. The explosion took out two massive grain silos; wheat spilled into the rubble and the ash.
This is not some lamentable accident. “I can’t stress this enough but the international community must respond to this as a war crime and not an accidental tragedy,” the Lebanese-Palestinian author Saleem Haddad wrote on Twitter.
In 1989, when I was 10, during the final and deadliest phase of the Lebanese civil war, we were huddled with our neighbors in a vestibule on the fourth floor of our building when a shell screeched into the floor below us and exploded. I thought that was the loudest sound I had ever heard in my life. Our upstairs neighbor was screaming; our downstairs neighbor’s face was gray with concrete dust.
We referred to that phase of the civil war as the “Aoun war,” after Michel Aoun, the general who commandeered the Lebanese Army like his own militia, decimating West Beirut in his bid to oust the Syrians from Lebanon.