Beirut minus two weeks

Brian Winter writes in today's LAT about his recent travels to Beirut, a city he describes as on the cusp of a kind of cultural revolution. He just didn't realize at the time that it was in store for a revolution of a different kind: The head of Hezbollah sends his regards," the note read, ...

Brian Winter writes in today's LAT about his recent travels to Beirut, a city he describes as on the cusp of a kind of cultural revolution. He just didn't realize at the time that it was in store for a revolution of a different kind:

Brian Winter writes in today's LAT about his recent travels to Beirut, a city he describes as on the cusp of a kind of cultural revolution. He just didn't realize at the time that it was in store for a revolution of a different kind:

The head of Hezbollah sends his regards," the note read, "but he will not be able to attend your book signing." Bummer, I thought. What else could he possibly be up to? I figured he might be at a rave, or maybe watching the World Cup on one of the big-screen TVs at the sidewalk cafes in Solidere, the heart of the city's stubbornly-won rebirth, where teenage girls in tank tops and women in black burkas mingled well past midnight, casing the jewelry stores and lining up at Dunkin' Donuts.

This was Beirut only two weeks ago, when it still seemed like a post-apocalyptic amusement park. Enough time had passed since the civil war that the handful of battle-scarred buildings that we saw seemed almost quaint. "That's where the Green Line used to be," my guide gushed. "Those are real bullet holes!"

The city pulsed with that giddy, heartbreakingly innocent feel of the early stages of youthful revolution. "SEX!" blared the cover of the June issue of Time Out Beirut, bearing a racy photo of crossed legs with black panties around the ankles. A bullet-ridden water tower downtown had been converted into a discotheque; at the plaza where in 2005 thousands of Lebanese protesters demanded Syria's withdrawal, there was an outdoor jazz festival. Just two weeks before my visit, the rapper 50 Cent had played to a packed house; surely he found it infinitely less threatening than Queens.

It's worth reading the whole thing. And in the current issue of FP, we featured Lebanon as one of the most tourism dependent countries in the world. 

Carolyn O'Hara is a senior editor at Foreign Policy.

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