The Art of Giving: Relief Efforts in Beirut

Chef Fouad at work in the relief kitchen of Ahla Fawda’s EcoHub, March 2026 (courtesy Ahla Fawda).

17 APRIL 2026 • By Jim Quilty

Six years into Lebanon’s collapse, with diminishing finances, Beirut struggles to cope with an unprecedented displacement crisis.

The state of Israel first occupied south Lebanon in 1948, the year of the Nakba. The Israeli military has assaulted and occupied Lebanese territory many times since then. The current conflict commenced after Hamas’ October 7, 2023 attacks on Israel and the Israeli army’s brutal campaign against Palestinian population centers and civilian infrastructure — homes, businesses, roads, bridges, power plants, hospitals, schools and universities, churches and mosques, cultural centers, agricultural land, wells. 

Hezbollah joined the fight on October 8, largely containing the conflict to the border regions. In January 2024, Israel conducted the first of many aerial assassinations in Dahyeh (Beirut’s southern suburbs). Its forces dramatically escalated attacks throughout Lebanon in September 2024, and commenced Lebanon ground operations in October. Though a ceasefire agreement was signed in November 2024, in the months that followed, Israel continued to consolidate its hold over the south and to strike homes, agricultural land, and infrastructure throughout the Beqaa and southern Lebanon.

When U.S. and Israeli forces attacked Iran on February 28, 2026, killing Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Hezbollah resumed attacks on Israel. War returned to Lebanon.

Lebanon’s current displacement crisis is worse than that of the 2023-24 phase of attacks because, firstly, more people have been dislocated. Three days after attacks resumed, on March 5, the Israeli army issued evacuation orders for the whole of Dahyeh, a line from the Gaza playbook unprecedented in Lebanon. By March 10, its south Lebanon evacuation zone extended from the UN Blue Line to the Litani River. Two days later, it was pushed 15 kms north, to the Zahrani River. New evacuation orders for different areas were issued daily.

When the provisional U.S.-Iran truce was announced on April 8, the Pakistani mediator, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, explicitly stated that the agreement included Lebanon. 

As expected, a few hours later Netanyahu declared that the ceasefire deal did not include Lebanon. That same day, Israeli forces launched over 150 strikes in Beirut, Dahyeh, the South, and Beqaa, hammering 100 targets in ten minutes. Several residential blocks across central Beirut were struck without warning. As this story is being edited, casualty estimates for the April 8 strikes are 357 dead and 1,223 wounded. A definitive death count is unavailable: bodies are still being pulled from the wreckage and the large number of body parts that have been recovered require DNA testing to confirm the numbers.

By the time the U.S.-Iran ceasefire was announced, Israeli forces had penetrated 5 to 9 km into Lebanon and taken the town of Khiam, though they were still facing resistance. Over a million people have been uprooted. The Israeli leadership has declared its army will remain in southern Lebanon until Hezbollah’s fighting force has been eradicated.

A ten-day Israeli-Lebanese ceasefire was announced in Washington on April 16. The same day Hezbollah demanded that Israel withdraw its forces to the Blue Line. Netanyahu declared they would remain in place. Based on Israel’s interpretation of the November 2024 ceasefire, it may be assumed that its army will use the cessation to take more land in the south.

Since Israel’s 2006 war, it has largely fallen to NGOs and grassroots initiatives to help the displaced, and cultural associations have played an important role in such relief work. What an association can contribute to mitigating a crisis depends on its financing. In a country where European-style state support for cultural organizations is absent and international funding streams have been drastically reduced in recent years, some must choose between giving and self-preservation.

The first impulse for most centers is to cease operations until the situation clarifies. Responding to public demand and a desire to sustain their staff and artists, some prominent Beirut institutions returned to programming on a reduced scale. Others have tried to balance core activities with relief work. In some cases, the lack of footfall has compelled some cultural workers to throw what limited resources they have into helping the displaced.

In March 2026, Barzakh, Ahla Fawda, Tiro Arts Association, Beirut Art Center, and Beit Aam were once again confronted with the question of how to operate during wartime. Despite their own precarious circumstances, all responded by turning their networks and resources over to relief work.


r-Chef Serena assistant in the Barzakh kitchen prepares an iftar meal for delivery March 2026 courtesy Khodor al Akhdar.jpg
An iftar meal of eggplant and rice from Chef Serena’s Barzakh kitchen, and her assistant in the Barzakh kitchen prepares an iftar meal for delivery, March 2026 (courtesy Khodor al Akhdar).

Culture to relief

Chef Serena and her assistant are lugging a huge pot of vegetable stew from the kitchen of Barzakh café to the seating area. It’s Ramadan, and the pot will soon be part of iftar at the nearby Capuchin school, which is once again serving as a shelter for displaced families.

Crisis is in Barzakh’s genes. The cultural center was launched in the wake of Lebanon’s 2019 uprising, in the midst of the country’s financial collapse. It is one of several spaces opened over the years by journalist and impresario Mansour Aziz — who co-founded the project Sanayeh House (2008-2019) and the residency program 3 Studios in 2009. A minute away, on the other side of Hamra Street, Barzakh has an older sibling in Mezyan, Aziz’s restaurant-music venue.

Barzakh boasts a wide-ranging trilingual multidisciplinary library-bookshop, complemented by a café-bar. In better times, the space hosts a lively program of film screenings, poetry readings and book launches, talks, and concerts. Such events, and the footfall that sustains the space, tend to wane during wars and other disruptions.

When Israel escalated its attacks in September 2024 and families from southern Lebanon and Dahyeh fled north, Barzakh manager Khodor al Akhdar announced on social media that he and his staff would make 100 meals a day for displaced people at their own expense.

The post was widely shared, and private citizens, Lebanese and non-Lebanese, sent assistance — foodstuffs or money. The 100 meals became 800, then swelled beyond 2,000 a day. Over the course of 2024-25, Akhdar collaborated with other relief initiatives, notably MSF (Doctors Without Borders), who financed the creation and operation of a kitchen in downtown Beirut’s L’azarieh complex, part of which had become an ad hoc shelter.

Barzakh returned to more normal operations during the lull following the Nov. 2024 ceasefire, when Israel’s airstrikes and assassinations continued to target southern Lebanon and the Beqaa. When full-scale war resumed, a number of previous donors encouraged Akhdar to resume relief work.

“I wasn’t sure,” he recalls. “It’s a global problem now and I didn’t know if people would donate or not.”

Sustained donations did come in but began to fall off after a couple of weeks. Barzakh turned over 1,300 iftar meals a day during Ramadan. Since Eid, the kitchen has returned to making 2,600 meals a day, lunch and dinner.

Akhdar and his staff are preparing meals for families from Dahyeh and the south sheltering in three schools — Hamra’s College Saint Francois and Evangelical schools and Umar Faroukh School in Tariq El Jdideh. They also try to fill occasional requests in Beirut and beyond.

“We send whole pots to each school,” Akhdar explains. “If we send packaged meals, it’s gonna cost me an extra $85 a day for containers. I can get meat with that money.”

This stage of the war came in the midst of a winter that’s been unusually wet and cool in Lebanon, making the displaced a little more miserable. So Akhdar has also been distributing other materials when needed.

“It’s cold so I’m buying blankets,” he says. “Some people found places to stay but they’re not equipped. So I’m giving them money to buy kitchen utensils or cooking gas. I’m doing a few food parcels, so families can cook their own meals.”

*

Today the prospects of Lebanon’s displaced look particularly bleak. The principal structural factor is the Lebanese state’s institutional frailty. Seldom if ever equipped with effective contingency plans or personnel to manage disasters — whether Beirut’s 2020 port blast or Israel’s periodic assaults — the state has been particularly enfeebled since the financial crisis that bankrupted most of the country in 2019 and still weighs heavy in 2026. 

Many displaced families who cannot be absorbed by the households of relatives and friends have likely ended up at schools — the default location for sheltering Lebanon’s unhoused — ensuring the disruption of Beirut’s education system. The state’s most conspicuous action in March was to open Camille Chamoun Stadium to displaced families so they could pitch their tents in a relatively covered area. 

Such gestures are insufficient. Since the first week of Israel’s assault, ad hoc settlements have bloomed. One lines the sidewalk outside the southern and eastern walls of Horsh Beirut (Beirut’s pine forest and largest public park) — just north of the evacuation zone — while some families are sheltering in the park itself. 

One sunny day, three weeks into the war, residents of a couple of tents were selling fruit on the sidewalk. Another fellow had improvised a fresh juice kiosk. For a time, there was a particularly picturesque cluster of tents and tarpaulin awnings before the western wall of the Résidence des Pins, the palatial Ottoman-era edifice that houses the French ambassador to Lebanon.

A timely resolution of this crisis seems unlikely. As this story is being written, the Israeli army continues razing all habitation and foliage adjacent the UN Blue Line (Lebanon’s de facto southern border) to clear its line of fire. Its political leadership has declared the army will re-occupy southern Lebanon until Hezbollah’s forces are destroyed, and that families will not be allowed to return before then. After the April 16 cessation was announced, the party asked the displaced not to return home until the situation is clarified.

As in Gaza, ethnic cleansing accompanies Israeli occupation, but in Lebanon the m.o. seeks to aggravate sectarian tensions more explicitly. Israel has assured residents of non-Shia Muslim villages in the south that evacuation orders do not apply to them but if they shelter displaced Shia families, they too will be targeted — a promise the Israelis have honored.

Though individual states have expressed outrage at Israeli-U.S. collusion in their illegal assaults on Iran and Lebanon, the consensus in the international community ranges from complicity to indifference.


Displaced youth in a workshop at Tiro’s cultural center in Tyre, March 2026 (courtesy Qassem Istanbouli).

Since 2024, Barzakh has been collaborating with the NGO Ahla Fawda. Activist Imane Assaf founded the organization around 2012, and in its early years it was known for the large-scale murals it commissioned from several young artists to adorn Beirut tower blocks, particularly around Hamra Street.

In the ensuing years, Ahla Fawda supplemented its arts activities with humanitarian and environmental projects. Since 2023, the NGO has been operating from its “EcoHub,” established on a plot of donated land on Emile Eddé Street, a few minutes’ walk from Barzakh. 

These days a relief kitchen has been set up beneath an awning. Chef Fouad and his assistant wear outfits with the logo of the We Deserve Better foundation emblazoned on their chests.

The EcoHub’s peacetime operating principle is to hitch assistance for dislocated people — a late-capitalist problem, aggravated by Lebanon’s 2019 collapse — to the worsening waste crisis. The hub’s cluster of buildings centers on the dukkan, a shop where people can access half-price tinned food and dry goods in exchange for recyclables. In wartime, foodstuffs are free, but displaced folks are encouraged to exchange recyclables for petty cash. 

Assaf’s staff now includes people displaced from Dahyeh. Near the dukkan, some volunteers are cleaning glass bottles for reuse and re-filling scrubbed bottles with cleaning products and cooking oil. Others are filling bags with dry goods — rice, lentils, sugar, salt, etc.

The hub also has a shop stocked with donated clothing. Every 15 days, registered adults are free to select two items for themselves and three for each child. There is a waste unit, where people bring their recyclables for weighing and exchange. There is an upcycling center for plastics, glass bottles, wooden pallets, and such. 

In addition, it hosts activities for children. Today a musician named Ziad has been showing displaced youngsters how lengths of PVC pipe (notoriously difficult to recycle) can be made into durable nay flutes. 

On this day, the Eco Hub exudes an incongruous air of hope. 

One of Assaf’s collaborators in this project is Design for Communities, an NGO based at AUB. “We support community projects by creating sustainable environments and with low-tech materials and limited budgeting,” explains architect Fatima Mourad.

Most of the structures here look improvised but for one stylish module that the NGO built for Eco Hub. “We have a full master plan for this lot,” Mourad says. “The aim is for the Hub to be a full community center.”


A displaced family prepares to bed down in the theatre of one of Tiro’s three cultural centers across Lebanon, March 2016. (Courtesy Qassem Istanbouli)
A displaced family prepares to bed down in the theatre of Tiro’s Tripoli cultural center, March 2026 (courtesy Qassem Istanbouli).

Space for the displaced 

At Hamra’s Le Colisee cinema this Sunday afternoon, Qassem Istanbouli and his colleagues are holding an acting workshop with a dozen or so children and teenagers from displaced families. Journalists are in the terraces and onstage, filming the improvised movement for overseas television and print media, and buttonholing Istanbouli whenever administrative demands pull him offstage.

The youngsters are preparing for a play entitled “Returning,” in which the players interpret their experiences of war and displacement on stage. Istanbouli debuted the play at Le Colisee on March 27, World Theatre Day, and it has been performed several times since. 

An actor-director, Istanbouli has been working to make the arts accessible to people outside Beirut since 2008. In 2014, he became the face of the Tiro Association for the Arts (TAA), an NGO dedicated to encouraging local communities to engage with arts and culture free of political and religious sectarianism.

Istanbouli has been reactivating derelict cinemas and retooling them as free cultural centers since 2014, when he relaunched Tyre’s Al-Hamra cinema (founded 1966). Today, the Colisee, Tyre’s Rivoli, and Empire cinema in the northern city of Tripoli, remain active. Collectively rebranded the Lebanese National Theater, they host workshops in handicrafts, storytelling, drawing, and theater. Tiro also brings its activities to outlying villages.

“We work a lot with kids, youth, and women,” Istanbouli says, nodding to the influence of the artist Bahiya Zayat, Tiro’s president. “We have a kiln in Tyre and many women are involved with making ceramics.”

Tiro also stages performances and hosts several festivals. In-house productions have been invited to European events and the NGO was shortlisted for the 2026 Mayor Pawel Adamowicz Prize, awarded for actively combatting intolerance, hate-speech, and xenophobia. 

In a region where diversity is under attack, Tiro’s ecumenicalism is notable. Several Syrians and Palestinians are involved in the Tripoli and Tyre spaces, Istanbouli says, and Le Colisee’s staff includes Syrians and Sudanese.

Istanbouli says about 100 people are sheltering in Tiro’s three spaces, and here too a big-tent inclusivity is evident. “We have families from Ethiopia and Bangladesh,” as well as Lebanon, Istanbouli says. “They have no options.”

Nodding to the young people onstage for the acting workshop, he notes that their families are from Sudan, Egypt, Palestine, Syria, and Lebanon. 

“In Beirut we have fewer displaced people than in Tripoli and Tyre,” he says. “Three families from the border region sleep in the loge [VIP boxes]. One of the sons is a barber, so he’s cutting the other residents’ hair. 

“We also have families in the theater,” he adds. “Individuals are sleeping backstage. Someone else sleeps in my office.” 

Istanbouli tends to use his trips between Tyre, Beirut, and Tripoli to run relief work errands. Holding a bag of pharmaceuticals, Istanbouli gestures to clothing donations neatly stacked in front of his desk, both destined for Tyre.

Many of Tiro’s peacetime partners are from overseas — like Drosos, UNESCO and UNIFIL. Since registering the cinemas as shelters, it has received some local assistance.

“Now we see some state support in Beirut and some NGOs bring food,” he says. “Not in Tyre, but we do get some support from the municipality. In Tripoli some NGOs are helping. If this war continues for a long time, we will need a lot of help from the community and the government.”


Orange water and oil, distilled from the groves of Darb El Sim during an event at Beirut Art Center, March 2026.
Orange water and oil, distilled from the groves of Darb El Sim during an event at Beirut Art Center, March 2026.

Before 2019, operations at Beirut Art Center were much like those of blue-chip institutions elsewhere in the world. The space in Jisr al-Wati hosted a wide range of contemporary art exhibitions featuring international, regional, and local artists. Its shows were complemented by a lively public program. BAC also commissioned work from local artists and staged a yearly emerging artists’ show.

When the Beirut port exploded in 2020, BAC opened its doors to the NGOs and grassroots initiatives working to secure and weatherproof the surviving portside structures. In the years before Israeli’s Gaza genocide and in the lull following the 2023-25 phase of the current conflict, the team has staged several significant exhibitions featuring Lebanese and regional artists. Such programming is now paused.

BAC’s operations head Boulos Saad says it made sense for the center to turn over much of its space to the relief effort. “As BAC is a big industrial space that’s easily accessible and in a safe area,” he says, “we decided our first responsibility is to support getting emergency materials to displaced people.”

BAC now has several organizations and initiatives using its spaces as a logistics hub. 

The sewing machines of Deep Sleep, a family-run company specializing in high-end pillows and beanbag furniture, have taken over the back end of the central hall. Their volunteer initiative Pillows of Hope is producing handmade pillows for displaced families — useful when you’ve been bereft of all your furniture.

On this day, three weeks into the conflict, the front end of the central hall has been stacked high with an assortment of materials, including duvets and mattresses. These are being disbursed by Beit Aam, a community cultural space founded in 2023. Based in Badaro, southeast Beirut, it hosts associations concerned with social and environmental justice.

“Badaro is quite close to the evacuation area,” says a Beit Aam member who requested anonymity, “and we needed a warehouse. Also, we have some issues with our landlord about storing stuff for displaced people.”

She says Beit Aam has been at this work since before the November 2024 ceasefire. “We also helped people transition — returning to their homes and supporting them with their basic needs,” she says.  

“We provide anything that comes in — food parcels, basic hygiene kits, hygiene for women, mattresses, blankets, pillows, diapers, baby milk. For Eid, we distributed around 700 boxes of sweets.”

During the early years of the collapse and COVID, 2019-2022, BAC’s team members chose to prioritize supporting the work of artists and arts writers over in-person exhibitions. Ibrahim Nehme, BAC’s current director, and his team are now following a similar course.

The center’s artist residency program, “Room for Practice,” will be open indefinitely so the six resident artists can mingle and collaborate with displaced artists and anyone else needing a space to work, or hold meetings. 

Environmental themes, catastrophic and otherwise, are pervasive these days and BAC plans to put on a series of events inspired by the land that has endured so much violence during Israel’s decades of air assaults, invasion, and occupation. 

Staged during Eid (March 19 and 20), the first of these events was inspired by the disruption of the yearly distillation of orange blossoms. Nathalie Abikhalil oversaw the distillation, which drew on flowers from orange groves in the southern town of Darb El Sim and the Shouf town of Jadra. The orange blossom water was distributed among displaced families who ordinarily distill for their own home.

This project is highly gestural — not at act of provisioning but an expression of solidarity. The second day of the event was dedicated to stories arising from families’ experience of this traditional practice. 

One dislocation after another

The weight of this displacement crisis is compounded by the fact that the violence of 2023-24 didn’t end in the south and east of the country. 

“I was living in Braikeh [on the Litani River],” the Eco Hub’s Fatima Mourad says of the 2025 lull. “You’d be afraid that the car in front of you is gonna be bombed, or the one behind you, or else a road, or a building. You don’t know.”

When the conflict escalated again in March, the prevailing sense around Beirut was one of exhaustion. 

“This is something we Lebanese always do. ‘Okay, the war’s finished. Go back to life,’” Akhdar says. “At Barzakh we were trying to build the business again, but we were still processing. Most of us lost people we know, but you didn’t have time to grieve. You really need this time.”

Some cultural institutions that stepped up to assist artists and dislocated communities — after the 2019 collapse, after the port blast and during the first phase of this war — have not been active since the 2024 “ceasefire.” 

A staffer at one organization that threw itself into relief work in 2024 laid out the stark realities of the current climate. “We put in lots of effort,” providing meals for displaced families, she recalls. “After the financial loss of closing for two months, it took us almost a year to get back to a place where we can sustain ourselves as a cultural institution that gets no external support. Then the war started again.” 

For Akhdar, the differences between the relief efforts of 2023-24 and those of 2026 are evident.

“Most of the displaced people from Dahyeh followed the evacuation route that the Israeli army gave them and went to the mountains. Those people are getting next to nothing because most of the relief work — the NGOs, the kitchens, the personal initiatives — is happening in Beirut.”

He’s received several calls asking for blankets for people sheltering in Mount Lebanon. 

“The initiatives are also less than before,” Akhdar adds. “Many people who hosted displaced people before don’t want to do so now, either for political reasons or because they are just drained.”

“In 2024, it was chaos. We made meals for anyone who asked, so the staff were really exhausted. I don’t want to make that mistake again.

“Nobody knows how long this war’s gonna continue. I have to manage the funding that I’m getting. If I spend everything now, and the war continues for months, I have nothing to give anymore.” 

Conflict increases costs. “I just bought 1,000 blankets,” Akhdar says. “Each blanket is $12.50. That’s $12,500. In 2023-24 a blanket would cost $7-8. Lebanon’s economic problems are now worldwide, so prices will skyrocket.”

Indeed, since oil and gas flows through the Strait of Hormuz entered the news feed, EDL (the state electrical utility, whose stations are oil-fired) has returned to rationing. Those who count on freelance generator operators to take up the slack face higher rates. 

Assaf remains optimistic but Ahla Fawda’s expenses have increased. “We’re paying not less than $1,500 a day to resupply,” she says. “It’s more expensive but we are lucky that there are people who trust our operation and who donate. People’s kindness is Lebanon’s strength, I think.”

Some give. Others take. Relief workers reckon that Beirut rents have trebled since the conflict resumed.

Launched when the war broke out in 2023, the initiative Saqef Wahad (One Roof) was created to provide safe places for displaced families, compiling a contact list of landowners wanting to rent and families in need. Because NGOs are focusing on the big shelters, Saqef Wahad, now based in BAC, is distributing in-kind donations from other organizations and individuals among families sheltering in houses around Lebanon.

Saqef Wahad is no longer trying to find accommodations for the displaced because, for diverse reasons — ranging from insecurity and fear to opportunism — the supply of affordable locations has evaporated.

“People are becoming very greedy,” says Reem, a Saqef Wahad volunteer, “and the government doesn’t do anything to restrict or cap rents. 

“A small, unfurnished room is being rented for $600-700,” she says. “Flats that used to cost $400 a month are now going for $1,200. Some families are sheltering in natour [concierge] rooms.”

The relief effort has been more challenging this time, she says, because of the lingering financial crisis. Suspicious of those seeking contributions, people are donating less, and volunteers themselves are strapped for cash.

Since hostilities resumed, negative attitudes towards the displaced have been evident among some Lebanese, which Reem finds ridiculous.

“For years these people have tried to stand their ground, to resist, to defend their land, their homes, their rights, their kids, their animals,” she says. “I don’t understand why others choose not to see this.”

“There’s a rejection this time,” Assaf reflects. “Last time, people’s attitude was, ‘We will help you. You’re one of us. We’re one community.’ This time it’s like, ‘Why did you bring this on us?’” 

This rejection stems, in part, from emotional and financial exhaustion among host communities, as well as gouging. It also derives from Lebanese sectarianism, and the brazen energy with which Israel adjusts its tactics to take advantage of its adversaries’ weaknesses. 

During the 2006 war, for instance, airstrikes were generally confined to regions assumed to host Hezbollah infrastructure — predominantly Shia Muslim southern Lebanon, Beqaa, and Dahyeh. Since attacks commenced in 2023, evacuation orders have been used to terrorize displaced and host communities alike as Israel has targeted displaced families all over Lebanon — including largely Christian north Lebanon, central Beirut’s mixed neighborhoods, and tents pitched at the seafront.

Military spokesmen claim that they are liquidating Hezbollah operatives, but these strikes more effectively target the anxieties and chauvinism of the country’s fragile, multifaceted society. It is an attack on Lebanon’s diversity.

“Many people are afraid,” says Akhdar, nodding in the direction of Mezyan. Earlier that day, the entire building had been shuttered because Israel had warned a sarraf (money changer), who’d recently opened an outlet next door to the restaurant, that his businesses would be targeted. 

“That’s a minute’s walk from here,” he says. 

“Many initiatives who led in 2024 had spaces where they could organize,” says BAC’s operations’ manger. “Now they’re facing difficulty finding spaces for logistics. Landowners have become afraid that if you’re receiving donations, you may become a target.”

Lebanon’s displaced are also in a different place. Assaf finds people more dispirited than in 2023-4.

“Last time they felt they would return,” she recalls, “that they would win this war. This time, there’s a real fear of occupation.

“I had some kids who volunteered with me last year. One of them, a young lady from the south, and a young man from the suburbs.”

“They lost everything last time, but they kept up their spirit,” Assaf smiles. “Even after they lost their scholarships [when Trump gutted USAID], it didn’t break them. This time, they’re here. They’re helping. But the mood, the atmosphere, is completely different. It’s one of defeat.”

Assaf says hello to a volunteer, then sighs. “Displaced people hear other Lebanese demean them and they’re hurt,” she says. “A lot of people who came are choosing to go back, even though it’s terribly dangerous. But they feel better off risking death rather than being rejected and humiliated.”

“I stayed with my family in the south for a couple of days when [the war] started again,” says Mourad. “I was crying when I left. I felt like I’m not coming back. 

“That’s why some people don’t want to leave the south. They feel that if they leave, they’re not going to come back. We’re not going to leave our houses, our land, even if we have to die in our homes.”

By the third week of the conflict, donations to Barzakh had dropped off significantly. “I’ll be honest,” says Akhdar. “I’ll manage the funds as best I can, but the minute I’m out of funds, I’m gonna stop.”

“I have a place I need to survive. In these conditions, it won’t last more than two months. There’s no business. The number of people coming is less every day. People are worried.” 

 

To participate in relief efforts, donate to any of the following:
Barzakh • Ahla Fawda  Tiro Arts Association  Beirut Art Center  Beit Aam

 

Jim Quilty

Jim Quilty is a Beirut-based writer, journalist, film critic and editor. He’s written about the cinema, contemporary art and cultural production of the Middle East and North Africa for two decades. He edited and contributed to the arts and culture pages of... Read more

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How Much Do We Miss Umm Khulthum?

7 NOVEMBER 2025 • By Amal Ghandour
How Much Do We Miss Umm Khulthum?
Centerpiece

The Grammar of Power: On Journalism, Grief, and the Stories That Break Us

7 NOVEMBER 2025 • By Adam Makary
The Grammar of Power: On Journalism, Grief, and the Stories That Break Us
Fiction

Sultana to the Rescue

7 NOVEMBER 2025 • By MK Harb
Sultana to the Rescue
Essays

The Absent Homeland

7 NOVEMBER 2025 • By Maysaa Alajjan
The Absent Homeland
Columns

Dear Souseh: Stuck Between Families

24 OCTOBER 2025 • By Lina Mounzer
Dear Souseh: Stuck Between Families
Essays

Lament For My Dear Cousin and Friend in Tulkarm

3 OCTOBER 2025 • By Thoth
Lament For My Dear Cousin and Friend in Tulkarm
Uncategorized

Reading the Landscape: Cultural Clues and Regime Messages in Iran

12 SEPTEMBER 2025 • By Raha Nik-Andish
Reading the Landscape: Cultural Clues and Regime Messages in Iran
Art & Photography

Ali Cherri’s show at Marseille’s [mac] Is Watching You

15 AUGUST 2025 • By Naima Morelli
Ali Cherri’s show at Marseille’s [mac] Is Watching You
Art

Architectural Biennale Confronts Brutality of Climate Change

1 AUGUST 2025 • By Iason Athanasiadis
Architectural Biennale Confronts Brutality of Climate Change
Essays

Unwritten Stories from Palestine

4 JULY 2025 • By Thoth
Unwritten Stories from Palestine
Essays

Life Under the Shadow of Missiles: the View From Iran

20 JUNE 2025 • By Amir
Life Under the Shadow of Missiles: the View From Iran
Film

From A World Not Ours to a Land Unknown

13 JUNE 2025 • By Jim Quilty
From A World Not Ours to a <em>Land Unknown</em>
Essays

Imagining Ghanem—My Return to Lebanon

6 JUNE 2025 • By Amelia Izmanki
Imagining Ghanem—My Return to Lebanon
Book Reviews

An Intimate History of Violence: Beirut Under Siege in Nejmeh Khalil Habib’s A Spring that Did Not Blossom 

30 MAY 2025 • By Rebecca Ruth Gould
An Intimate History of Violence: Beirut Under Siege in Nejmeh Khalil Habib’s <em>A Spring that Did Not Blossom</em> 
Arabic

Jawdat Fakreddine Presents Three Poems

20 MAY 2025 • By Jawdat Fakhreddine, Huda J. Fakhreddine
Jawdat Fakreddine Presents Three Poems
Art

Going Home to South Lebanon: Abdel Hamid Baalbaki

2 MAY 2025 • By Karina El Helou
Going Home to South Lebanon: Abdel Hamid Baalbaki
Art

Neither Here Nor There

2 MAY 2025 • By Myriam Cohenca
Neither Here Nor There
Essays

A Letter To My Cruel Lover: Tripoli

2 MAY 2025 • By Lara Kassem
A Letter To My Cruel Lover: Tripoli
Essays

Looking for a Job, Living and Dying in Iran: The Logistics of Going Back

2 MAY 2025 • By Raha Nik-Andish
Looking for a Job, Living and Dying in Iran: The Logistics of Going Back
Art

Between Belief and Doubt: Ramzi Mallat’s Suspended Disbelief

11 APRIL 2025 • By Marta Mendes
Between Belief and Doubt: Ramzi Mallat’s Suspended Disbelief
Film

Gaza, Sudan, Israel/Palestine Documentaries Show in Thessaloniki

28 MARCH 2025 • By Iason Athanasiadis
Gaza, Sudan, Israel/Palestine Documentaries Show in Thessaloniki
Book Reviews

Memories of Palestine through Contemporary Media

7 FEBRUARY 2025 • By Malu Halasa
Memories of Palestine through Contemporary Media
Essays

A Fragile Ceasefire as Lebanon Survives, Traumatized

29 NOVEMBER 2024 • By Tarek Abi Samra, Lina Mounzer
A Fragile Ceasefire as Lebanon Survives, Traumatized
Essays

A Jewish Meditation on the Palestinian Genocide

15 NOVEMBER 2024 • By Sheryl Ono
A Jewish Meditation on the Palestinian Genocide
Editorial

The Editor’s Letter Following the US 2024 Presidential Election

8 NOVEMBER 2024 • By Jordan Elgrably
The Editor’s Letter Following the US 2024 Presidential Election
Film

The Haunting Reality of Beirut, My City

8 NOVEMBER 2024 • By Roger Assaf, Zeina Hashem Beck
The Haunting Reality of <em>Beirut, My City</em>
Art & Photography

Beyond Our Gaze: Rethinking Animals in Contemporary Art

1 NOVEMBER 2024 • By Naima Morelli
Beyond Our Gaze: Rethinking Animals in Contemporary Art
Art & Photography

The Palestinian Gazelle

1 NOVEMBER 2024 • By Manal Mahamid
The Palestinian Gazelle
Opinion

Should a Climate-Destroying Dictatorship Host a Climate-Saving Conference?

25 OCTOBER 2024 • By Lucine Kasbarian
Should a Climate-Destroying Dictatorship Host a Climate-Saving Conference?
Book Reviews

The Walls Have Eyes—Surveillance in the Algorithm Age

18 OCTOBER 2024 • By Iason Athanasiadis
<em>The Walls Have Eyes</em>—Surveillance in the Algorithm Age
TMR 45 • From Here, One Year On

Witnessing Catastrophe: a Painter in Lebanon

4 OCTOBER 2024 • By Ziad Suidan
Witnessing Catastrophe: a Painter in Lebanon
Opinion

Everything Has Changed, Nothing Has Changed

4 OCTOBER 2024 • By Amal Ghandour
Everything Has Changed, Nothing Has Changed
Fiction

The Last Millefeuille in Beirut

4 OCTOBER 2024 • By MK Harb
The Last Millefeuille in Beirut
Essays

Meta’s Community Standards as a Tool of Digital Settler Colonialism

6 SEPTEMBER 2024 • By Omar Zahzah
Meta’s Community Standards as a Tool of Digital Settler Colonialism
Opinion

Lebanon’s Holy Gatekeepers of Free Speech

6 SEPTEMBER 2024 • By Joumana Haddad
Lebanon’s Holy Gatekeepers of Free Speech
Essays

Meditations on Palestinian Exile and Return

16 AUGUST 2024 • By Dana El Saleh
Meditations on Palestinian Exile and Return
Book Reviews

Nabil Kanso: Lebanon and the Split of Life—a Review

2 AUGUST 2024 • By Sophie Kazan Makhlouf
Nabil Kanso: <em>Lebanon and the Split of Life</em>—a Review
Books

On The Anthropologists—an interview with Aysegül Savas

26 JULY 2024 • By Amy Omar
On <em>The Anthropologists</em>—an interview with Aysegül Savas
Book Reviews

Israel’s Black Panthers by Asaf Elia-Shalev—a Review

19 JULY 2024 • By Ilan Benattar
<em>Israel’s Black Panthers</em> by Asaf Elia-Shalev—a Review
Books

Ripped from Memoirs of a Lebanese Policeman

5 JULY 2024 • By Fawzi Zabyan, Lina Mounzer
Ripped from <em>Memoirs of a Lebanese Policeman</em>
Columns

Creating Community with Community Theatre

21 JUNE 2024 • By Victoria Lupton
Creating Community with Community Theatre
Book Reviews

Is Amin Maalouf’s Latest Novel, On the Isle of Antioch, a Parody?

14 JUNE 2024 • By Farah-Silvana Kanaan
Is Amin Maalouf’s Latest Novel, <em>On the Isle of Antioch</em>, a Parody?
Centerpiece

Dare Not Speak—a One-Act Play

7 JUNE 2024 • By Hassan Abdulrazzak
<em>Dare Not Speak</em>—a One-Act Play
Essays

Wajdi Mouawad’s “Controversial” Wedding Day

7 JUNE 2024 • By Elie Chalala
Wajdi Mouawad’s “Controversial” <em>Wedding Day</em>
Theatre

What Kind Of Liar Am I?—a Short Play

7 JUNE 2024 • By Mona Mansour
<em>What Kind Of Liar Am I?</em>—a Short Play
Essays

Omar Naim Exclusive: Two Films on Beirut & Theatre

7 JUNE 2024 • By Omar Naim
Omar Naim Exclusive: Two Films on Beirut & Theatre
Books

Palestine, Political Theatre & the Performance of Queer Solidarity in Jean Genet’s Prisoner of Love

7 JUNE 2024 • By Saleem Haddad
Palestine, Political Theatre & the Performance of Queer Solidarity in Jean Genet’s <em>Prisoner of Love</em>
Fiction

“I, Mariam”—a story by Joumana Haddad

26 APRIL 2024 • By Joumana Haddad
“I, Mariam”—a story by Joumana Haddad
Opinion

Equating Critique of Israel with Antisemitism, US Academics are Being Silenced

12 APRIL 2024 • By Maura Finkelstein
Equating Critique of Israel with Antisemitism, US Academics are Being Silenced
Art

Paris, Abstraction and the Art of Yvette Achkar

1 APRIL 2024 • By Arie Amaya-Akkermans
Paris, Abstraction and the Art of Yvette Achkar
Art & Photography

Will Artists Against Genocide Boycott the Venice Biennale?

18 MARCH 2024 • By Hadani Ditmars
Will Artists Against Genocide Boycott the Venice Biennale?
Essays

Israel’s Environmental and Economic Warfare on Lebanon

3 MARCH 2024 • By Michelle Eid
Israel’s Environmental and Economic Warfare on Lebanon
Columns

Genocide: “That bell can’t be unrung. That thought can’t be unthunk.”

3 MARCH 2024 • By Amal Ghandour
Genocide: “That bell can’t be unrung. That thought can’t be unthunk.”
Featured article

Israel-Palestine: Peace Under Occupation?

29 JANUARY 2024 • By Laëtitia Soula
Israel-Palestine: Peace Under Occupation?
Columns

Messages From Gaza Now

11 DECEMBER 2023 • By Hossam Madhoun
Messages From Gaza Now
TMR 37 • Endings & Beginnings

“The Summer They Heard Music”—a short story by MK Harb

3 DECEMBER 2023 • By MK Harb
“The Summer They Heard Music”—a short story by MK Harb
Fiction

“I, Hanan”—a Gazan tale of survival by Joumana Haddad

3 DECEMBER 2023 • By Joumana Haddad
“I, Hanan”—a Gazan tale of survival by Joumana Haddad
Opinion

Gaza vs. Mosul from a Medical and Humanitarian Standpoint

27 NOVEMBER 2023 • By Ahmed Twaij
Gaza vs. Mosul from a Medical and Humanitarian Standpoint
Art & Photography

Palestinian Artists & Anti-War Supporters of Gaza Cancelled

27 NOVEMBER 2023 • By Nada Ghosn
Palestinian Artists & Anti-War Supporters of Gaza Cancelled
Book Reviews

The Fiction of Palestine’s Ghassan Zaqtan

13 NOVEMBER 2023 • By Cory Oldweiler
The Fiction of Palestine’s Ghassan Zaqtan
Art & Photography

War and Art: A Lebanese Photographer and His Protégés

13 NOVEMBER 2023 • By Nicole Hamouche
War and Art: A Lebanese Photographer and His Protégés
Opinion

Beautiful October 7th Art Belies the Horrors of War

13 NOVEMBER 2023 • By Mark LeVine
Beautiful October 7th Art Belies the Horrors of War
Featured Artist

Mohamed Al Mufti, Architect and Painter of Our Time

5 NOVEMBER 2023 • By Nicole Hamouche
Mohamed Al Mufti, Architect and Painter of Our Time
Book Reviews

The Refugee Ocean—An Intriguing Premise

30 OCTOBER 2023 • By Natasha Tynes
<em>The Refugee Ocean</em>—An Intriguing Premise
Islam

October 7 and the First Days of the War

23 OCTOBER 2023 • By Robin Yassin-Kassab
October 7 and the First Days of the War
Editorial

Palestine and the Unspeakable

16 OCTOBER 2023 • By Lina Mounzer
Palestine and the Unspeakable
Fiction

I, SOUAD or the Six Deaths of a Refugee From Aleppo

9 OCTOBER 2023 • By Joumana Haddad
I, SOUAD or the Six Deaths of a Refugee From Aleppo
Theatre

Hartaqât: Heresies of a World with Policed Borders

9 OCTOBER 2023 • By Nada Ghosn
<em>Hartaqât</em>: Heresies of a World with Policed Borders
Theatre

Lebanese Thespian Aida Sabra Blossoms in International Career

9 OCTOBER 2023 • By Nada Ghosn
Lebanese Thespian Aida Sabra Blossoms in International Career
Fiction

“Kaleidoscope: In Pursuit of the Real in a Virtual World”—fiction from Dina Abou Salem

1 OCTOBER 2023 • By Dina Abou Salem
“Kaleidoscope: In Pursuit of the Real in a Virtual World”—fiction from Dina Abou Salem
Amazigh

World Picks: Festival Arabesques in Montpellier

4 SEPTEMBER 2023 • By TMR
World Picks: Festival Arabesques in Montpellier
Books

“Sadness in My Heart”—a story by Hilal Chouman

3 SEPTEMBER 2023 • By Hilal Chouman, Nashwa Nasreldin
“Sadness in My Heart”—a story by Hilal Chouman
Book Reviews

Laila Halaby’s The Weight of Ghosts is a Haunting Memoir

28 AUGUST 2023 • By Thérèse Soukar Chehade
Laila Halaby’s <em>The Weight of Ghosts</em> is a Haunting Memoir
Book Reviews

What’s the Solution for Jews and Palestine in the Face of Apartheid Zionism?

21 AUGUST 2023 • By Jonathan Ofir
What’s the Solution for Jews and Palestine in the Face of Apartheid Zionism?
Opinion

The Middle East is Once Again West Asia

14 AUGUST 2023 • By Chas Freeman, Jr.
The Middle East is Once Again West Asia
Book Reviews

Ilan Pappé on Tahrir Hamdi’s Imagining Palestine

7 AUGUST 2023 • By Ilan Pappé
Ilan Pappé on Tahrir Hamdi’s <em> Imagining Palestine</em>
Film

The Soil and the Sea: The Revolutionary Act of Remembering

7 AUGUST 2023 • By Farah-Silvana Kanaan
<em>The Soil and the Sea</em>: The Revolutionary Act of Remembering
Opinion

The End of the Palestinian State? Jenin Is Only the Beginning

10 JULY 2023 • By Yousef M. Aljamal
The End of the Palestinian State? Jenin Is Only the Beginning
Arabic

Inside the Giant Fish—excerpt from Rawand Issa’s graphic novel

2 JULY 2023 • By Rawand Issa, Amy Chiniara
Inside the Giant Fish—excerpt from Rawand Issa’s graphic novel
Essays

Alien Entities in the Desert

4 JUNE 2023 • By Dror Shohet
Alien Entities in the Desert
Featured Artist

Nasrin Abu Baker: The Markaz Review Featured Artist, June 2023

4 JUNE 2023 • By TMR
Nasrin Abu Baker: The Markaz Review Featured Artist, June 2023
Islam

From Pawns to Global Powers: Middle East Nations Strike Back

29 MAY 2023 • By Chas Freeman, Jr.
From Pawns to Global Powers: Middle East Nations Strike Back
Book Reviews

How Bethlehem Evolved From Jerusalem’s Sleepy Backwater to a Global Town

15 MAY 2023 • By Karim Kattan
How Bethlehem Evolved From Jerusalem’s Sleepy Backwater to a Global Town
TMR Conversations

TMR CONVERSATIONS: Amal Ghandour Interviews Raja Shehadeh

11 MAY 2023 • By Amal Ghandour, Raja Shehadeh
TMR CONVERSATIONS: Amal Ghandour Interviews Raja Shehadeh
Beirut

The Saga of Mounia Akl’s Costa Brava, Lebanon

1 MAY 2023 • By Meera Santhanam
The Saga of Mounia Akl’s <em>Costa Brava, Lebanon</em>
Film Reviews

Yallah Gaza! Presents the Case for Gazan Humanity

10 APRIL 2023 • By Karim Goury
<em>Yallah Gaza!</em> Presents the Case for Gazan Humanity
Beirut

Tel Aviv-Beirut, a Film on War, Love & Borders

20 MARCH 2023 • By Karim Goury
<em>Tel Aviv-Beirut</em>, a Film on War, Love & Borders
Beirut

Interview with Michale Boganim, Director of Tel Aviv-Beirut

20 MARCH 2023 • By Karim Goury
Interview with Michale Boganim, Director of <em>Tel Aviv-Beirut</em>
Book Reviews

In Search of Fathers: Raja Shehadeh’s Palestinian Memoir

13 MARCH 2023 • By Amal Ghandour
In Search of Fathers: Raja Shehadeh’s Palestinian Memoir
Fiction

“Counter Strike”—a story by MK HARB

5 MARCH 2023 • By MK Harb
“Counter Strike”—a story by MK HARB
Fiction

“Mother Remembered”—Fiction by Samir El-Youssef

5 MARCH 2023 • By Samir El-Youssef
“Mother Remembered”—Fiction by Samir El-Youssef
Essays

Home Under Siege: a Palestine Photo Essay

5 MARCH 2023 • By Anam Raheem
Home Under Siege: a Palestine Photo Essay
Art & Photography

Becoming Palestine Imagines a Liberated Future

27 FEBRUARY 2023 • By Katie Logan
<em>Becoming Palestine</em> Imagines a Liberated Future
Beirut

The Curious Case of Middle Lebanon

13 FEBRUARY 2023 • By Amal Ghandour
The Curious Case of Middle Lebanon
Art

The Creative Resistance in Palestinian Art

26 DECEMBER 2022 • By Malu Halasa
The Creative Resistance in Palestinian Art
Essays

Conflict and Freedom in Palestine, a Trip Down Memory Lane

15 DECEMBER 2022 • By Eman Quotah
Columns

Sudden Journeys: Israel’s Intimate Separations—Part 3

5 DECEMBER 2022 • By Jenine Abboushi
Sudden Journeys: Israel’s Intimate Separations—Part 3
Book Reviews

Fida Jiryis on Palestine in Stranger in My Own Land

28 NOVEMBER 2022 • By Diana Buttu
Fida Jiryis on Palestine in <em>Stranger in My Own Land</em>
Columns

For Electronica Artist Hadi Zeidan, Dance Clubs are Analogous to Churches

24 OCTOBER 2022 • By Melissa Chemam
For Electronica Artist Hadi Zeidan, Dance Clubs are Analogous to Churches
Fiction

“Ride On, Shooting Star”—fiction from May Haddad

15 OCTOBER 2022 • By May Haddad
“Ride On, Shooting Star”—fiction from May Haddad
Columns

Sudden Journeys: Israel’s Intimate Separations—Part 1

26 SEPTEMBER 2022 • By Jenine Abboushi
Sudden Journeys: Israel’s Intimate Separations—Part 1
Essays

Phoneless in Filthy Berlin

15 SEPTEMBER 2022 • By Maisan Hamdan, Rana Asfour
Phoneless in Filthy Berlin
Film

The Mystery of Tycoon Michel Baida in Old Arab Berlin

15 SEPTEMBER 2022 • By Irit Neidhardt
The Mystery of Tycoon Michel Baida in Old Arab Berlin
Columns

Unapologetic Palestinians, Reactionary Germans

15 SEPTEMBER 2022 • By Abir Kopty
Unapologetic Palestinians, Reactionary Germans
Art & Photography

Photographer Mohamed Badarne (Palestine) and his U48 Project

15 SEPTEMBER 2022 • By Viola Shafik
Photographer Mohamed Badarne (Palestine) and his U48 Project
Art & Photography

16 Formidable Lebanese Photographers in an Abbey

5 SEPTEMBER 2022 • By Nada Ghosn
16 Formidable Lebanese Photographers in an Abbey
Opinion

Attack on Salman Rushdie is Shocking Tip of the Iceberg

15 AUGUST 2022 • By Jordan Elgrably
Attack on Salman Rushdie is Shocking Tip of the Iceberg
Music Reviews

Hot Summer Playlist: “Diaspora Dreams” Drops

8 AUGUST 2022 • By Mischa Geracoulis
Hot Summer Playlist: “Diaspora Dreams” Drops
Editorial

Editorial: Is the World Driving Us Mad?

15 JULY 2022 • By TMR
Editorial: Is the World Driving Us Mad?
Book Reviews

Leaving One’s Country in Mai Al-Nakib’s “An Unlasting Home”

27 JUNE 2022 • By Rana Asfour
Leaving One’s Country in Mai Al-Nakib’s “An Unlasting Home”
Columns

Why I left Lebanon and Became a Transitional Citizen

27 JUNE 2022 • By Myriam Dalal
Why I left Lebanon and Became a Transitional Citizen
Featured excerpt

Joumana Haddad: “Victim #232”

15 JUNE 2022 • By Joumana Haddad, Rana Asfour
Joumana Haddad: “Victim #232”
Opinion

Israel and Palestine: Focus on the Problem, Not the Solution

30 MAY 2022 • By Mark Habeeb
Israel and Palestine: Focus on the Problem, Not the Solution
Book Reviews

Fragmented Love in Alison Glick’s “The Other End of the Sea”

16 MAY 2022 • By Nora Lester Murad
Fragmented Love in Alison Glick’s “The Other End of the Sea”
Essays

We, Palestinian Israelis

15 MAY 2022 • By Jenine Abboushi
We, Palestinian Israelis
Book Reviews

In East Jerusalem, Palestinian Youth Struggle for Freedom

15 MAY 2022 • By Mischa Geracoulis
Featured excerpt

Palestinian and Israeli: Excerpt from “Haifa Fragments”

15 MAY 2022 • By khulud khamis
Palestinian and Israeli: Excerpt from “Haifa Fragments”
Latest Reviews

Palestinian Filmmaker, Israeli Passport

15 MAY 2022 • By Jordan Elgrably
Palestinian Filmmaker, Israeli Passport
Opinion

Palestinians and Israelis Will Commemorate the Nakba Together

25 APRIL 2022 • By Rana Salman, Yonatan Gher
Palestinians and Israelis Will Commemorate the Nakba Together
Beirut

Fairouz is the Voice of Lebanon, Symbol of Hope in a Weary Land

25 APRIL 2022 • By Melissa Chemam
Fairouz is the Voice of Lebanon, Symbol of Hope in a Weary Land
Film Reviews

Palestine in Pieces: Hany Abu-Assad’s Huda’s Salon

21 MARCH 2022 • By Jordan Elgrably
Palestine in Pieces: Hany Abu-Assad’s <em>Huda’s Salon</em>
Opinion

U.S. Sanctions Russia for its Invasion of Ukraine; Now Sanction Israel for its Occupation of Palestine

21 MARCH 2022 • By Yossi Khen, Jeff Warner
U.S. Sanctions Russia for its Invasion of Ukraine; Now Sanction Israel for its Occupation of Palestine
Columns

Music in the Middle East: Bring Back Peace

21 MARCH 2022 • By Melissa Chemam
Music in the Middle East: Bring Back Peace
Essays

“Gluttony” from Abbas Beydoun’s “Frankenstein’s Mirrors”

15 MARCH 2022 • By Abbas Baydoun, Lily Sadowsky
“Gluttony” from Abbas Beydoun’s “Frankenstein’s Mirrors”
Book Reviews

Temptations of the Imagination: how Jana Elhassan and Samar Yazbek transmogrify the world

10 JANUARY 2022 • By Rana Asfour
Temptations of the Imagination: how Jana Elhassan and Samar Yazbek transmogrify the world
Columns

My Lebanese Landlord, Lebanese Bankdits, and German Racism

15 DECEMBER 2021 • By Tariq Mehmood
My Lebanese Landlord, Lebanese Bankdits, and German Racism
Fiction

Three Levantine Tales

15 DECEMBER 2021 • By Nouha Homad
Three Levantine Tales
Comix

How to Hide in Lebanon as a Western Foreigner

15 DECEMBER 2021 • By Nadiyah Abdullatif, Anam Zafar
How to Hide in Lebanon as a Western Foreigner
Essays

Syria Through British Eyes

29 NOVEMBER 2021 • By Rana Haddad
Syria Through British Eyes
Art & Photography

Hayy Jameel — Jeddah’s Sparkling New Center for the Arts

22 NOVEMBER 2021 • By TMR
Hayy Jameel — Jeddah’s Sparkling New Center for the Arts
Art

Etel Adnan’s Sun and Sea: In Remembrance

19 NOVEMBER 2021 • By Arie Amaya-Akkermans
Etel Adnan’s Sun and Sea: In Remembrance
Columns

Burning Forests, Burning Nations

15 NOVEMBER 2021 • By Hadani Ditmars
Burning Forests, Burning Nations
Book Reviews

Diary of the Collapse—Charif Majdalani on Lebanon’s Trials by Fire

15 NOVEMBER 2021 • By A.J. Naddaff
<em>Diary of the Collapse</em>—Charif Majdalani on Lebanon’s Trials by Fire
Book Reviews

The Vanishing: Are Arab Christians an Endangered Minority?

15 NOVEMBER 2021 • By Hadani Ditmars
The Vanishing: Are Arab Christians an Endangered Minority?
Film Reviews

Victims of Discrimination Never Forget in The Forgotten Ones

1 NOVEMBER 2021 • By Jordan Elgrably
Victims of Discrimination Never Forget in <em>The Forgotten Ones</em>
Featured excerpt

Memoirs of a Militant, My Years in the Khiam Women’s Prison

15 OCTOBER 2021 • By Nawal Qasim Baidoun
Memoirs of a Militant, My Years in the Khiam Women’s Prison
Film Reviews

Will Love Triumph in the Midst of Gaza’s 14-Year Siege?

11 OCTOBER 2021 • By Jordan Elgrably
Will Love Triumph in the Midst of Gaza’s 14-Year Siege?
Editorial

Why COMIX? An Emerging Medium of Writing the Middle East and North Africa

15 AUGUST 2021 • By Aomar Boum
Why COMIX? An Emerging Medium of Writing the Middle East and North Africa
Latest Reviews

Rebellion Resurrected: The Will of Youth Against History

15 AUGUST 2021 • By George Jad Khoury
Rebellion Resurrected: The Will of Youth Against History
Latest Reviews

Women Comic Artists, from Afghanistan to Morocco

15 AUGUST 2021 • By Sherine Hamdy
Women Comic Artists, from Afghanistan to Morocco
Weekly

World Picks: August 2021

12 AUGUST 2021 • By Lawrence Joffe
World Picks: August 2021
Columns

Remember 18:07 and Light a Flame for Beirut

4 AUGUST 2021 • By Jordan Elgrably
Remember 18:07 and Light a Flame for Beirut
Columns

In Flawed Democracies, White Supremacy and Ethnocentrism Flourish

1 AUGUST 2021 • By Mya Guarnieri
In Flawed Democracies, White Supremacy and Ethnocentrism Flourish
Essays

Making a Film in Gaza

14 JULY 2021 • By Elana Golden
Making a Film in Gaza
Weekly

The Unfinished Presidency of Jimmy Carter

4 JULY 2021 • By Maryam Zar
The Unfinished Presidency of Jimmy Carter
Columns

The Diplomats’ Quarter: Wasta of the Palestinian Authority

14 JUNE 2021 • By Raja Shehadeh
The Diplomats’ Quarter: Wasta of the Palestinian Authority
Weekly

War Diary: The End of Innocence

23 MAY 2021 • By Arie Amaya-Akkermans
War Diary: The End of Innocence
Book Reviews

The Triumph of Love and the Palestinian Revolution

16 MAY 2021 • By Fouad Mami
Essays

The Wall We Can’t Tell You About

14 MAY 2021 • By Jean Lamore
The Wall We Can’t Tell You About
Essays

Reviving Hammam Al Jadeed

14 MAY 2021 • By Tom Young
Reviving Hammam Al Jadeed
Art

The Labyrinth of Memory

14 MAY 2021 • By Ziad Suidan
The Labyrinth of Memory
Weekly

Hanane Hajj Ali, Portrait of a Theatrical Trailblazer

14 FEBRUARY 2021 • By Nada Ghosn
Hanane Hajj Ali, Portrait of a Theatrical Trailblazer
Film Reviews

Muhammad Malas, Syria’s Auteur, is the subject of a Film Biography

10 JANUARY 2021 • By Rana Asfour
Muhammad Malas, Syria’s Auteur, is the subject of a Film Biography
TMR 4 • Small & Indie Presses

Children of the Ghetto, My Name Is Adam

14 DECEMBER 2020 • By Elias Khoury
Children of the Ghetto, My Name Is Adam
TMR 3 • Racism & Identity

I am the Hyphen

15 NOVEMBER 2020 • By Sarah AlKahly-Mills
I am the Hyphen
Beirut

Wajdi Mouawad, Just the Playwright for Our Dystopian World

15 SEPTEMBER 2020 • By Melissa Chemam
Wajdi Mouawad, Just the Playwright for Our Dystopian World
Beirut

Beirut In Pieces

15 SEPTEMBER 2020 • By Jenine Abboushi
Beirut In Pieces
Book Reviews

Salvaging the shipwreck of humanity in Amin Maalouf’s Adrift

15 SEPTEMBER 2020 • By Sarah AlKahly-Mills
Salvaging the shipwreck of humanity in Amin Maalouf’s <em>Adrift</em>

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