Sunday 16 July
It is the first time I have actually seen a
missile in this war. They fly too fast - or you are
too busy trying to run away to look for them - but
this morning, Abed and I actually see one pierce the
smoke above us. "Habibi (my friend)!" he cries, and
I start screaming "Turn the car round, turn it
round" and we drive away for our lives from the
southern suburbs. As we turn the corner there is a
shattering explosion and a mountain of grey smoke
blossoming from the road we have just left. What
happened to the men and women we saw running for
their lives from that Israeli rocket? We do not
know. In air raids, all you see is the few square
yards around you. You get out and you survive and
that is enough.
I go home to my apartment on the Corniche and
find that the electricity is cut. Soon, no doubt,
the water will be cut. But I sit on my balcony and
reflect that I am not crammed into a filthy hotel in
Kandahar or Basra but living in my own home and
waking each morning in my own bed. Power cuts and
fear and the lack of petrol now that Israel is
bombing gas stations mean that the canyon of traffic
which honks and roars outside my home until two in
the morning has gone. When I wake in the night, I
hear the birds and the wash of the Mediterranean and
the gentle brushing of palm leaves.
I went to buy groceries this evening. There is no
more milk but plenty of water and bread and cheese
and fish. When Abed pulls up to let me out of the
car, the man in the 4x4 behind us puts his hand
permanently on the horn, and when I get out of
Abed's car, he mouths the words "Kess uchtak" at me.
"Fuck your sister." It is the first time I have been
cursed in this war. The Lebanese do not normally
swear at foreigners. They are a polite people. I
hold my hand out, palm down and twist it palm
upwards in the Lebanese manner, meaning "what's the
problem?". But he drives away. Anyway, I don't have
a sister.
Monday 17 July
The phones are still working and my mobile
chirrups like a budgerigar. Too many of the calls
are from friends who want to know if they should
flee Beirut or flee Lebanon or from Lebanese who are
outside Lebanon and want to know if they should
return. I can hear the bombs rumbling across
Hizbollah's area of the southern suburbs but I
cannot answer these questions. If I advise friends
to stay and they are killed, I am responsible. If I
tell them to leave and they are killed in their
cars, I am responsible. If I tell them to come back
and they die, I am responsible. So I tell them how
dangerous Lebanon has become and tell them it is
their decision. But I feel great sorrow for them.
Many have been refugees four times in 24 years.
Today I am called by a Lebanese woman with Lebanese
and Iranian citizenship and one child with a US
passport and another with only a Lebanese passport.
Her situation is hopeless. I suggest she travels to
the Christian mountains around Faraya and try to
find a chalet. It will be safe there. I hope.
I come back from Kfar Chim where part of an
Israeli missile or an aircraft wing has just
partially decapitated the driver of a car. He looked
so tragic, his head lolling forward in the driver's
seat, just looking at all the blood splashing down
his body on to the floor. Abed was getting spooked
because I spent too long at the scene. The Israelis
always come back. "Habibi, you took too long. Never
stay that long again!" He is right. The Israelis did
come back and bombed the Lebanese army.
Now my housemaid Fidele is spooked. She thinks it
is too dangerous to travel from the Christian
district of Beirut to my home since the Israelis
blew the top off the local lighthouse 400 metres
from my front door. Fidele is from Togo and makes
fantastic pizzas (I recommend her Pizza Togolaisi to
anyone) so I send Abed off to pick up her up and
bring her to my home for one hour. She puts my dirty
clothes in the washing machine, and after five
minutes the power goes off and we have to take them
all out and try again tomorrow.
Tuesday 18 July
At 3.45am, I wake to the sound of tank tracks and
a big military motor heaving away in the darkness. I
go downstairs to find that the Lebanese army has
positioned an American-made armoured personnel
carrier in the car park opposite my home. It has
been placed strategically under some palm trees, as
if this will stop Israeli aircraft from spotting it.
I don't like this at all and nor does my landlord,
Mustafa, who lives downstairs. The Lebanese army is
now an occasional target for the Israelis and this
little behemoth looks like a palm tree disguised as
a tank. Later in the morning, I call a general in
the army who is a friend of mine and army operations
calls me back to check the location. It takes an
hour before they find the car park on their maps.
Then I receive another call telling me that the APC
is next to my home to prevent the Hizbollah from
using the car park to launch another missile at an
Israeli ship. The empty American Community School is
just up my road. The Lebanese army is defending us.
The first French warship arrives to pick up
French citizens fleeing Lebanon. It steams proudly
past my balcony. Many French naval vessels are named
after great military leaders, and this particular
anti-submarine frigate is called the Jean-de-Vienne.
I pad off to consult my little library of French
history books. Jean de Vienne, it turns out, was a
14th-century French admiral who raided the Sussex
town of Rye and the Isle of Wight and who was killed
- oh lordy, lordy - fighting in the Crusades against
the Muslim Turks. A suitable ship to start France's
evacuation of the ancient Crusader port of Beirut.
Wednesday 19 July
Now that the Israelis are destroying whole
apartment blocks in the Shia southern suburbs -
there is a permanent umbrella of smoke over the
seafront, stretching far out into the Mediterranean
- tens of thousands of Shia Muslims have come to
seek sanctuary in the undamaged part of Beirut, in
the parks and schools and beside the sea. They walk
back and forth outside my home, the women in
chadors, their bearded husbands and brothers
silently looking at the sea, their children playing
happily around the palm trees. They speak to me with
anger about Israel but choose not to discuss the
depth of cynicism of the Shia Hizbollah who provoked
Israel's brutality by capturing two of its soldiers.
As well as the Hizbollah, the Israelis are now
targeting food factories and trucks and buses - not
to mention 46 bridges - and the bin men are now
reluctant to pick up the rubbish skips each night
for fear their innocent rubbish truck is mistaken
for a missile launcher. So no rubbish collection
this morning.
The local Beirut papers are filled with
photographs that would never be seen in the pages of
a British paper: of decapitated babies and women
with no legs or arms or of old men in bits. Israel's
air raids are promiscuous and - when you see the
results as we now do with our own eyes - obscene. No
doubt Hizbollah's equally innocent civilian victims
in Israel look like this but the slaughter in
Lebanon is on an infinitely more terrible scale. The
Lebanese look at these pictures and see them on
television - as does the rest of the Arab world -
and I wonder how many of them are provoked to think
of another 9/11 or 7/7 or whatever the next date
will be.
What does war do to people? Later, I am talking
to an Austrian journalist and idly ask what her
father does. "He drinks," she says. Why? "Because
his father was killed at Stalingrad."
I walk across with tea for the soldiers on the
APC in the car park. They are all from Baalbek, Shia
Muslims. They would never open fire on a Hizbollah
missile crew. Then I return home from another visit
to the southern suburbs and find they have gone,
along with their behemoth. The first good news of
the day.
The minister of finance holds a press conference
to talk of the billions of dollars of damage being
done to Lebanon by Israel's air raids. "We have had
pledges of aid from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Qatar,"
he proudly announces. "And from Syria and Iran?" the
man from Irish radio asks, naming Hizbollah's two
principal supporters in the Muslim world. "Nothing,"
the minister replies dismissively.
Thursday 20 July
A bad day for messages. Phone calls from the
States to tell me I am an anti-Semite for
criticising Israel. Here we go again. To call decent
folk anti-Semites is soon going to make
anti-Semitism respectable, I tell the callers before
asking them to tell the Israeli air force to stop
killing civilians. Then a fax from a Jewish friend
in California to tell me that a man called Lee
Kaplan - "a columnist for the Israel National News",
whatever that is - has condemned me in print for
developing a "high-paid speaking career among
anti-Semites". Unlike Benjamin Netanyahu and many
others I can think of, I never take money for
lecturing - ever - but to smear the thousands of
ordinary Americans who listen to me as anti-Semites
is outrageous.
Another fax from the editor of the forthcoming
paperback edition of my book, apologising for
bothering me at a "very difficult (sic) time" but
promising to send me page proofs by DHL which is
still operating to Beirut. I go downtown to check
this with DHL. Yes, the man says, parcels for
Lebanon are sent to Jordan and then in a truck via
Damascus to Beirut. A truck, I say to myself. Ouch.
Friday 21 July
The Israelis have just bombed Khiam prison. An
interesting target since this was the jail in which
Israel's former proxy militia, the South Lebanon
Army, used to torture male prisoners by attaching
electrodes to their penises and female prisoners by
electrocuting their breasts. When the Israeli army
retreated in 2000, the Hizbollah turned the prison
into a museum. Now the evidence of the SLA's cruelty
has been erased. Another "terrorist" target.
The power comes back at home at 11pm and I watch
Israel's consul general, Arye Mekel, telling the BBC
that Israel is "doing the Lebanese a favour" by
bombing Hizbollah, insisting that "most Lebanese
appreciate what we are doing". So now I understand.
The Lebanese must thank the Israelis for destroying
their lives and infrastructure. They must be
grateful for all the air strikes and the dead
children. It's as if the Hizbollah claimed that
Israelis should be grateful to them for attacking
Zionism. How far can self-delusion reach?
Saturday 22 July
I have coffee in my landlord's garden and he
climbs an old wooden ladder into his fig tree and
brings me a plate of fruit. "Every day it gives us
our figs," he tells me. "We sit under our tree in
the afternoon and with the breeze off the sea, it is
like air conditioning." I look at his little
paradise of pot plants and sip my Arabic coffee from
a little blue mug. We watch the warships sliding
into Beirut port. "What will happen when all the
foreigners have gone?" he asks. That's what we are
all asking. We shall find out this week.
Sunday 16 July
It is the first time I have actually seen a
missile in this war. They fly too fast - or you are
too busy trying to run away to look for them - but
this morning, Abed and I actually see one pierce the
smoke above us. "Habibi (my friend)!" he cries, and
I start screaming "Turn the car round, turn it
round" and we drive away for our lives from the
southern suburbs. As we turn the corner there is a
shattering explosion and a mountain of grey smoke
blossoming from the road we have just left. What
happened to the men and women we saw running for
their lives from that Israeli rocket? We do not
know. In air raids, all you see is the few square
yards around you. You get out and you survive and
that is enough.
I go home to my apartment on the Corniche and
find that the electricity is cut. Soon, no doubt,
the water will be cut. But I sit on my balcony and
reflect that I am not crammed into a filthy hotel in
Kandahar or Basra but living in my own home and
waking each morning in my own bed. Power cuts and
fear and the lack of petrol now that Israel is
bombing gas stations mean that the canyon of traffic
which honks and roars outside my home until two in
the morning has gone. When I wake in the night, I
hear the birds and the wash of the Mediterranean and
the gentle brushing of palm leaves.
I went to buy groceries this evening. There is no
more milk but plenty of water and bread and cheese
and fish. When Abed pulls up to let me out of the
car, the man in the 4x4 behind us puts his hand
permanently on the horn, and when I get out of
Abed's car, he mouths the words "Kess uchtak" at me.
"Fuck your sister." It is the first time I have been
cursed in this war. The Lebanese do not normally
swear at foreigners. They are a polite people. I
hold my hand out, palm down and twist it palm
upwards in the Lebanese manner, meaning "what's the
problem?". But he drives away. Anyway, I don't have
a sister.
Monday 17 July
The phones are still working and my mobile
chirrups like a budgerigar. Too many of the calls
are from friends who want to know if they should
flee Beirut or flee Lebanon or from Lebanese who are
outside Lebanon and want to know if they should
return. I can hear the bombs rumbling across
Hizbollah's area of the southern suburbs but I
cannot answer these questions. If I advise friends
to stay and they are killed, I am responsible. If I
tell them to leave and they are killed in their
cars, I am responsible. If I tell them to come back
and they die, I am responsible. So I tell them how
dangerous Lebanon has become and tell them it is
their decision. But I feel great sorrow for them.
Many have been refugees four times in 24 years.
Today I am called by a Lebanese woman with Lebanese
and Iranian citizenship and one child with a US
passport and another with only a Lebanese passport.
Her situation is hopeless. I suggest she travels to
the Christian mountains around Faraya and try to
find a chalet. It will be safe there. I hope.
I come back from Kfar Chim where part of an
Israeli missile or an aircraft wing has just
partially decapitated the driver of a car. He looked
so tragic, his head lolling forward in the driver's
seat, just looking at all the blood splashing down
his body on to the floor. Abed was getting spooked
because I spent too long at the scene. The Israelis
always come back. "Habibi, you took too long. Never
stay that long again!" He is right. The Israelis did
come back and bombed the Lebanese army.
Now my housemaid Fidele is spooked. She thinks it
is too dangerous to travel from the Christian
district of Beirut to my home since the Israelis
blew the top off the local lighthouse 400 metres
from my front door. Fidele is from Togo and makes
fantastic pizzas (I recommend her Pizza Togolaisi to
anyone) so I send Abed off to pick up her up and
bring her to my home for one hour. She puts my dirty
clothes in the washing machine, and after five
minutes the power goes off and we have to take them
all out and try again tomorrow.
Tuesday 18 July
At 3.45am, I wake to the sound of tank tracks and
a big military motor heaving away in the darkness. I
go downstairs to find that the Lebanese army has
positioned an American-made armoured personnel
carrier in the car park opposite my home. It has
been placed strategically under some palm trees, as
if this will stop Israeli aircraft from spotting it.
I don't like this at all and nor does my landlord,
Mustafa, who lives downstairs. The Lebanese army is
now an occasional target for the Israelis and this
little behemoth looks like a palm tree disguised as
a tank. Later in the morning, I call a general in
the army who is a friend of mine and army operations
calls me back to check the location. It takes an
hour before they find the car park on their maps.
Then I receive another call telling me that the APC
is next to my home to prevent the Hizbollah from
using the car park to launch another missile at an
Israeli ship. The empty American Community School is
just up my road. The Lebanese army is defending us.
The first French warship arrives to pick up
French citizens fleeing Lebanon. It steams proudly
past my balcony. Many French naval vessels are named
after great military leaders, and this particular
anti-submarine frigate is called the Jean-de-Vienne.
I pad off to consult my little library of French
history books. Jean de Vienne, it turns out, was a
14th-century French admiral who raided the Sussex
town of Rye and the Isle of Wight and who was killed
- oh lordy, lordy - fighting in the Crusades against
the Muslim Turks. A suitable ship to start France's
evacuation of the ancient Crusader port of Beirut.
Wednesday 19 July
Now that the Israelis are destroying whole
apartment blocks in the Shia southern suburbs -
there is a permanent umbrella of smoke over the
seafront, stretching far out into the Mediterranean
- tens of thousands of Shia Muslims have come to
seek sanctuary in the undamaged part of Beirut, in
the parks and schools and beside the sea. They walk
back and forth outside my home, the women in
chadors, their bearded husbands and brothers
silently looking at the sea, their children playing
happily around the palm trees. They speak to me with
anger about Israel but choose not to discuss the
depth of cynicism of the Shia Hizbollah who provoked
Israel's brutality by capturing two of its soldiers.
As well as the Hizbollah, the Israelis are now
targeting food factories and trucks and buses - not
to mention 46 bridges - and the bin men are now
reluctant to pick up the rubbish skips each night
for fear their innocent rubbish truck is mistaken
for a missile launcher. So no rubbish collection
this morning.
The local Beirut papers are filled with
photographs that would never be seen in the pages of
a British paper: of decapitated babies and women
with no legs or arms or of old men in bits. Israel's
air raids are promiscuous and - when you see the
results as we now do with our own eyes - obscene. No
doubt Hizbollah's equally innocent civilian victims
in Israel look like this but the slaughter in
Lebanon is on an infinitely more terrible scale. The
Lebanese look at these pictures and see them on
television - as does the rest of the Arab world -
and I wonder how many of them are provoked to think
of another 9/11 or 7/7 or whatever the next date
will be.
What does war do to people? Later, I am talking
to an Austrian journalist and idly ask what her
father does. "He drinks," she says. Why? "Because
his father was killed at Stalingrad."
I walk across with tea for the soldiers on the
APC in the car park. They are all from Baalbek, Shia
Muslims. They would never open fire on a Hizbollah
missile crew. Then I return home from another visit
to the southern suburbs and find they have gone,
along with their behemoth. The first good news of
the day.
The minister of finance holds a press conference
to talk of the billions of dollars of damage being
done to Lebanon by Israel's air raids. "We have had
pledges of aid from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Qatar,"
he proudly announces. "And from Syria and Iran?" the
man from Irish radio asks, naming Hizbollah's two
principal supporters in the Muslim world. "Nothing,"
the minister replies dismissively.
Thursday 20 July
A bad day for messages. Phone calls from the
States to tell me I am an anti-Semite for
criticising Israel. Here we go again. To call decent
folk anti-Semites is soon going to make
anti-Semitism respectable, I tell the callers before
asking them to tell the Israeli air force to stop
killing civilians. Then a fax from a Jewish friend
in California to tell me that a man called Lee
Kaplan - "a columnist for the Israel National News",
whatever that is - has condemned me in print for
developing a "high-paid speaking career among
anti-Semites". Unlike Benjamin Netanyahu and many
others I can think of, I never take money for
lecturing - ever - but to smear the thousands of
ordinary Americans who listen to me as anti-Semites
is outrageous.
Another fax from the editor of the forthcoming
paperback edition of my book, apologising for
bothering me at a "very difficult (sic) time" but
promising to send me page proofs by DHL which is
still operating to Beirut. I go downtown to check
this with DHL. Yes, the man says, parcels for
Lebanon are sent to Jordan and then in a truck via
Damascus to Beirut. A truck, I say to myself. Ouch.
Friday 21 July
The Israelis have just bombed Khiam prison. An
interesting target since this was the jail in which
Israel's former proxy militia, the South Lebanon
Army, used to torture male prisoners by attaching
electrodes to their penises and female prisoners by
electrocuting their breasts. When the Israeli army
retreated in 2000, the Hizbollah turned the prison
into a museum. Now the evidence of the SLA's cruelty
has been erased. Another "terrorist" target.
The power comes back at home at 11pm and I watch
Israel's consul general, Arye Mekel, telling the BBC
that Israel is "doing the Lebanese a favour" by
bombing Hizbollah, insisting that "most Lebanese
appreciate what we are doing". So now I understand.
The Lebanese must thank the Israelis for destroying
their lives and infrastructure. They must be
grateful for all the air strikes and the dead
children. It's as if the Hizbollah claimed that
Israelis should be grateful to them for attacking
Zionism. How far can self-delusion reach?
Saturday 22 July
I have coffee in my landlord's garden and he
climbs an old wooden ladder into his fig tree and
brings me a plate of fruit. "Every day it gives us
our figs," he tells me. "We sit under our tree in
the afternoon and with the breeze off the sea, it is
like air conditioning." I look at his little
paradise of pot plants and sip my Arabic coffee from
a little blue mug. We watch the warships sliding
into Beirut port. "What will happen when all the
foreigners have gone?" he asks. That's what we are
all asking. We shall find out this week.