Blog
Nadia Michel

10 Reasons Why I Still Love Beirut

One mushroom cloud, at least 170 people dead, thousands injured, and 300,000 people left homeless. The capital of Lebanon has been to hell and back yet still stands tall. Here are the great things few outsiders know about Beirut and we completely adore:

1. The food (sigh).

From home-cooked stews and scrumptious salads at casual restaurants to unbeatable street food, you’d be hard-pressed to eat a Lebanese meal that’s not fantastic. If you’ve lived abroad and ordered a watery house salad or a pre-packaged turkey and cheese sandwich, you know what I mean. It’s also the quintessential Mediterranean diet, one of the healthiest in the world.

2. The weather.

Sure, it sometimes goes a little above 30 degrees Celsius. But you can always head to a nearby beach or take shelter under a tree and bask in the gentle breeze. What about winter? Canadians would sip sangria wearing a bikini on a terrace during Lebanese winters. Lebanon has one of the best, most livable climates in the world. Tried, tested, and true.

3. The sense of humor.

You can laugh at anything. A day after the massive blast, one of our friends shared a meme of a destroyed home on a WhatsApp group, with a big black dildo and a bottle of lubricant on the floor. Crossing the line? That line disappeared long ago in Beirut, along with the Civil War.

4. The 24/7 delivery

In Beirut, whether you need a Bounty bar, a bottle of wine, or an emergency charging cable for your phone, you just make a quick call and your wish appears at your doorstep in under 20 minutes. In comparison, in Montreal it takes 3–5 days and costs $12 to deliver a simple bottle of wine. The Lebanese Genie is real.

5. The extra-ness of our people.

Your real estate agent just might take you apartment hunting on his Triumph motorcycle, sans helmet. No need for a fancy car to impress the clients here. It’s all about speed, efficiency, and the wind in your hair. Home tours have never been more fun.

6. The escapism.

From your personal HQ, you could drive less than an hour to hike in a cool pine forest to escape summer heat or mingle with the swanky Faqra crowd while swaying to the irresistible sound of an overrated DJ, any night of the week. Escapism? Why not.

7. The close-knit community.

The guys at your local supermarket know where you live, and that’s a good thing. You can ride your bike there, buy 10 bags of groceries, and have them delivered without having to remind anyone of your address, and then ride back as light as you came to find your provisions safe and sound at home. Ditto for phone orders. They have your digits.

8. The unbreakable spirit.

What doesn’t kill us makes us stronger, and the Lebanese have proven this aphorism to be true, over and over again. They have stared down civil war, violent bloodshed, a brutal economic meltdown, and lived through things most Westerners have only read about in history books. And yet they stand up with their chin held high and march on. More than that: they laugh, they dance, and they often go on to become some of the most successful people in the world.

9. The promising future generations.

The new generation is full of promise. Young people went out in droves hours after the massive explosion to clean up the countless debris-filled streets and to help the thousands of victims with supplies and shelter. Students pulled up their sleeves. The future is bright.

10. The fight for what’s right.

Lebanese people are exceptionally smart, seething with anger, and not afraid to show it. It’s a mismanaged country with a somewhat shady legal and national security system that might arrest you for saying the wrong thing. Nevertheless, since the 2019 October Revolution began, the people (including several public figures) have loudly voiced their opposition to a failed, corrupt, criminal leadership and even straight out called for their heads on a platter. Rightly so. The real children of Lebanon will rise up, steal home plate and Beirut will shine again.

We love you, Beirut.