Main content

Rebuilding Beirut鈥檚 village in a city

A year on from the explosion that devastated Beirut, survivors in one close-knit district are trying to rebuild their lives, helped by passionate volunteers, but not the state.

A year ago Johnny Khawand saw the home he grew up in ripped apart by the massive explosion in a chemical dump in the port of Beirut, Lebanon 鈥 one of the largest non-nuclear blasts in history.
For hours Johnny fought to save neighbours trapped in the rubble, seeing some die in front of him. Now, after months of restoration work, he鈥檚 coming back to try to rebuild his life, hoping that the unique spirit of his close-knit, multi-faith neighbourhood 鈥 Karantina 鈥 will survive. As he enters his house again for the first time, memories flood back 鈥 both comforting and distressing. Johnny and other survivors have formed close bonds with some of the volunteers, including engineers and architects, who鈥檝e spent the last year rebuilding the district for free. They鈥檙e passionate about restoring its ancient buildings exactly as they were before. But they鈥檙e angry that they鈥檝e received no help from the Lebanese state, which is accused of negligence over the explosion. And Johnny and others now fear that wider redevelopment plans will bring in big money and change Karantina鈥檚 character forever. Tim Whewell asks if Beirut鈥檚 鈥渧illage in a city鈥, with its many layers of history and memory, can survive?

Reporter and producer: Tim Whewell
Producer: Mohamad Chreyteh
Editor: Bridget Harney

(Image: Beirut explosion survivors Manal Ghaziri and Johnny Khawand outside the ruins of a neighbours' house in the Karantina district. Credit: Mohamad Chreyteh/成人论坛)

Available now

23 minutes

Last on

Thu 29 Jul 2021 19:06GMT

Broadcasts

  • Thu 29 Jul 2021 03:06GMT
  • Thu 29 Jul 2021 08:06GMT
  • Thu 29 Jul 2021 12:32GMT
  • Thu 29 Jul 2021 19:06GMT

Download this programme

Subscribe to this programme or download individual episodes