Public Project
Anatomy Revolution
On the 17th of October 2019, Lebanese protesters took to the streets of Beirut to express their anger over a WhatsApp tax, newly imposed by their government. It was the beginning of the Lebanese Revolution, a wave of daily protests ranging from tens of thousands to even millions of Lebanese rising up against a deeply corrupt government.
The “October Revolution” is a revolution against the ghosts of the civil war, feeding a politics of fear, for more than thirty years, the fear of ‘the other’ (confession) and that of civil unrest if the sectarian balance of power is disrupted.
Since October 17th, the walls of fear began to crumble under the weight of the ever-growing economic crisis, widening the horizons of possibilities and bringing to light interest-based alliances against the sectarian oligarchy. Poverty set to deepen with Lebanon's economic crisis. Fear of what the future may hold is palpable, as economic crisis deepens and living standards plummet rapidly.
Publications
NYT: Lebanon Protests Unite Sects in Demanding New Government
NYT: Lebanon Names New Cabinet Amid Political and Economic Crisis
NYT: To Make Sense of Lebanon’s Protests, Follow the Garbage
NYT: The new Lebanon is the old Lebanon
NYT: For Lebanon’s Shiites, a Dilemma: Stay Loyal to Hezbollah or Keep Protesting?
NYT: IN HER WORDS: where woman rule the headlines
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