On Monday December 19, 2022, the streets of Beirut saw new, modern public buses for the first time in years. ...
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Beit Waraq is a project initiated in 2012 by Waraq, a non-profit organization that supports graphic art practices through “education,...
“I am the head of this association for the entire country, all lawyers and all people."
More than 170,000 people held hands to cover a 171-kilometer distance along Lebanon’s coastal roads, from Tripoli in the North to Tyre in the South.
Five Egyptian musicians walk into Bayt Em Nazih and set the crowd on fire with their unique blend of rock and social activism.
Rather than imitating the West, the Arab community has turned drag into its own.
Desiccated, naked trees of brittle brown bark. Broken twigs scattered across a flowerless plot. Spots of gray where fire several...
Moving forward, Beirut's reconstruction must rethink the inequalities & weaknesses that stemmed out from urban planning before the explosion.
Protesters in Lebanon rung in the new year by pressuring different public institutions they see as corrupt and inefficient.
Statements from both the queer community in Lebanon and religious authorities called for its boycott, but for vastly different reasons.
In recent years, several civil society groups have fought to protect what little is left of public spaces in Beirut.
As you stare at the details of these posters, an orientalist narrative of submissive Arab women and violent Arab men stares right back at you.