الصمود في الضاحية الجنوبية من قلب الدمار
Masdar Diplomacy
By Marlene Khalife
It is no easy task to walk through Beirut’s southern suburbs at the very moment when Avichay Adraee sounds his warnings across social media.
This is not merely an act of daring. It is an immersion into a human laboratory—one that explains why Israel’s military machine has failed to break the will of this stretch of land extending nearly one hundred kilometers along the edges of the Lebanese capital.
Over the course of an hour, moving from Chiyah and Ghobeiry to Haret Hreik, Bir al-Abed, Jamous, Kafaat, Hay al-Amrikan, Mreijeh, Sfeir, and beyond, a fine thread seemed to bind the rubble to the people passing through it: a certainty of victory that transcends the language of numbers and destruction.
The Russian Peasant’s Axe—Reborn in the Suburbs
History echoes here. One recalls a famous episode involving Napoleon Bonaparte during his invasion of Russia. Seeking to humiliate a peasant, Napoleon ordered his soldiers to brand the man’s hand with his name, marking him as property. Calmly, the peasant took an axe, severed his own branded hand, and declared: “Take it—I am free.” Napoleon is said to have turned to his soldiers and uttered: “We have lost the war.”
That same peasant lives today in every corner of the southern suburbs.
The enemy wagers on breaking consciousness through fire and devastation. But the people here, in their almost mythic resilience, declare to the world that they have severed the hand of submission and fear. They lose their homes, yet they reclaim their identity. To remain in Chiyah or Ghobeiry beneath the hum of drones is itself the suburb’s axe—cutting away any hope of symbolic victory for the occupier.
Beyond the Lens: A Suburb Still Standing
Some media outlets—and those orbiting them—focus almost exclusively on scenes of ruin, as if the southern suburbs had been flattened entirely.
What this field tour by Masdar Diplomacy reveals is something different.
Yes, there is painful destruction. Entire neighborhoods have been gutted. But the suburbs, as both an urban and human entity, remain standing—upright, unbowed. The damage is often surgical, scattered from one area to another, while the broader fabric of life continues to pulse against all odds.
Scenes from the Eye of the Storm
In Bir al-Abed, a man has opened his small shop selling pickled goods as though the seasons themselves had not shifted. Nearby, a mechanic works in his garage, repairing cars amid the rubble.
Perhaps the most striking image is that of a father teaching his young son how to shoot with a handgun. Here, marksmanship is not taught as aggression, but as ritual preparation—for a future in which weakness has no place.
On the outskirts of Chiyah, tents have been erected in the open. These are not displaced people in the conventional sense; they are guardians of memory. They sleep in tents to remain close to their homes, visiting them daily, inhaling what they call “the scent of place,” drawing from it a courage that cannot be found beyond these invisible walls.
When Gold Defies the Logic of War
Today, the southern suburbs are not merely a geography of confrontation—they are a living human encyclopedia of striking contradictions.
Here, one finds shop signs bearing the names of William Shakespeare, Isaac Newton, and Al-Mutanabbi—humble businesses that endured, reminding passersby that culture here is not a luxury, but an identity suspended above doorways.
In its alleyways, the divisions so often amplified by the media dissolve. Veiled and unveiled women walk side by side, defying airstrikes. A single call of “Haj” gathers under its shade both Ali and Elie in an unspoken, organic national unity.
Yet the most powerful image may be that gold shop in Bir al-Abed—its gleaming displays refusing evacuation despite the threat. The gold in its windows is not merely commerce; it is a political statement: here, the land is harder than metal, and the people do not pack their bags waiting for war to end.
They live within it—as though it were a passing detail.
This collective stubbornness, spanning from the simplicity of the pickle vendor to the audacity of the gold merchant, proves that a suburb once pushed to the margins of the state has forged for itself a moral state—one that cannot be defeated, transforming fragments into meaning and ashes into a life that renews itself before the dust has even settled.
Guardians of Night and Day
At the shrine known as “the resting place of the Sayyed,” silence blankets a site now closed to visitors—yet the presence there feels anything but still.
Roads leading to certain damaged buildings are sealed off with symbolic barriers to prevent looting. Under the watchful eyes of young men in their twenties—dressed in black and bearing arms—order is maintained. These are the شباب Hezbollah, who have not left the field. Their vigilance protects livelihoods even under the threat of direct bombardment.
“It Will Return in Six Days”
On the way back, as the shattered studios of Radio Al-Nour and the partially destroyed Al-Manar TV told their own story of targeted media, my companion said with absolute certainty:
“This suburb, whose limbs have been broken, will return to life in six days the moment the guns fall silent.”
What the people of the southern suburbs are doing today is redefining victory.
Victory is not the absence of damage—it is the absence of defeat.
They are proving to the “Napoleon of our time” that the hand you believed you had branded with fire has been severed by its owner’s will, so that the spirit remains free. The homes that were destroyed are but shells; the core beneath them is beyond the reach of missiles.
The southern suburbs are not merely concrete structures. They are a condition—a state of historical defiance.
And anyone who walks their streets today understands that this war was not decided by gunpowder. It was decided the moment the pickle vendor chose to open his door in the face of Adraee’s warnings.
The suburbs did not fall—and they will not fall.
Because their people have chosen, quite simply… to be the axe.
