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Beirut: Specters Of War Thwart Efforts To Forget

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  • Beirut: Specters Of War Thwart Efforts To Forget

    SPECTERS OF WAR THWART EFFORTS TO FORGET

    The Daily Star, Lebanon
    May 5 2014

    May 05, 2014 12:03 AMBy India Stoughton
    The Daily Star

    BEIRUT: As we troop awkwardly through the narrow streets of Khandaq
    al-Ghamiq, our guide gestures to the decaying facade of a once-stunning
    building.

    The balconies are crumbling, their wrought-iron rails rusted. The
    masonry is pocked with bullet holes, window frames empty or fringed
    with jagged, lethal-looking shards of glass.

    As if unaware of the devastation that has been wrought on the building,
    the guide orders us to take note of the beautiful architecture. The
    derelict-looking structure is occupied, he notes in passing, but the
    inhabitants in the area are forbidden to hang washing outside to dry.

    Pointing out one building where residents have blithely ignored this
    stipulation, he complains that he has called the police several times
    but no one ever shows up.

    The washing, he claims, ruins the area's historic appearance.

    "Watch Your Step: Beirut Heritage Walking Tour," is an interactive,
    site-specific performance directed by actress and AUB theater studies
    lecturer Sahar Assad and written by Robert Myers, cultural historian
    and AUB professor of English and Creative Writing.

    Six tours took place over the weekend, led by actors Raffi Feghali
    and Sany Baki. Numerous interventions and interruptions along the way
    are devised by students from Assaf's "Workshop in Theater Production"
    and enacted by theater students from five Beirut universities.

    A sizable group follows Feghali through Khandaq al-Ghamiq Friday. As
    we mill like sheep in his wake, he rattles off architectural facts at
    great speed. The consummate tour guide, he seems keen to rush through
    the sites and collect his tips in time for Happy Hour.

    Inside a building he claims was designed by "the Lebanese Gaudi" -
    a corner apartment block with an elaborate, decorative facade - we
    stop in a spacious first floor apartment. Its beautifully proportioned
    rooms are long-since abandoned. Feghali calmly brushes a thick layer
    of grime from a small section of the floor, imploring us to observe
    the beautiful tiles.

    Two floors above, we wait in awkward silence as he negotiates with a
    young man in a soldier's drab olive attire. Before accepting LL20,000
    to let us inside the apartment, he eyes us with scorn and twice spits
    at our guide's feet.

    An ancient suite of furniture, coated with decades of dust, attests
    to a want of inhabitants. Our guide informs us that the building's
    tenants are actually four young men in combat-colored clothing -
    lounging on newspapers, smoking and playing cards amid the rubbish,
    abandoned dolls and filthy mattresses.

    Seemingly utterly disinterested, he draws our attention to an
    exquisitely painted ceiling, now damaged and peeling, urging us to step
    over and around the young men as casually as the dusty furnishings.

    As the tour progresses, our guide's chatter becomes increasingly
    bizarre. Strange incidents begin to intrude. As we turn the corner
    of what our guide says is Syria Street, a young woman dressed in a
    blue bathrobe begins to scream at him in Armenian.

    Apparently embarrassed by her outburst, the guide smiles awkwardly and
    looks at his feet. When she stops shouting, he ushers us urgently away.

    "What was she saying?" enquires an audience member.

    "Oh, just something about how the Armenians used to live here but
    were driven out and exterminated like they were in Turkey," he says.

    "Nothing important."

    We visit a small, cramped flat where a wild-haired, catatonic-looking
    woman sits at a small table with two plates of congealing pasta. We
    shuffle past to the balcony.

    As we aim our gazes wherever our guide commands, the woman appears,
    staring into our faces one by one. Seizing a bearded young man,
    she shakes him violently then runs inside.

    The guide mutters something like: "She does this every time."

    We edge back inside, studiously avoiding her gaze. As the last member
    of our group reaches the hallway, a blood-curdling scream issues
    from within, and several people jump. The guide slams the door as
    though protecting himself from an attacking dog and impatiently herds
    us outside.

    An exercise in resurrecting past trauma, "Watch Your Step" is likely
    one of the most fascinating and least comfortable performances to
    take place in Beirut in recent years.

    "The inspiration of the text was a play by [Argentine playwright]
    Griselda Gambaro," Assaf explains. "She wrote a play in the '70s
    entitled 'Information for Foreigners,' which is also a sort of
    promenade performance ... basically pointing the finger at audiences
    as accomplices to the state terrorism in Argentina at that time.

    "When I read the play, I thought of our Civil War: 'This would make
    a great project for the students.' So we read it together. We started
    brainstorming and I started to look for a location ...

    "I passed through Khandaq al-Ghamiq and the first thing that struck
    me was that the moment you're in the area you automatically think
    of the Civil War ... You go down to Downtown it's as if you're in a
    different country - there's no trace of the war. Here it's like the
    whole area is a monument."

    Assaf came up with the idea of contrasting a manifestation of the
    post-war amnesia - the tour guide's shallow, fabricated rhetoric -
    with dramatic moments based on stories residents shared with her
    or gleaned from research conducted by the International Center for
    Transitional Justice.

    The wailing woman, she explains, is based on a lady whose son
    disappeared during the conflict. Three decades on, she still prepares
    two plates of food every night, refusing to leave the house for fear
    he might return.

    "I wanted to make a play about our memory of the Civil War,"
    says Assaf, who timed the performances to coincide with the 39th
    anniversary of the conflict's beginning, "to just say simply that we
    must remember. We have to look back, we have to step back in history
    in order for there to be a peaceful present and a peaceful future.

    "We had 15 years of Civil War that ended overnight when all the
    fighting parties came together and decided to end it, like it was
    a football match or something ... They rehabilitated all of the
    buildings, but they've done no rehabilitation for the human beings -
    all the people who disappeared, all the people who lost their houses,
    lost their future, lost everything."

    Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of the performance was the
    audience's reluctance to intervene in scenes of violence, and
    willingness to passively witness strangers' suffering.

    "The guide is an accomplice, [a manifestation] of Lebanese amnesia,"
    Assaf says. "Like in Gambaro's play, the audience becomes an
    accomplice to what's happening. You see that he's lying, but what do
    you do? Nothing. You just nod and move on."

    A thought-provoking performance, "Watch Your Step" is amusing,
    enlightening and deeply sad. Allowing audiences a rare opportunity
    to explore the interiors of some war-ravaged Beirut buildings,
    it simultaneously provides an insight into the human cost of the
    conflict and the passive mentality that allows atrocities to happen.

    Far more than a simple trip down memory lane, "Watch Your Step"
    was a chilling wake-up call.

    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/Culture/Performance/2014/May-05/255335-specters-of-war-thwart-efforts-to-forget.ashx#axzz30rdSC7hf

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