By
For 34 days in the summer of 2006, the world’s attention
turned to Lebanon, where a bloody war erupted between the country’s
militant group Hezbollah and longtime enemy Israel. But for Habib
Haddad, who was hundreds of miles away from family at the University of
Southern California, searching for local-language updates was almost
impossible because he did not have access to an Arabic keyboard. Enter
Yamli, the online transliteration service he invented that allows
searches in Arabic using phonetic English.
When, in
2012, Yahoo acquired the company’s licensing rights, Haddad joined the
ranks of an impressive group of industrious Lebanese entrepreneurs who
have dominated multiple global companies across industries — telecoms,
logistics, automobiles. In total, the 35-year-old Haddad has been
involved as an engineer, angel investor or founder in no fewer than 10
companies in the Middle East. “Things that don’t work excite me,” says
Haddad, speaking over the phone from Beirut. “It’s the same reason I
live in Lebanon. A lot of things are broken in this country.”
Among the approximately 15 million people of Lebanese descent who live outside of Lebanon,
that doer attitude seems ubiquitous, if we are to judge by the success
of the business community. (Carlos Slim, the telecoms tycoon and the
richest man in the world, is Lebanese-Mexican. Ely Calil, whose father,
George, founded an oil empire in Nigeria, is one of the richest men in
Britain. Carlos Ghosn, who is French-Lebanese-Brazilian, is the chief
executive of French carmaker Renault and Japanese carmaker Nissan.) But
increasingly, a slice of this highly successful community is turning
back toward their place of ancestry. It’s good news for the motherland,
which is home to fewer than 5 million people, ancient infrastructure,
shaky internet connections, and, these days, increasing startup
activity.