Khazen

Taline Mansour, (center) poses for a self portait on her mobile phone, while amongst Debutante Ball participants, before the Ball at Casino du Liban where the Ball is held.
by: – Time
24-year-old
Dima Arabi peers from behind a curtain at 600 guests socializing beneath
a glittering chandelier at the Casino du Liban in Jounieh, Lebanon.
Nervously giggling with her girlfriends, she retraces her dance steps in
a white floor-length ball gown.

They are the Debutante Girls: daughters of the wealthy, connected
families of Lebanese high society, college-educated women making an
entrance in a lavish evening event. “It’s a way to present yourself to society,” photographer Natalie
Naccache tells TIME. “But it’s also a way to be a princess for a night.”

Known as the Paris of the Middle East, Lebanon was the epicenter of
nightlife in the mid-1900s. And then the war hit, followed by an influx
of Syrian refugees and sectarian tension. Despite the tense political
climate, Naccache says it’s a culture that persists. “This ball is their
way of carrying on, no matter what is going on in their country,” she
says. “This was them retaining their little Paris of the Middle East.”

Naccache began reporting in Lebanon in 2010. She started
photographing glamorous Lebanese weddings, which led to photographing
society and beauty culture. A Lebanon native, she was interested in
showing a part of Lebanese society that few focus on. She also wanted to
combat stereotypes usually associated with the Middle East. “When
people see images of Lebanon, they are usually images of refugees or of
destruction,” she says. “This is a part of modern-day society that is
never revealed. Why is it never revealed and why aren’t people from high
society ever documented or photographed?”

Naccache attended every Saturday rehearsal to photograph the girls.
As time drew closer to the ball, she would stay late with them as they
rehearsed until midnight. “I spent as much time as I possibly could with
these girls, getting to know them,” she says. “I came to admire and
respect them. They’re not just a bunch of silly, lofty bimbos prancing
around and doing nothing with their money. They are college-educated
women who work hard to ensure that their money and time goes to a good
place.”

 

Natalie Naccache is a Lebanese-British photojournalist based between Dubai, UAE and Lebanon. Follow her on Instagram @natnacphotos.

Rachel Lowry is a writer and contributor for TIME LightBox. Follow her on Twitter and Instagram.