
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.”