
By Warren Singh-Bartlett
http://www.singhbartlett.com/news/2014/10/4/why-beirut-really-matters
For the last few days, a pleasant little story on VICE by Mary von Aue has been doing the rounds in Beirut. Entitled ‘Fighting for the Right to Party’, it’s essentially an interview with Yousef Harati, one of the city’s more interesting movers and shakers on the nightlife scene.
Essentially, von Aue’s article posits that in a country floundering under the weight of more than 1 million Syrian refugees (von Aue, for some reason, puts that figure at 800,000) and which is next door to a civil war, the Islamic State (almost) and Israel
Of course, it’s elicited howls of delight and horror, as well as the usual self-loathing accusations that the Lebanese are one nation under amnesia. If, for me, there is any sense of unease in reading it, that’s because the story is an old one and a favourite American trope, to boot. Beirut as the centre of decadence, the city that danced even as the bombs dropped, has been rehashed in assorted American and European publications at least once a year since I got here. The emergence of the IS just adds a new sexy spin.