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demolition beirut brisbane | beyond the surface exposed | by Joanne Choueiri | November 2021

http://www.beyondthesurface.exposed

 

 

During Lebanon’s civil war (1975-1990), Beirut was witness to a series of illegal and unethical demolitions that instigated the erasure of the city, memory, and identity, launching Beirut into a new era of collective amnesia.

 

 

In 1975, the war was situated in the centre of the capital where a demarcation line also known as the green line divided the country into east and west Beirut. The area was abandoned by residents due to the ongoing dangers posed by Muslim and Christian fighters on either side of the line. The war spanned two years, before arriving to a cease-fire in 1977. Signs of life, particularly in the bustling souks (markets), slowly started creeping back in before the war expanded to other parts of the city. At that time, the city was abandoned and deserted once again, and access to the city was once again prohibited.

 

 

The fighting caused destruction to the city; however, a series of secretive illegal demolitions were conducted. Literary scholar Saree Makdisi counted four series of demolitions that took over the city.1 On the pretext of cleaning up the centre after the Israeli invasion, a first series of demolitions in 1983 erased parts of the souks mainly: Souk Al-Nouriyeh and Souk Sursuq, along with some sections of the Saifi area. The second series in 1986 was similarly executed without the necessary demolition requests from governmental institutions. As Nabil Beyhum wrote, the demolitions were executed by the company OGER led by the late Prime Minister Rafiq El Hariri in preparation for an envisioned masterplan.2 At that point, therefore, the destruction caused was not due to the war but rather the deliberate intention of demolition of buildings. While the first two series of demolitions were executed illegally without any public or governmental oversight, the following demolitions were carried out under a form of legality. By 1991, the government’s abdicated its role as the prime decision-maker of the redevelopment of Beirut. Hariri’s firm OGER would later come to be known as Solidere that became the principal agency of the reconstruction plans. As a result, Makdisi claimed:

 

 

Thus, without regard to the public – or even to those whose property would be expropriated by the company – did Solidere come into being the ultimate expression of the dissolution of any real distinction between public and private interests or, more accurately, the decisive colonization of the former by the latter.3

 

 

The demolitions of 1992 and 1994 although legal, were executed haphazardly with the help of explosives that excessively damaged the buildings and their neighbouring structures.4 The centre became unrecognizable as Lebanese novelist Elias Khoury wrote: “We enter the Square but do not find the Square.5 The new vision of the city presented by Solidere eradicated the centre and left few monuments and areas intact.

 

 

Consequently, the reconstruction project was implemented first erasing the memory of the war that had just occurred and second obliterating the buildings and their significance in shaping the Lebanese identity and collective memory. Journalist Khaled Saghieh concluded “[…] the reconstruction project becomes a war not on buildings, but on the city’s memory. War for the sake of forgetting”.6

 

 

Through the series of demolitions, a large number of political holes began to appear in the urban fabric. With this reconstruction plan in effect, excavations intended for laying out foundations led to the revealing of deeper gaping holes while exposing past archaeological traces. Taking into consideration that the destruction of buildings started in 1983, the holes would have remained present and unfilled for a minimum of 6 years, before the official launch of the reconstruction project.

 

 

 

 

 

ACCESS >

 

http://www.beyondthesurface.exposed

 

 

Mapping a lost Beirut and the return of stolen ‘living gods’

 

One year on from the catastrophic Beirut explosion, ABC Top 5 Arts resident Joanne Choueiri takes us through her own art project mapping lost buildings in Beirut, a city riddled with political and spatial holes dating from the civil war.

And, what impact has the explosion had on the city’s artists and museums? Lebanese sound artist Rayya Badran joins us between the intermittent power outages of Beirut, where the prevailing city soundscape is now generators humming day and night.

The National Gallery of Australia has announced it is returning to the Indian Government the remaining artworks purchased through disgraced antiquities dealer Subhash Kapoor, more than 10 years after he was put behind bars. But will this mean that the statues go to their rightful homes and how vast is the black market in stolen art and antiquities? Antiquities sleuth Vijay Kumar (Idol Thief, India Pride Project) and ANU’s Dr Chaitanya Sambrani offer different takes on restitution.

Duration: 54min 2sec
Broadcast: Wed 4 Aug 2021, 10:05am

 

 

https://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/the-art-show/xx/13482236

 

 

Artist Website>

 

https://joannechoueiri.cargo.site

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