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Lebanon

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  • A woman is smoking a hookah by a swimming pool. (Photo: Promo/Patrick Baz)
    Lebanese film "Do You Love Me"

    A complicated love

    Lana Daher’s new film "Do You Love Me" is a journey through Lebanon’s film archives. Using collage, it traces the history of a country given to repressing its complicated and violent past.

  • A group on motorbikes in the foreground on the left. In the background a bombed building and rubble.
    Lebanon

    Shia families struggle for shelter in divided Beirut

    More than one million Lebanese have been displaced by Israeli strikes. Destruction and occupation have made return impossible for many from the south, including Shia families, who are stranded in Beirut with limited shelter amid deepening sectarian mistrust.

  • Displaced people live in tents along the seaside of Ramlet al-Baida on the Beirut Corniche in Beirut, Lebanon, on March 12, 2026, near the site where an Israeli strike reportedly targeted people sheltering in tents.
    Lebanon

    When war reached my Beirut home

    In Lebanon, war is a test of social cohesion. Beirut-based author Manal Khader recounts how fear and uncertainty spread through her neighbourhood. Her building's WhatsApp group came to life—first with updates and practical questions, then the tone shifted.

  • A yellow flag waves among a destroyed building.
    Lebanese writer Hazem Saghieh

    "Hezbollah has never protected Lebanon from Israel"

    Hazem Saghieh says that the renewed war between Israel and Hezbollah has revealed deep divisions within Lebanese society rather than fostering unity. He warns that Israel's intervention to disarm Hezbollah risks paving the way for a new occupation.

  • Two women walk down a wide pavement holding hands. One is wearing a headscarf, the other without.
    "The Fruit of Fire" by Haneen Al-Sayegh

    Fear and rebellion in the lives of Druze women

    In her novel "The Fruit of Fire", a follow-up to the award winning "The Women's Charter", Haneen Al-Sayegh follows four generations of Druze women in rural Lebanon as they navigate religious authority, isolation, community and love.

  • The image of two men are projected onto a natural arch-like rock formation in the sea.
    Disarming Hezbollah in Lebanon

    Nasrallah on the Pigeon Rocks

    When the Lebanese government moved to disarm Hezbollah, the influential militia responded with a symbolic show of force in the heart of Beirut. Is it projecting strength, or masking political weakness?

  • Two men climb onto a statue lying in ruins.
    Transitional justice in Syria

    "Accountability is more important than punishment"

    Can there be justice after the horrors Syria has endured? Sociologist Mohammed Bamyeh sees signs that the country's new leadership wants to confront the past, but warns against the dangers of selective justice.

  • A boy looks out from the balcony of an apartment building marked with many bulletholes.
    Lebanese Civil War

    The postwar that never was

    Fifty years since its outbreak, Lebanon's Civil War continues to shape its society and political system. The postwar era has been marked by violence, foreign occupation, political paralysis and economic crisis—raising the question: did the war ever truly end?

  • A man gets down on his knees, licking water.
    Filmmaker Monika Borgmann

    "Syria needs a culture of justice"

    Monika Borgmann has spent decades documenting Lebanese and Syrian prison systems. Her 2016 film "Tadmor" found new resonance after Assad's fall. She discusses Syria's future and her fight for justice after the murder of her husband, activist Lokman Slim.

  • The Syrian actor Lojain Ismail in Muawiya's series.
    TV series "Muawiya"

    Historical Ramadan drama fuels controversy

    The Saudi-produced television series “Muawiya” emerged as a talking point during Ramadan, sparking debate throughout the Middle East. Both Iran and Iraq have banned the show which charts the life of one of the most controversial figures in Islamic history.

  • Landscape, destroyed houses and vehicles. The Mediterranean Sea in the background.
    Southern Lebanon

    Returning to find ruins

    The Israeli army is slowly and partially withdrawing from southern Lebanon. Returning residents are confronted by the destruction of their homes and local infrastructure. A view from the ground.

  • Trump holding  a document to the camera, his signature clearly visible at the bottom.
    US Middle East policy

    Is there a Trump-Netanyahu consensus?

    Trump's new administration could give Israel even greater freedom to pursue its territorial and political ambitions in Palestine, Syria and Lebanon, while the future of the ceasefire in Gaza hangs precariously in the balance.

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