The Prague Post - War takes centre stage as Lebanon's theatres are back

EUR -
AED 4.34017
AFN 80.362489
ALL 96.682504
AMD 452.559816
ANG 2.115903
AOA 1083.712734
ARS 1741.66693
AUD 1.778042
AWG 2.130199
AZN 2.014539
BAM 1.952418
BBD 2.379777
BDT 143.860771
BGN 1.954907
BHD 0.445509
BIF 3477.454161
BMD 1.181803
BND 1.508586
BOB 8.16551
BRL 6.276677
BSD 1.181553
BTN 103.744609
BWP 16.751326
BYN 4.002666
BYR 23163.331029
BZD 2.376574
CAD 1.628063
CDF 3338.591925
CHF 0.932271
CLF 0.028683
CLP 1125.24142
CNY 8.395112
CNH 8.39175
COP 4582.250507
CRC 595.46839
CUC 1.181803
CUP 31.317769
CVE 110.499493
CZK 24.324926
DJF 210.030014
DKK 7.46475
DOP 73.867327
DZD 152.627377
EGP 56.893514
ERN 17.727039
ETB 171.236908
FJD 2.644519
FKP 0.865613
GBP 0.867402
GEL 3.188024
GGP 0.865613
GHS 14.4896
GIP 0.865613
GMD 85.089831
GNF 10234.410115
GTQ 9.051319
GYD 247.221578
HKD 9.191364
HNL 30.982325
HRK 7.530917
HTG 154.612144
HUF 390.201706
IDR 19441.83463
ILS 3.951983
IMP 0.865613
INR 103.893626
IQD 1547.918332
IRR 49709.571061
ISK 142.808999
JEP 0.865613
JMD 189.591545
JOD 0.837922
JPY 173.692484
KES 153.045536
KGS 103.348469
KHR 4736.665109
KMF 490.447991
KPW 1063.601357
KRW 1634.562632
KWD 0.360566
KYD 0.984773
KZT 640.282222
LAK 25586.026095
LBP 105830.422881
LKR 356.60221
LRD 209.153583
LSL 20.492876
LTL 3.489556
LVL 0.714861
LYD 6.399453
MAD 10.591905
MDL 19.479818
MGA 5191.423511
MKD 61.543468
MMK 2481.370238
MNT 4251.451163
MOP 9.464864
MRU 47.177362
MUR 53.252111
MVR 18.093265
MWK 2052.790831
MXN 21.651392
MYR 4.959433
MZN 75.529406
NAD 20.492177
NGN 1768.343502
NIO 43.484666
NOK 11.60266
NPR 165.978453
NZD 1.993204
OMR 0.454401
PAB 1.181648
PEN 4.1115
PGK 4.939818
PHP 67.078987
PKR 332.671916
PLN 4.256023
PYG 8431.393157
QAR 4.302647
RON 5.067099
RSD 117.162765
RUB 99.278139
RWF 1712.870253
SAR 4.433115
SBD 9.710949
SCR 16.83517
SDG 710.860549
SEK 10.983863
SGD 1.510681
SHP 0.928711
SLE 27.547692
SLL 24781.814025
SOS 674.13211
SRD 45.190362
STD 24460.927843
STN 24.457629
SVC 10.339088
SYP 15365.538818
SZL 20.541065
THB 37.617297
TJS 11.137301
TMT 4.148127
TND 3.420275
TOP 2.767897
TRY 48.814117
TTD 8.016113
TWD 35.573917
TZS 2919.052701
UAH 48.724798
UGX 4135.834934
USD 1.181803
UYU 47.511308
UZS 14516.955851
VES 189.380771
VND 31170.043668
VUV 140.173798
WST 3.136997
XAF 654.875114
XAG 0.02829
XAU 0.000322
XCD 3.193881
XCG 2.129511
XDR 0.813016
XOF 654.822562
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.100825
ZAR 20.569981
ZMK 10637.635038
ZMW 27.680271
ZWL 380.539956
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    77.27

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    24.52

    +0.24%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.15

    +0.38%

  • SCS

    -0.1500

    16.73

    -0.9%

  • BCC

    -1.9300

    80.46

    -2.4%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    40.36

    +0.77%

  • BTI

    0.2400

    56.03

    +0.43%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    23.49

    +0.26%

  • RELX

    0.4000

    47.09

    +0.85%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    24.42

    +0.12%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    13.85

    -0.51%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2500

    15.25

    -1.64%

  • RIO

    -0.4500

    62.99

    -0.71%

  • VOD

    -0.1100

    11.66

    -0.94%

  • BP

    -0.1300

    34.3

    -0.38%

  • AZN

    0.1300

    77.69

    +0.17%

War takes centre stage as Lebanon's theatres are back
War takes centre stage as Lebanon's theatres are back / Photo: Joseph EID - AFP

War takes centre stage as Lebanon's theatres are back

As Lebanon suffered a war last year, Ali Chahrour was determined to keep making art, creating a performance inspired by the plight of migrant workers caught up in the conflict.

Text size:

Months after a ceasefire largely halted the fighting between Israel and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, Chahrour's work premiered in Beirut in early May with plans to take it to stages across Europe including at France's famed Avignon Festival.

"This project was born during the war," said the 35-year-old playwright and choreographer.

"I did not want to stop making theatre, because I don't know how to fight or carry weapons, I only know how to dance."

On stage, two Ethiopian domestic workers and a Lebanese Ethiopian woman speak, sing and dance, telling stories of exile and mistreatment in "When I Saw the Sea", directed by Chahrour.

The play pays tribute to the migrant women who were killed or displaced during the two-month war between Israel and Hezbollah which ended in November, and the year of hostilities that preceded it.

Hundreds of migrant workers had sought refuge in NGO-run shelters after being abandoned by employers escaping Israeli bombardment.

Others were left homeless in the streets of Beirut while Lebanon's south and east, as well as parts of the capital, were under attack.

Chahrour said that "meeting with these women gave me the strength and energy to keep going" even during the war, seeking to shed light on their experience in Lebanon which is often criticised for its poor treatment of migrant workers.

- 'Escape and therapy' -

The war has also shaped Fatima Bazzi's latest work, "Suffocated", which was shown in Beirut in May.

It was revised after the 32-year-old playwright was displaced from her home in Beirut's southern suburbs, a Hezbollah stronghold heavily bombarded during the war.

The play originally portrayed a woman dealing with her misogynistic husband, and was reshaped by Bazzi's own experience, forced to escape to Iraq until the ceasefire was finally reached.

Determined to continue the project the moment she returned to Lebanon, Bazzi had kept in contact with the cast in video calls.

"We took advantage of this in the performance, the idea of separation and distance from each other, how we worked to continue the play," she told AFP during a recent rehearsal.

At one point in the play, the characters are suddenly interrupted by the sound of a bomb and rush to their phones to see what was hit this time, with their reactions becoming scenes of their own.

To Bazzi, working on the play has allowed her and the cast to "express the things we felt and went through, serving as an escape and therapy".

- 'Children of war' -

Theatre stages across Lebanon did not lift their curtains during the war, and though they are now back, the local scene is still burdened by the effects of a devastating economic crisis since 2019.

"We postponed an entire festival at the end of last year due to the war," said Omar Abi Azar, 41, founder of the Zoukak collective.

The group runs the theatre where Bazzi's latest piece was performed.

"Now we have started to pick up the pace" again, said Abi Azar, whose own play was postponed by the war.

"Stop Calling Beirut", which Abi Azar created with his collective, tells the story of the loss of his brother more than a decade ago and their childhood memories during Lebanon's civil war, which ended in 1990.

Zoukak itself was born out of a crisis during a previous war between Hezbollah and Israel in 2006.

"We are children of war. We were born, raised and grew up in the heart of these crises," said Abi Azar.

To him, "this is not a challenge, but rather our reality".

"If this reality wanted to pull us down, it would have dragged us, buried us and killed us a long time ago," he added, seeking hope in art.

A.Slezak--TPP