tv Women in Beirut BBC News August 26, 2023 12:30pm-1:01pm BST
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will take legal action, after a member of the country's women's world cup squad said she did not consent to being kissed on the lips by its president, following last weekend's final. 81 team members are refusing to play until luis rubiales removed, but he refuses to resign. rail passengers across england are experiencing disruption today, as 20,000 staff begin a walk—out over pay and working conditions. workers from m train operators are taking part in the strike, which is its 24th since last summer. hundreds of enthusiasts from across the world have gathered in the scottish highlands, in the biggest hunt for the loch ness monster in more than 50 years. thermal imaging cameras on drones are, ambitiously, being used to detect unusual activity. now on bbc news — women in beirut:
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rebuilding our city. hello, i'm kim chakanetsa and today, i'm in beirut, the capital of lebanon. 0n the 4th of august 2020, a devastating explosion ripped through the city's port. the blast claimed more than 200 lives and thousands others were injured. damage to surrounding properties and businesses was estimated to be overfour billion us dollars. many of those affected were small to medium enterprises, led by women. it was one of the largest non—nuclear explosions in history. three years on, what is life like for the people who live and work here? i've come to downtown beirut to meet two women who are working tirelessly to rebuild their city.
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joelle azar is the owner of le panier du coin, a food store selling natural products, in the centre of beirut. and nour tannir is an architect and stylist, who co—founded espacefann, a social enterprise, offering affordable workshops and professional courses in textile design and traditional crafts. welcome, joelle and nour. thank you. thank you, kim. it's great to be here. now, how would you describe your lives prior to the blast? i'll start with you, joelle. prior to the blast, it was an excellent life, so everything was booming, the businesses were booming, even the economy in lebanon was booming. and then, 2019 happened, so we had the financial crisis and then, in 2020, august 4, the big explosion. nour, how would you describe your life prior to that? i would say the same... the same thing. things were going smoothly, up until 2019. before the blast, we had some...
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the banking crisis and the economic crisis here in lebanon, not to mention the covid crisis, but... and while these were happening, we were trying to adapt, but the blast was really a hit in the heart, unfortunately. we'll talk more about the explosion and its aftermath in a second, but first, i want to hear about your personal stories. joelle, you were in banking and then you left that and you opened a food store, so tell me, why did you choose to quit banking? ok, so, basically, when we opened the shop, i was still in the banking sector in lebanon and then, when the financial crisis hit and the banking sector saw the devaluation of our lebanese pound was really huge, so when you work in a bank, you earn in lebanese... in lebanese pound. and everything was dollarized and everything was...
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the prices were extremely changing, so i couldn't... i was like, "i need to do something," so i changed completely from the bank. i still have a job from eight to six, i work in a software company, and i take care of my shop because my dream was to actually leave everything and take care of this shop. but with covid and the financial crisis and the blast, it was too much, so we couldn't. and this was a family shop that you started, that you joined, with your sisters. exactly, so we are a group of four. it was started at home because of my mum, so, since we are young, my mum used everything that's very natural. we had the idea, me and my sisters, to open the shop, in order to let people, medium range and high—end, if you want, customers, to enjoy eating healthy, without like paying too much money. we started with two or three brands and then we have like 60 or 70 brands, all done by women. nour, you also work with a family
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member, your sister—in—law. yes. tell me more about your business. sure. well, ijoined yasmine dabbous, my partner, in 2019. i started my career as an interior architect, working full—time in a furniture gallery. but i always felt like i wanted to do more so, at 24 years old, fate had led me to yasmine, to join forces with her to expand espacefann, so espacefann is an art and design school. we offer courses for younger talents and more mature talents. and you don't really have to have an art background in order to learn. you canjust come and test it out for yourself. fantastic. now, joelle, i understand you have a network of women artisans and farmers that you use. yes. tell me about that. so, basically, when you want to find
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natural products in lebanon, you have to go in the mountains, so when the crisis hit, and after covid, they were not working. the only stores that were working were actually the big supermarkets because they were delivering and the delivery was easy. so, they had specially no—one to come from... always from beirut to... from the mountain to beirut, in order to get us the products. so, we started gathering some women that would actually cook or do something like jams or peanut butter or carob molasses or products that you can actually find in my shop. in order for them to have a little bit of income, so they can be a bit more independent, or even help in the household and in the charges of the family. so, yeah, this is how we started. nour, who are your students? tell me about the courses they are doing.
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so, the majority of our students are women. they come from different age groups, different socioeconomic backgrounds, and different educational backgrounds. and they come to our studio, either to learn a new skill, or tojust come de—stress and relax. but what's amazing is that many of those who initially come tojust relax, actually end up pursuing and making a career out of what they learn. actually, 65 of 400 of our students have opened their small businesses in lebanon from a course that they've taken with us and so, we really witnessed this impact, especially during the times of the covid crisis and the lebanese economic crisis. joelle, when you made that switch from working in banking to becoming a first—time entrepreneur, what hurdles did you encounter? actually, a lot.
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0ne, because the economic situation was not helping. two, because, as i told you, i opened the store with my four sisters and after the blast, all my sisters left beirut, so i had to stay alone and work, and do something with the shop. that must have been difficult. oh, yeah! trust me! because you know when you're four, it's easier, you know, but when you handle the responsibility on your own, it's much more difficult. but what's amazing about lebanon is that whenever you need help, you will find it, so it's... that's true. 0ur heart is... maybe we can hate each other, but when someone needs help, everybody will come and, like, help you. yes, totally. i think that people's help to one another was really a major factor in being able to rise again after the explosion. nour, when you look back, what were some of the hurdles you faced at the beginning?
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well, i started my entrepreneurial journey a couple of weeks before the revolution started. so, it has been a chain of challenges because after that, a few weeks later, we had the banking crisis, and the lira devaluation. later on, we had the covid crisis, up until later in the summer, the beirut blast. i was feeling very scared and i wanted to give up so many times because i didn't really know what was going on and things were going... were drifting from the way we had planned them. but with the determination and the experience of my partner and the fact that we encouraged each other, we were able to keep going. of course, financially speaking, this was through the help of grants and the...
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coming up with new projects that helped us sustain during the crisis. you've both painted a picture of how dire the situation has been, the severe financial crisis lebanon is facing, triple—digit inflation, a devaluating currency. how would you say that has shaped how you go about your everyday life, jere? so, basically, i think that i was very aggressive with myself and my entourage. i was always... i always wanted to be better and to try to do something, but the problem is that the problem was not coming from me, it was from the situation. but you were frustrated. you don't know what to do. and you start coming up with solutions and when you find a solution, it's always going to be close... at the end of the road. and it was very... i think that it's the biggest
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psychological challenge we had, more than my day—to—day life. it was the stress that we encountered, it was the scare, the uncertainty, the... you go out, you don't know what to do, so what am i supposed to do now? the dollar is at 30, tomorrow it's going to be at 35. what to do? how am i going to survive? so, basically, yeah. can you relate, nour? yes, definitely. it's really a challenge that you have to take day by day in lebanon and what these challenges have taught me is to be more lenient with uncertainty, to adapt to things that are going to change along the way. and i would say that these challenges have also pushed our business to go into certain directions that otherwise we wouldn't have ventured into. so, this is kind of a virtue. but on a personal level, it has taught me a lot. yeah.
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let's come back to 2020, the year of the pandemic. lebanon's facing this very severe financial crisis and then, of course, on august the 4th, the blast happens. joelle, where were you when the explosion occurred and were you injured? thank god, no. i was not injured. but i was so scared after the blast, so i couldn't really understand what happened, so i was in my car when it happened, ground zero, i did not actually hear anything, other than my car moving forward. and then, everything was yellowish. and there was glass everywhere. so, my car, i had a very big car, so i thought the explosion was next to my car and nothing around... and everything around me was ok, you know? but then, ijust realised that everything was broken and i looked up and my car was... i have a panoramic view from my car and the glass was shattered and i had a balcony that fell
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on my car, but not on my head. so, i think it's by a miracle i was not injured. so, what did you do immediately after that? how did you get out of your car? so, my only... actually, my only thought at this second was to see if my sister is still alive, because she was here in the shop. so, i was only screaming the name of my sister and i was trying to call her, but i had no... my body was frozen. i have one of my neighbours that hugged me, because i was screaming nonstop the name of my sister, so when he hugged me, he was like, "you're 0k, your sister is ok," and then, i saw everything around me. everything was yellowish, the glass was everywhere, flying. glass was flying everywhere because we have a lot of high buildings. and when i saw my sister, this was, i think, the best moment of my life. by the time i realised,
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it took me literally ten to 15 minutes to realise that the blast is not actually in this road, it was all beirut. mm. and i ran to my house. were your family all 0k? yes, everyone was ok, but unfortunately, i can say to myself that i was lucky, my family was lucky, i guess you were lucky too... yes, absolutely. ..but i lost five friends. the trauma that you have is not ok. the ptsd that you still have is not ok. and when you finally came back to the store, the space we're in now, what did it look like? i came back the second day because i had everything that... from the store that was shattered. i had no more... glass everywhere. all the products were on the floor. and i started cleaning and people came to help me clean. people i did not even know.
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people i did not ever see in my life... this is the community you mentioned. exactly. they were just passing by, seeing one woman cleaning all alone, removing the glass, "everything's 0k? "can we help? " and they started helping me, so i cleaned all the shop and i removed everything from the shop and i closed fora month, because, psychologically, it was too much. so, i had to rebuild the shop, but again, saying that, the community of lebanon helped me and there were lot of ngos, especially ngos that really helps women that are... i don't know if you're familiar with them madame caroline fattal, stand for women, they contacted me directly and it's like, "we are ready to help you. "what do you need?" so, basically, this is where you can see there's still lebanon somewhere, there are still people living in this country, it's not like broken souls. there's a lot of love. nour, you were at home with your
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husband when the blast occurred. what do you remember of that day? i remember it being a very regular day, except that it was... we had been in contact with someone who had covid at the time and so, my family and i, everyone, was on lockdown to make sure that we don't infect anybody. and we were supposed to have a class at the studio around 6pm, so right around the time of the explosion. but we decided to close and to postpone because it was the ethical thing to do. and we were really saved by a miracle back then. i'm really glad. but how i felt in my body, actually, just like joelle said, everyone felt like it was happening on their street and in the building where they were. i said my prayers, i thought i was going to die. and that was it, i wasjust glad that my husband and i were in front of each other and still alive. ijust wanted to check if my family was alive too. and i wanted to understand where it was coming from, that was it. i feel really blessed. among all of the disaster that
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happened, i feel really blessed that there were still parts of the silos that were destroyed, they were still standing and they protected a very large part of the city because otherwise, all of it would have been gone. i'm blessed and i'm grateful that half of the blast went into the sea. i feel grateful that we were not... i mean, like, it was godly timing that we were not right there at the time. yeah. joelle, how did you spend the weeks... the days and weeks, following the blast? you know, i think everybody was on survival mode, so, basically, for my part, the day after i came to clean
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the shop and then i had to fix also my house, because my house was also destroyed and even if everything was destroyed around you, we had to be supportive towards each other, so, as i told you, i lost five people i know, so i had to go and see if their friends are ok. nour, those days that came right after the blast, what were you doing? we were also helping on the ground and we were really trying to make sense of things in our heads, but physically, we were working. we had some energy to put somewhere. we had to help each other. of course, it took us time to be back on our feet, slowly, after that. and you can see it also with the students who were coming and they wanted to express all the feelings that they were feeling because at the end of the day, it's a traumatic experience.
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and how long do you think, nour, it took you until you felt that you were back firmly on your feet? i would say at least several months. this was happening gradually. and, like, this is the natural occurrence of things. but there's really always a small part of us that is sad because of this, but despite it, we came back stronger and this has taught us a lot. i mean, on a personal level and our business. yeah. joelle, how long would you say it took you to feel that you could... things were back to... well, i hesitate to say normal, but back on your feet? physically, the second day. but mentally, it took me a while, so i kept the shop closed for more than a month because whenever i used
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to come here, or near the shop, i was feeling anxious. and i think that it took me maybe time to get over what we lived, but without forgetting what we lived. but, you know, whenever you live that traumatic experience, whatever you do is to fight, so we had to, wake up, work, come back, sleep. you both spoke about how the community came together in the immediate aftermath of the blast. is that sense of solidarity still there, joelle? 0h, definitely. this is what you'll definitely find in beirut — and in lebanon, actually, not only beirut. but when you see the love that the people gave us and the support actually and the presence. just the fact to see people that you don't know coming in to help, or calling, "are you 0k? "is everything 0k? "do you need anything?"
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it was, i think, the best thing that ever happened to each other. nour, do you still feel that sense of solidarity? to be honest, in my day to day life, outside, when i'm on the street, i don't feel it as much as i felt it when the blast had happened, because we generally tend to focus on our disagreements, whether they're political, or religious, or... this is like the general way of being on the street in lebanon, but in our studio, i definitely feel that love and this bonding that people might have for one another in our country. and i feel like everyone wanted to help each other and our way of helping was that even though we were in pain, even though we did not feel like we were ready to open up again with our business, we felt like we had a duty to because people wanted to come and de—stress and be away from all these stresses, so this extra help that each one can offer to one another is really felt and it's really made a difference in people's lives.
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running a business is challenging, but especially so in a place like lebanon, where there's a lot of uncertainty. what advice would you have for people about dealing with uncertainty, joelle? to be courageous. to be courageous, 0k. courage. courage, and be positive, because no matter what happens, if you're going to be negative, it will never be ok, so just be positive. and at the end, everything will be ok. this is the thing that everybody says. so, everything will be ok. do you believe that?
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yeah. honestly, i lived it, so, yeah. nour, what advice would you have for people? i'd also say the same thing, but i would also tell people that it's great to plan, it's great to think about the future, but it's also important to be able to adapt to things that might come our way. and that no problem is big enough, because there will always be a solution. in my time in lebanon, i've spoken to a number of women and there's one word that keeps coming up, which is resilience. oh, yeah! nour, do you consider yourself to be resilient? and is it something you always had, or is it something that's built up over time? i mean, if you are looking from the outside, you would see that, yes, this is a very resilient character. but i think that me and a lot of women who are like me don't really identify as resilient because we are just really caught up
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in our day to day life, trying to figure out a solution and so we are really focused on this problem solving, that we don't think of this bigger picture of how we are as a general character. but if i look back, and i see... and i feel like, yes, we learned to be a little bit more patient, yeah. so, you're busy, getting on with things... yes! no time to put a name on them. and, joelle, do you consider yourself to be a resilient person? i would actually would have answered the same way as nour because you know when you're inside, you will never see how you're acting, but if people will look at us, like all the foreigners that were coming to help, even after the blast, were like, "wow! "how can you do that? "how can you live that? "how can you be ok with that? "how can you be smiling?" and then, they would always tell us,
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"you are resilient people," so, in a way, it's very good because it shows a lot of character and a lot of courage, but in order to be resilient, also, we had to face a lot of trauma, so... yeah, it comes at a cost. comes at a cost. but, as she said, you know, you have something wrong, just face it and move on. do you have any questions or advice for each other? i think we're going to become friends. yeah! no, i think that i will learn a lot from her point of how... actually, what happened after, how did you come back on your feet? really it was not... it was not a given. it took a lot of crying and it took a lot of processing, but ijust think time heals, you know? what about you ? i think i had to seek help from my entourage and i had to talk about it,
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but there is still a scar, but i try to, like, temper it, maybe. yeah. and... yeah. and you have to fight. yeah. joelle and nour, thank you so much. it's been such a pleasure speaking to you both. thank you. thank you for having us. thank you. thank you so much. hello. i have got a pretty changeable weekend weather—wise for you. yes, there'll be a bit of blue sky and sunshine, but there'll also be some big shower clouds producing those downpours of showery rain both today and tomorrow.
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could be heavy and frequent at times. i think tomorrow — slightly drier for some of us, compared to what we'll see out there today. but we've got low pressure sitting to the east of the uk — weather front wrapped around that area of low pressure. quite breezy conditions around the edge of that low pressure, so breezy for scotland, northern ireland, through the english channel, for instance, as well. you can see these showers that are peppering up through the course of the day — almost anywhere, really, but i think they'll be most frequent for central and eastern parts of england. and it's here that we're likely to see some thunderstorms. could be some hail, some lightning mixed in. cloudier skies across the northern half of scotland into western parts of northern ireland, as well. temperatures — high teens or low 20s. but we are likely to see some of those showers affecting both reading and leeds festivals at times today, but there'll be some late sunshine, i think, for both those areas, as the showers gradually fade away through the evening hours. 0vernight, many of us dry with clear spells, some mist and some fog patches forming, but we will see further heavy showers rattling in across parts of wales and the south west of england, too, and then perhaps into the west of northern ireland by the early hours of sunday. a bit more cloud and rain spilling
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in because this weather front is slowly approaching from the west on sunday. for most of us, actually, a bit of a drier morning but, again, those showers will build through the afternoon and it'll be central and eastern england as well as eastern scotland that'll see the most frequent and the heaviest. slightly less numerous than today, i think, those downpours, but you still could catch one almost anywhere. a slight improvement for wales and for scotland, too. and sunday, of course, marks the start of the notting hill carnival, which may be a little bit damp, i think — perhaps some brighter spells at times — but it is into monday that the weather does start to improve, because we've got this area of high pressure in the atlantic that's nudging its way in from the west, so squeezing away the bulk of the showers for monday. it's a bank holiday for many of us — not everywhere — on monday, and we've got some sunshine, particularly for southern and eastern parts of the uk. a bit more cloud working in from the northwest and there could be the odd spot of showery, light rain just working eastwards in the breeze through the day. temperatures around about 16 to 19 in the north, but perhaps up to 20, possibly 2! in the southeast. it should feel relatively pleasant in those spells of sunshine. a drier day for many of us, then, on monday, but the week
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action over comments made by the playerjenni hermoso. investigations into thefts at the british museum continue — as the institution says some of the 2000 items believed stolen have now been recovered. more disruption to uk rail services expected today — with workers in england walking out over pay and conditions. and the hunt is on — hundreds of enthusiasts gather in the scottish highlands in the hopes of catching a glimpse of the loch ness monster — the biggest search in more than 50 years. hello and welcome, i'm luxmy gopal. the spanish football federation has accused the women's world cup winner, jenni hermoso, of lying about a kiss by the federation�*s president. the organisation says it'll take legal action against her, after the forward said she did not
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