
MECC
Beirut, in the Heart of the Church
Beirut, a City of Resurrection
One year has passed and the Beirut explosion tragedy is still growing, angrier and stronger. No memory can contain the pain it caused, while no time could ever make it go away. Since last August, Beirut is praying in the name of the Father for every son, brother, sister, mom, or dad wo went to work and never came back. 216 victims within seconds. Thousands of injured, hundreds of whom made it with no permanent disabilities. More than 80 thousand household, business, school, hospital, and historical location that stood long enough to watch Beirut grow and bloom were destroyed.
His Holiness Pope Tawadros II: One Year Post-Explosion…?
A whole year has passed since the unfortunate event, the massive Beirut port explosion, our beloved Lebanese capital, on August 4, 2020, after flammable chemicals were stored there for a long time with no precautions. The terrifying picture we saw on TV made our hearts sink... At the time, we considered it a horrific crisis and incident that would bring people together and unify hearts to face this disaster with all its humanitarian, social, economic and life dimensions. Peoples have always united in the face of disaster, hoping to get out of it with the strength and determination...
Nunca te olvidaremos...
Escrito por la periodista Melvine Khoury / 4 de agosto de 2020. Superviviente de la explosión del puerto de Beirut
Este es el 4 de agosto, lo que se suponía que iba a ser un día normal, a pesar de las circunstancias inusuales por las que estábamos pasando a muchos niveles.
Estaba en casa, lo que todo el mundo llama un «lugar seguro». No sabía que había una bomba de relojería a punto de estallar, privándonos de la vida a los mártires, las víctimas, los heridos y los condenados.
Quisieron mancharnos aquel 4 de agosto de sangre, miedo, desesperación y rendición, porque son hijos de las tinieblas y líderes de un mundo ajeno a la misericordia y a la humanidad.
Matar a un pueblo seguro... es un asunto que no se debe considerar
Otro capítulo de la tragedia épica de nuestro Levante antioqueno fue taladrado hace un año en Beirut.
Digo taladrado y no escrito, porque lo sucedido ha quedado grabado en nuestros cuerpos, así como en nuestra memoria, e igualmente en la memoria de quienes se ocupan de nosotros.
La marcha de la carne y la sangre y el desamparo no ha terminado aún sus capítulos.
Más de doscientos muertos, seis mil heridos y cientos de miles de personas sin hogar han sido un golpe para la humanidad, para el mundo entero, para la extensión del mundo árabe y para la propia humanidad.
We Will Never Forget You…
Written by the journalist Melvine Khoury/ August 4, 2020 Beirut Port Explosion Survivor
This is the fourth of August, what was supposed to be an ordinary day, despite the unusual circumstances we were going through on many levels.
I was home, what everyone calls a “safe place”. I didn’t know there was a ticking bomb about to explode, depriving us martyrs, victims, injured, and doomed of our lives.
They wanted to stain us that August 4 with blood, fear, despair, and surrender, for they are the sons of darkness, and leaders of a world unfamiliar to mercy and humanity. But once these negative feelings touch our souls, we take our gowns of worry and disability off. We are now stronger, and surrender is not an option we are willing to consider.
When Lebanon’s Lawyers represent their People
Head of the Beirut Bar Association Melhem Khalaf: The Beirut Port Explosion was an intentional crime
“We will not let Lebanese people sink in despair”
As a first response to the crime of the century, and so the criminal does not escape from justice, the Beirut Lawyers Syndicate filed a lawsuit as a party affected by the blast and started an office presided by the Syndicate President Melhem Khalaf to represent all those who fell victims of the explosion.
Melhem Khalaf then directed the founding of a central operation room and the setup of a few offices in different locations in Beirut to help people file lawsuits.
They were the first to raise their voices when everyone was afraid. They sent a letter to the Secretary General of the United Nations with explicit clauses asking for help in their fight for justice.
Between Faith and Confusion, We Won’t Forget the August 4 Tragedy
Dr. Rima Nasrallah from the Evangelical Churches of Beirut
“We try as much as possible to encourage one another, putting our fate in the hands of Jesus Christ”
On the August 4 of last year, joy turned into sadness and hope into despair. A tragedy targeted us all. Even churches were wounded crying from their children’s pain. It is true that churches were severely damaged, but it stood tall and remained the one refuge that spread strength and will. It saved people from despair and put them back of the path of hope, tranquility, and safety, for there is no savior other than Jesus Christ who tell us: “Come to me, all you who labor and are burdened, and I will give you rest.” (Matthew 11:28)
The Evangelical churches in Beirut got their fair share of damages.
The Syriac Catholic Church in Beirut, Living the Tragedy Alongside its Parish
His Eminence Bishop Mathias Charles Mrad: ‘August 4 was a hard test that we passed with faith and solidarity’
It was destroyed and went through pain alongside its children, it mourned and cried with them in times of despair, then it rose and held on to its hope in Jesus Christ. Indeed, these are the churches of Beirut, houses od God, the one safe refuge, source of faith and resilience amidst the tragedy and loss that took over Lebanon on August 4,2020. A date holding a memory of death, despair, distress, and fear… however, churches refused to surrender and chose to rise, as once did Jesus Christ.
The churches of Beirut weren’t spared from the explosion destruction. Each was severely damaged to its core, as it suffered the unbearable losses of its children.
His Eminence Archbishop Shahe Panossian:
The Armenians of the World Rushed to Help their Communities in Lebanon
The restoration and rehabilitation committee taking care of the August 4 explosion destruction completed its duties with success
The Beirut port explosion damaged a big part of Armenian residences in Beirut. The Armenian Orthodox Church played a big role in rehabilitating what was destroyed during what we may call the biggest crime against Lebanon. His Eminence Archbishop Shahe Panossian, Primate of the Armenian Orthodox Church in Lebanon explains how the Church stood by its children.
A few days after the tragedy that burdened Beirut, Archbishop Panossian says: “A committee was started with the blessing of the Holy Catholicos Aram the First of the Armenian house of Cilicia.
Archbishop Abdel Sater:
“We finished 30% of restorations and what’s left is the damage the state needs to fix”
“Church property, if sold, like some suggested, would not be enough to save Lebanon from collapse”
“People turn to the Church as a mother and a home”
One year after the Beirut port explosion, 131 Maronite parishes had their churches destroyed and 145 priests went from serving masses to becoming relief teams. From focusing on the spiritual life to protecting dignities, homes, and rights… After one year, we meet with the Curial Bishop of the Maronite Archdiocese of Beirut HE Archbishop Boulos Abdel Sater to ask him: “How did you treat the wounds of Beirut? Are there still bleeding wounds left?” Archbishop of Beirut said a few weeks before the 4th of August that he does not trust that the identity of the person behind the explosion would be exposed.
Archbishop Audi: ‘After the August 4 explosion, they tried to convince residents to sell the houses they got from their ancestors’
‘They are trying to change the demographics of Beirut, we will not tolerate that!’
On his face, you can see Beirut. In his voice resonating every Sunday in St. George Cathedral in Beirut, you hear the voice of Beirut. Through his aching heart, and his saddened eyes ever since August 4 of last year, you can feel the pain of Beirut, gem of the Middle East, mourning in her black dress…
Far from his political opinion that disdains our irresponsible leaders, and his stance against corruption and the corrupted, Metropolitan of Beirut and its dependencies of the Greek Orthodox Bishop Elias Audi said during the mass of commemoration of the blast victims:
The Ghost of death is still haunting Beirut as we still live in the deadly unknown.
Momentum, the Weekly Newsletter from the Middle East Council of Churches
The new and special issue of the MECC magazine "Al Muntada" is now issued, under the title of "Beirut in the Heart of the Church, the Risen Beirut Does Not Die!", in the weekly newsletter Momentum prepared by the Communication and Public Relations Department of the Middle East Council of Churches. The department produced this issue for the commemoration of the Beirut Port explosion, as it includes exclusive interviews with the heads of Beirut's churches and special articles shedding the light on this disaster and its repercussions, in addition to the role of the churches amidst the tragedy.
Beirut Blast in a Special Issue of “Al Muntada” Magazine, Published by the Middle East Council of Churches
The Communication and Public Relations Department of the Middle East Council of Churches (MECC) published a new and special issue of its quarterly magazine, “Al Muntada”, for the month of August 2021, in Arabic and English. It is entitled "Beirut, in the Heart of the Church, Beirut, a City of Resurrection". The department has dedicated this issue as a tribute to Beirut and its people on the first commemoration of the Beirut Port explosion which occurred on August 4, 2020.
The Coronavirus COVID-19 situation in the Middle East
Report: 3 August 2021
The World Health Organization once again, warned of the dangerous spread of the new corona strain which has infected 15 out of 22 countries stretching from Morocco to Pakistan.
Momentum, the Weekly Newsletter from the Middle East Council of Churches
The new issue of the weekly newsletter Momentum issued by the Communication and Public Relations Department of the Middle East Council of Churches, presents an exclusive interview with MECC Secretary General Dr. Michel Abs prepared by the World Council of Churches Communication Department about the living conditions in Lebanon and how Churches are helping. As for the weekly message of the Secretary General Dr. Michel Abs, it was entitled " Trafficking in Human Beings!".
Regresar a cuando todo empezó
Dentro de una semana, el Líbano volverá a ver al día 4 de agosto con, nada más, que melancolía, ya que ha pasado un año con poco que mostrar, en cuanto a la investigación. Si no fuera por la ayuda de los socios internacionales del Líbano en estos tiempos oscuros, cerca de 300,000 libaneses seguirían sin hogar o desplazados. Mientras tanto, los líderes libaneses, los responsables de la toma de decisiones y los políticos se regodean en sus torres de marfil o nadan en sus piscinas privadas, riéndose de toda la riqueza que han acumulado a lo largo de los años.
Back to When it All Started
In one week, Lebanon will revisit August 4 with nothing more than melancholy as a year had passed by with little to show, investigation-wise. If it weren’t for the assistance of Lebanon’s international partners throughout these dark times, about 300,000 Lebanese would be still without a home or displaced. Meanwhile Lebanese leaders, decision makers, and politicians bask in their ivory towers or swim in their private pools, giggling away at all wealth they had gathered over the years.
The Coronavirus COVID-19 situation in the Middle East
Report: 28 July 2021
The World Health Organization warned the surge in the delta variant could be catastrophic for the Middle East, due to low vaccine availability, a lack of adherence to public health and social measures, and increasing complacency by communities.
The Middle East and the New Arrival
Report: 16 to 26 July 2021
As the WHO warns of the next wave of the corona pandemic, the Delta variant of the virus continues to spread worldwide and in the ME region. If it weren’t for the vaccine rollout that preceded the emergence of the new strain, the effects would not be imaginable.
En el Líbano, «sin paz no hay justicia»
Cuando el Dr. Michel Abs, secretario general del Consejo de Iglesias del Oriente Medio, habla de las condiciones de vida en el Líbano, su compasión por su pueblo —y su pasión por la paz— desborda. En una entrevista en video con el Consejo Mundial de Iglesias, compartió con honestidad sus más profundas preocupaciones sobre la actual crisis socioeconómica en su país, y cómo las iglesias están ayudando.