. . . when you visit Beirut.
There are so many facets to a country. Especially this one.
And when you come as a tourist, you only get the big picture.
You visit the
National Museum (I wonder why, not that interesting), you run around Martyr’s
Square (pretty bleak, if I may say so), go downtown (not Lebanon at all), visit
a mosque (now that’s something I do when I
visit a real Arab country) , look at Rauche Rock ( if anything is ONLY
visited by tourists, it is this one) or tramp around the Corniche (Okay, that one
counts as a real Lebanese experience).
But all the finer nuances escape you. And those are the ones
that make this country so intricately interesting (as far as I am concerned).
This little red light, for instance. (Sorry for the all the other lights, but
that’s what you get when the little red light is one.)
Why would there be a little red light with switches on the
electricity pole?
Well, when the light is on, it means there is government
electricity (Hence the street lights). If it is off, you’re on the neighborhood
generator. Which means for many that you cannot blow-dry your hair and turn on
the microwave at the same time. If you do, that means a trip down stairs, to
the electricity pole, where you must flip your ‘digenteur’ (circuit breaker) back
up again (or stay in the dark).
Personally, I think that’s more interesting than
what’s laying around in the National Museum. But that’s me.
2 comments:
hahahaha so true! Or turning on the chauffe-eau and ACs only when it's moteur
Go visit the National Museum and get back to us on your thoughts of all the civilizations that have passed through the Lebanon throughout the past 7000 years.
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