Waad Project restores people’s hope
Sep 13, 2009
Dahia was the area hardest hit by Israel in 2006. It suffered 934 bombing
raids, according to the Lebanese army. Much of the neighborhood was reduced to
rubble.
Three years later we saw none of that. In the hardest hit areas of Dahia we
saw endless reconstruction, new, modern apartment buildings, bustling
neighborhoods and new hospitals. We saw a vibrant and alive community
rebuilding itself.
Beirut Cardiac Hospital in Dahia, built with
funds from Iran.
photo: Joyce Chediac
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Before Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war, this tightly packed Shiia
neighborhood was called the “Belt of Misery.” The Dahia, or
southern suburb of Beirut, was long the city’s most disenfranchised area.
There were no social services until Hezbollah began providing them. Now once
again, after the bombing raids by Israel, the neighborhood is on the move.
We felt the enthusiasm and experienced the friendliness and openness of a
people who had overcome a man-made disaster and were coming out on top.
When Israel bombed this poor neighborhood, it followed the infamous policy
of all occupiers: carry out collective punishment of the population to turn the
people against the resistance movement. This massive retaliation against the
population was even named by Israel as its “Dahia Doctrine,”
defined by Israeli Chief of Staff Dan Halutz as a plan to “use
disproportionate force and cause great damage and destruction” in order
to “turn the clock back 20 years.” (www.electronicintifada.net)
What Israel and its backers in Washington did not count on, however, was the
response of Hezbollah, the leading resistance group in Lebanon. Hezbollah
announced the Waad Project, a reconstruction plan for the complete restoration
of this neighborhood.
Dahia becoming a showpiece
In fact, Hezbollah is building the hardest-hit areas of Dahia into a
showcase, with new workers’ housing much improved from what it was before
the Israeli bombing. Far from being turned against the resistance, Hezbollah
has drawn the people of Dahia even closer with its response.
The Lebanese government is providing an average of $53,000 in compensation
for families who lost their homes in the war. Most agree this is far from being
enough to buy an adequate apartment in Beirut. The Waad Project gave people a
choice: rebuild your own apartments with the compensation funds or give the
Project the money and let it assume responsibility for reconstruction.
Hezbollah promised to cover whatever extra was needed to build higher standard
housing.
Each building held a vote—the overwhelming majority voted to put their
trust in Hezbollah and its project. The Waad pledged to rebuild about 280
destroyed and damaged buildings in Dahia and make them even better than before.
From everything we saw, the Waad is making good on its promise. Construction is
expected to be completed by the end of 2009.
According to the Project’s design, the newly rebuilt areas have
“more lighting and open spaces, traffic reduction through improved roads,
new parking lots, and gardens to give the streets and buildings a greater sense
of place and character.” People are even being given a choice of
countertops and other variables for their new apartments! This is happening in
an area that was once the poorest and most run down in all of Beirut.
We witnessed the fruits of this commitment. In addition to spanking new
apartments under construction, we saw shops, offices, warehouses and schools.
There was a cardiac-specialty hospital donated by Iran. We were shown a large
restaurant which served traditional Lebanese food at low prices for working
families. “Come to Dahia if you want to shop,” we were told,
“things are cheaper here.”
People’s struggle defeats ‘Dahia
Doctrine’
Hezbollah and the people of Dahia have turned around this U.S-Israeli
“Dahia Doctrine” of destruction and despair into its very
opposite—a victory for the people and their liberation struggle. The U.S.
and Israeli policy of collective punishment has backfired here, as it has
backfired throughout history—in Vietnam, in Algeria, in occupied Europe
and elsewhere.
What has been the response? The U. S. government has labeled not only
Hezbollah a “terrorist” organization but also the reconstruction
project. It has frozen any assets held by the Waad Project that are under U.S.
jurisdiction and U.S. citizens are barred from having any transactions with
Waad.
Backed by the U.S., Israel has also threatened new terrors against Lebanon
if Hezbollah takes part in the Lebanese government which is now being formed.
Don’t the Lebanese people have the right to defend their homes?
In Dahia we saw a population teeming with new confidence and pride in their
organization, Hezbollah, and in themselves for what they have accomplished. The
people of Dahia are hopeful for the future and confident that they can
successfully defend its hard-won gains and sparkling new neighborhoods.