The same site links to Paradise Lost: Robert Fisk's elegy for Beirut.
The anger that any human soul should feel at such suffering and loss was expressed so well by Lebanon's greatest poet, the mystic Khalil Gibran, when he wrote of the half million Lebanese who died in the 1916 famine, most of them residents of Beirut:
My people died of hunger, and he who
Did not perish from starvation was
Butchered with the sword;
They perished from hunger
In a land rich with milk and honey.
They died because the vipers and
Sons of vipers spat out poison into
The space where the Holy Cedars and
The roses and the jasmine breathe
Their fragrance.
Juan Cole, at Informed Comment, lets the facts do the talking.
Someone pointed out the Independent's front page to me. Says it all really.
Meanwhile, the picture in Iraq looks bleaker than ever.
1 comment:
Fisk makes some a some good points today about the media fixation with the (some) evacuees.
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