Bourj Hammoud

Bourj Hammoud The Bourj-Hammoud district in Lebanon is the geographical extension of Beirut City along the Mediterranean coastline.

The Bourj-Hammoud district in Lebanon is the geographical extension of Beirut City along the Mediterranean coastline, housing a population roughly estimated at 90,000 persons, extending over an area of 0.96 square-mile. Until early last century, it was marshlands, with scattered individual settlements. After 1928, Armenian refugees who had survived the Ottoman persecutions started settling in the

area, in compact quarters organized in regular gridiron patterns, each populated by natives from a village in their original homeland, which gave its name to each new quarter such as Marash, Nor-Adana, Nor-Sis. The district became a safe haven for Armenians who were forced to leave their homeland and subsequently converged in this one square mile territory and created a home away from home. In mid 1940's part of the population migrated to Armenia, followed by the influx of migrants from remote rural areas, attracted by employment opportunities in and around the capital. My parents, both survivors of 1915 Ottoman exodus met and were married in Damascus, Syria, only then to relocate their family to Bourj Hammoud in 1949. During the course of 15- year civil war, most Armenian inhabitants of Bourj Hammoud emigrated abroad and others moved out of the quarter to better their social ranking. For more than 50 years this tiny enclave was the cultural and intellectual beacon of Armenians worldwide. Today, like many dwindling Christian minorities across the Middle East, Bourj Hammoud struggles to retain its Armenian character against the tide of political uncertainty engulfing the region.

08/04/2024
Without you, Bourj Hammoud will never be the same.
19/07/2023

Without you, Bourj Hammoud will never be the same.

Brothers.
21/05/2023

Brothers.

Barber aka Berber Vartan
16/10/2022

Barber aka Berber Vartan

One square mile labyrinth
08/07/2022

One square mile labyrinth

After making a limited film festival round, the full-length documentary MASTER EDDY is now available for streaming at ht...
04/03/2022

After making a limited film festival round, the full-length documentary MASTER EDDY is now available for streaming at https://watch.eventive.org/mastereddy/play/61f8951703a05e0078ab4858

"Edward "Eddy" Yacoubian - an immigrant from Lebanon - has been mending shoes since the tender age of nine. “If Eddy can’t fix it, no one can” his patrons affirm.
In the age of digital automation, Eddy’s artistry and humanity are a reminder of global cultural change. He accepts his reality with a certain discontent but also admits that luck has been a force majeure.
Shot cinema verité, MASTER EDDY with deep existential simplicity, hammers away his story one nail at a time, keeping a pragmatic philosophy of life, much like his hands do."

If Eddy can’t fix it, no one can.

04/08/2021

With its unique sense of identity, Beirut’s Armenian neighbourhood of Bourj Hammoud has united against hardship

Bourj Hammoud before August 4, 2020 from BIRDS NEST photo book collection.I WILL DONATE 45% FROM THE SALES OF THE BOOK T...
12/08/2020

Bourj Hammoud before August 4, 2020 from BIRDS NEST photo
book collection.

I WILL DONATE 45% FROM THE SALES OF THE BOOK TO A CHARITY TO HELP THE NEEDY IN BEIRUT, LEBANON.

Visit www.aramadzounian.com for more information.

Don't ignore the garbage mountain and the ticking time bomb of Bourj Hammoud.Another public health and safety hazard tha...
08/08/2020

Don't ignore the garbage mountain and the ticking time bomb of Bourj Hammoud.

Another public health and safety hazard that's been piling up since 1975 on the seashores of Bourj Hammoud.

Backround:
The origins of the waste crisis in Lebanon date back to the Lebanese Civil War (1975-1990), when various governmental agencies and other groups began dumping garbage in a plot of land in Bourj Hammoud, a densely populated and commercial area inhabited by a majority Armenian population as well as working class Lebanese, migrant workers, and refugees. [1] By the end of the war, tons of waste had piled up by the Bourj-Hammoud seashore. However, the majority of the waste was dumped after the war, when the uncontrolled dump started being used as an official landfill, this time by governmental decision*. After the civil war, around 3,000 tons of waste was thrown daily in the landfill.** By 1997, the dump had far exceeded its capacity and had become an environmental and public health hazard. [2] The situation became unbearable, with putrid smells and uncontrollable fires in the area, and opposition started by the Tashnag party to close the landfill.* On May 30, 1997, the Cabinet advised the closure of the Bourj Hammoud landfill and the establishment of two new waste treatment centers, Karantina and Amroussieh. However, the government delayed the implementation of the decision, and the Armenian Tashnag party, as well as the Matn deputies, called for a strike on June 5, 1997. The protesters declared during the strike that it is unacceptable that people have to resort to strike in order to demand the “lifting of garbage that threatens their lives." [3] The Bourj Hammoud landfill was not only a dumpsite for the region, but also for all the suburbs of Beirut and Matn, and people protested that they are not obliged to bear the trash of other regions. [3] Meanwhile, the governmental plan to open an incinerator in Amroussieh failed due to protests from the community- including setting the incinerator on fire- despite threats from the government that the garbage would spread on the roads. The Amroussieh and Karantina incinerators were functional from 1993 to 1997, and were used to incinerate hazardous hospital waste, hazardous plastic waste, household toxic waste, and industrial toxic waste, releasing carcinogenic atmospheric emissions, including dioxins and furans. Moreover, the toxic ash from these incinerators was dumped in the Bourj Hammoud landfill.[4] By July 19,1997, “the streets of the southern suburbs of Beirut and the Southern Matn coast had turned into dozens of landfills, and the residential neighborhoods were sinking in heaps of trash… The waste begun to burn, causing the spread of methane gas and an outbreak of fires threatening the health of residents in the area." [3] In this way, the government was using the same strategy to be repeated in the garbage crisis almost 20 years later: extortion of people by leaving the garbage on the streets and the imposition of solutions with prices and conditions dictated by the crisis. Eventually, the government responded due to popular pressure from the communities near the landfill, and the Bourj Hammoud landfill closed in July 20, 1997, without rehabilitation [3]. However, rather than developing a practical and sustainable solution to the solid waste management problem, the government simply created another landfill- the Naameh landfill. [3] Moreover, today the Bourj Hammoud landfill releases an estimated 120,000 tones of leachate annually, corresponding to more than half the leachate produced by three major coastal dumpsites in Lebanon (Tripoli, Bourj Hammoud and Normandy). [5] As such, the dumpsite still persists and spreads its smells and harmful effects over an area where tens of thousands of citizens and non-citizens live.

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Borj Hammoud

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