Watch him! His middle name is Mortal

Showing posts with label lebanon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lebanon. Show all posts

Saturday, November 20, 2010

BeitMisk, A True Sense of Place With a Scent of Musk

I am usually not impressed when I see things that I have already seen before. However, when I got the opportunity to visit the new-born Lebanese village dubbed 'BeitMisk', well I was equally ENCHANTED and IMPRESSED.
'BeitMisk', a charming poetic name, in line of a handful of other intriguing names attributed to Lebanese villages that have the word 'Beit',-- home in Arabic--embedded within: i.e Beit Mery, Beit el Kik, Beit Shabab etc.
Though the etymology of the name 'Misk' remains unknown, speculations are that the name relates to an Old English word for the 'moon', 'misor', or from the Anglo-Saxon word 'miersc' meaning 'boundary'. However, the word Misk is mostly evocative of the 'musk', a substance known for its strong odor and often used in fragrance all across the Arab world. A definite enchanting introduction to a journey that blends harmony and luxury, one that redefines our way of living.

Perched atop a hill in the Lebanese mountain known as Metn, BeitMisk is set away from the city hustle and bustle so to let the peace and magnificent vistas relax and unwind the privileged few who have found their interpretation of luxury and have chosen to own their 'Beit' in this high-end gated-community project.  However, while BeitMisk has been designed to provide secluded luxury and natural beauty for home-owners, this is just part of the story of this massive green lush new-born village.
Community is defined as a unified body of individuals. BeitMisk project is an ideal setting for residents to foster their individuality and grow within a unique living environment.
At BeitMisk, you don't buy a house, you become part of a community. The moment you unpack your boxes, and settling into your new 'beit', will be just the beginning of what promises to be a rich and rewarding experience.  This is a project that was developed and built with a mission: make sure the inhabitants of BeitMisk community get much more than owning a luxurious residence, as this real estate project has been designed like no other, where the ultimate aim is to offer an environment in which residents benefit from, and are able to grow and develop in a community of friends and fellow neighbors.
Visitors, can easily sense the dreams and visions embedded at the heart of the planning and the construction of BeitMisk village, which has been re-imagined as a series of showcase luxury environments.
Although the "green revolution" has gained momentum in recent years, BeitMisk's commitment to creating a sustainable real estate project was an imperative. And since day one, the developers have engaged in instilling an eco-minded awareness all through the conception to the development of the project. Actually, it has been made clear that the people behind this one-of-a-kind residential project are continually working to improve environmental practices and remain steadfast in their focus on sustainability through communication, practice and philosophy.
BeitMisk has been designed to keep any damage to the environment as absent as possible.  Only a minimal number of trees have been cut and homes built around mature trees.  As a matter of fact, the developers have envisaged a community where lovers of nature and luxury can live and enjoy the good things in life, as they strive to enhance a harmonious living experience by fostering a safe, private and secure surroundings, yet throughout a dynamic lifestyle, as BeitMisk provides an atmosphere that empowers residents to make valuable connections, while it offers them both convenience and great community enhancing experiences within a context that celebrates and extends green living. Of course and needless to add, BeitMisk offers as well extensive leisure and recreation facilities for everyone's interests. With all the amenities made available within the village, one may indeed never want to leave his 'beit' within the greater BeitMisk.

All of this and much more have been designed so that the living experience at this coveted real estate address in Lebanon is a rewarding one. 
Ultimately, beyond BeitMisk's grand design, there is a sense that it is the combination of the little things that they are central to its aim of providing the luxurious hideaway alluded to in its name. And many seem to believe such measures can make a major difference to lucky owners and potential buyers as myself.


By Summer Lubnan

Friday, May 21, 2010

WHY CAN'T WE STOP GOSSIPING?


WHY CAN'T WE STOP GOSSIPING?

In light of the February 25 incident at Maison Blanche night club in Beirut, involving two young entrepreneurs, Antoun Sehnaoui & Mazen El Zein, we ought to wonder about  the "evil and unlawful," or "of poor quality" narratives that followed such incident, where all the cursing addressed toward the so called culprit before even he got judged remain puzzling. 

In recent years, researchers have turned to the study of gossip—our predilection for talking about people who are not present. 

Why is news about others so irresistible?
As it turns out, gossip serves a useful social function in bonding group members together. We are social creatures like wolves.  We hunt in packs to weaken individuals (to see if they are fit) and either physically or psychological try to over power individuals (who are weak) and take them down. 

All through my life, since the day i learned reading, I always found myself puzzled over the 24/7 coverage of people such as Paris Hilton, Tara Reid, Nicole Richie and all in between, who are “celebrities” for no apparent reason other than we know who they are--if we happen to know who they are. And yet, covering these so-caled 'Celebs' is a non-stop habit, simply because people/readers are obviously tuning in with a state of delirium barely understandable. 
This preoccupation with the lives of others, is a by-product of society of which its members have big time issues with themselves. Thus, it appears that we are hardwired to be fascinated by gossip, wealthy people, to say the least. And here again, the Maison Blanche story comes to mind again, for all the meanness and cheap talk opportunists have jumped into to ruin a wealthy, healthy, successful young CEO, everyone would dream to be in his chair.

It is difficult to define exactly what Gossip is...

Most researchers agree that the Gossip practice involves talk about people who are not present and that this talk is relaxed, informal and entertaining. Typically the topic of conversation also concerns information that we can make moral judgments about. Gossip appears to be pretty much the same wherever it takes place. 
Why does private information about other people represent such an irresistible temptation for us? It is an undeniable fact that is pretty unusual to see any individual walk away from a juicy story about one of his or her acquaintances, and many of us have firsthand experience with the difficulty of keeping spectacular news about someone's else a secret. Although everyone seems to detest a person who is known as a “gossiper”; though, it appears to be a national hobby, especially in a country as tiny as Lebanon, where any name rings a bell to anyone...And boom,,,,the tongue suddenly rolls, becoming longer, harder, bitter, if not lethal. Gossiping can become worse witch hunting or lynching. 

Monday, May 3, 2010

Harming Antoun Sehnaoui Seems To Have Satisfied the Envious Hearts

Make lemonade
As it goes, the White House is an incident that was shined, polished, & perfected for a television show, O TV in that case: Extreme Makeover Tayyar Home Edition. So funny, so Absurd!
As a society, we're at a point where adversity, war, fights--mashkal-- call it whatever, and chaos are deemed somehow 'Normal'. However, because of these facts, our definition of 'Normal' has become changed and distorted beyond comprehension...
When we look at the news, on 25th February 2010, we hear of a young successful entrepreneur, Antoun Sehnaoui, shooting at people left right & centre.

He was at Beirut's Maison Blanche night club, and chose to do so for no reason says the rumours.

On the other side, It is still unclear what the reasons are for launching such a massive rumour-based orchestrated campaign; but it is thought that the young man was going out to party and was attacked verbally, insulted with rude gestures and disparaged beyond anyone's imagination with all the meanness low people may be good at. Then, the thunderbolt....

Harming this man was an obvious, easy, cheap and Oh so Golden opportunity for many here in Lebanon to catch. 


Would be good to try to dissect the false from the truth...Why the news was hugely distorted?


A thought by The Free Spirit 
Read More 

Thursday, April 29, 2010

A Lebanese Saturday Night Fever


The POP, CURSE, SHOOT scene rewinded

Recap:  Two angry men showing up one night at the Lebanese White House (aka Maison Blanche), one of the hip night club in town, located in Sodeco,  Ashrafieh.
A Saturday night 'à la Libanaise' fever that started as usual, with all the bling-bling set on fire mode for a show off long night-party played on a strident volume, and a base finely tuned. 

However, that night, ego entered the arena like a flashlight, as fast as guns charged in, and rumours followed, spreading out of all proportion, on an exceptionaly unrealistic scale...   
I'm sure you all agree; encounters as such adversity involving an exchange of insults--have high probability to end up with an injury than not. 

Nonetheless, i'm trying to understand how could two educated young men end up in such a furious face-off,  as one could hardly believe that a Mazen el Zein has been willingly targeted with a "shoot to kill 007 plan" from an Antoun Sehnaoui, as he declared to the media.

It was a screw up on all sides, easily admissible. Everything went wrong that night after the war of words kicked in. In a blink of an eye, an incomprehensible hateful downward spiral, which like an inverted tornado, took amazingly hold of Lebanon.

Now let's think of it this way: whoever is insulted in front of others will see himself as diminished in his masculine mind & body, reputation and status. Perhaps partly as a result, the insult produces more aggressive or domineering behavior depending on each individual.  In fact, the "public" insult produces heightened aggression over and above a "private" insult.  We do believe this was the case in the White House shooting,  where the public versus private nature of the flow of insult played an important and determinant element here.  It is normal to see that publicly insulted individuals would show a more extreme pattern of responses than privately insulted people, as traditional "macho" behaviors emerge, specially in Arab countries.

Indeed, in private, an assaulted man would make an approach that is entirely different than that what we heard happened at Maison Blanche. 

What am trying to ponder here, is that a lonely cowboy is not as prone to ambush; he doesn't charge in randomly nor purposely, if not given the right stimulus. Antoun became upset and prepared for aggression on the physiological level; and only because he was chaperoned by big dudes with plenty of beef on their shoulders that hostility increased and the high degree of aggressiveness made the guys easily primed to react with no wise thinking. 

An article by The Free Spirit

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

The "Culture Of Honor" At Play Between Antoun Sehnaoui and Mazen el-Zein

The dynamics and specific mechanisms inherent to the culture of honor is an important topic to study in light of the Maison Blanche night club shooting that took place February 25th between a Mazen el-Zein and Antoun Sehnaoui, CEO of SGBL. What happened on that hot Saturday at the White House Club in Beirut helps us understand something about the etiology of 'manhood' in Arab societies and in similar cultures of honor

In fact, Antoun Sehnaoui's bodyguards' act falls within what anthropologists have righteously identified and dubbed a "culture of honor", in which even small disputes become contests for reputation and social status."

Honor in a society like Lebanon means a pride of manhood in masculine courage, physical strength, and warrior virtue. It was somehow of no surprise to see the bodyguards of Antoun Sehnaoui, defend the young CEO's honor without a moment's hesitation-lashing out against their challengers. 
Indeed, defense of honor can and must be understood within a larger social context of reputations, relative social status, and enduring relationships.
The shooting provided strong additional evidence that defamatory insults are crucially important in such cultures. A male who is insulted but does not retaliate risks having his masculine reputation diminished. When a challenging or highly status-relevant situation is encountered, the person may lash out with violent or aggressive behavior to reassert himself. 

Sunday, September 27, 2009

the Context justified the absurdity













Many years ago, I was awaken to a penetratingly loud mechanical ringing, which regardless of my efforts, to dream away, the more alert I became to my surrounding. Taking the call, a voice, showing signs of stress, informed me that a relative had just passed away, and hung up. Naturally, the funeral service would require me to shuttle myself to Baalback early next morning. With some coffee in the car’s cup holder and cigarettes on the passenger seat, I was half way there, when it started to drizzle. By the time I had parked, in close proximity to the deceased’s house, it was pouring. 
At the grave site, most mourners were cold, with the other half standing under a naked sky receiving its blessings. The man had barely taken to his earthly resting place, when the curator was locking the rusted metal gates, waving the last mourner driving away, goodbye. 
Taking my time on the way back to my car, I inhaled what had transpired, held it, and then breathed the cold air, which was starting to feel heavy on my chest, out. 

Making my way through the narrow, run-down market street, I got to the last intersection that opens onto a three-lane highway out of the village. Looking to my right, as that was the only lane crossing my path, a well-kept seven series BMW was slowly moving closer, before slowing down, as it approached. By the time I had gotten half-way across, the BMW had nudged the right-side of my passenger door, denting it. 

The world, had once again grown silent, this time for only a second, and was followed by the bustle of the market vendors advertising their products. Turning my head in both directions, I came to realise that the accident had not attracted anyone’s attention. 

Getting out of my car, I walked over to the driver who had crashed into me. Laying comfortably in his chair, which he had taken special care of refurbishing with some sort of white wool, I asked if he were hurt. 
Like a man, coming to from a slumber, he took off his metal framed sunglasses, look at me and said, “What’s the matter with you man,” in a fashion, that was surprisingly tranquil. Pointing out the obvious, I replied, “You were slowing down so I thought you were going to stop to let me pass.” Bewildered, he raised his right hand, revealing a joint from which he took a drag, exhaled without a care in the world and said, ”Can’t you see I’m tripping?!”
That was all it took!
At that point in time, there was only one way to deal with the matter, though an instant later, that too, was not an option anymore.

Objectively, fault was to be shared, however in that particular circumstance, the Context, justified the absurdity, whichever way you looked at it. Here, right & wrong, held no sway. After that had dawned on me, I found myself smiling, all the way back home.

By Maverick from the Demos Unit