Just as Innocent - Comparing Beirut and Paris
A Lebanese journalist asks why we categorise Lebanese victims as we
mourn French ones.
By Habib Battah
November 15, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Al
Jazeera" - Because the Lebanese community
is one of Australia's largest and oldest immigrant groups, it was
not entirely surprising to see Lebanon's flag projected on to
Sydney's iconic Opera House as
published by a local news site.
But that image of solidarity after last week's
Beirut bomb attacks
proved to be a digitally altered fake, underscoring the double
standard that lurks beneath the myth of global compassion for
victims of such attacks.
Lebanese bloggers and tweeps were quick to
point out that while monuments across the world had been lit up
with the French flag out of respect for the victims of Friday's
attacks in Paris, there was no parallel lighting or homage to the
victims of twin suicide attacks in Beirut a day earlier.
The irony was not lost on some in the Australian
press, who noted that there were three times as many Lebanese
Australians as French Australians. And yet, when the country's prime
minister, Malcolm Turnbull, tweeted
"Australians' thoughts, prayers & resolute solidarity with the
people of France", there was no mention of Lebanon.
"You'd think if we were able to identify with
anyone, it would be with Lebanese Australians - after all, so many
of them are among the most beloved in this nation, and have
contributed enormously to public life,"
wrote Chris Graham in New Matilda.
In Washington, meanwhile, US President Barack
Obama dubbed the Paris bombings an "attack on all humanity", but
once again, as the prominent Lebanese academic Saree Makdisi tweeted,
the Beirut bombings were "not worth a mention".
Diluting the massacres
But what was perhaps even more disturbing than the
omission of the Beirut attacks from the international stage of
outrage was the number of Western news reports that sought to
categorise Lebanese victims rather than mourn them.
Initial headlines about the killings in France
were objectively descriptive, if not sympathetic:
"Paris Attacks Kill More Than 100, Border Controls Tightened"
according to the New York Times as Reuters proclaimed:
"Disbelief, Panic as Militants Cause Carnage in Paris".
But in Beirut, mere descriptions of the violence
and anguish on the streets were not enough. Headlines immediately
diluted the massacres with qualifying adjectives that labelled the
victims according to their geography and assumed political
leadership.
The New York Times announced:
"Deadly Blasts Hit Hezbollah stronghold in Southern Beirut," while
Reuters headlined:
"Two Suicide Bombers hit Hezbollah bastion in Lebanon."
In the opening paragraphs of stories about Paris, Reuters and the
New York Times narrate scenes of horror, laced with chilling quotes
from the victims and police efforts to apprehend the terrorists.
Buried deeper in the body of the stories, a token mention of
France's military involvement in Syria briefly appears. By contrast,
in stories about Beirut, the military and geopolitical details take
centre stage - nearly every paragraph examines Hezbollah's
deployment in Syria. There are virtually no quotes from the victims
and the word "terrorism" is rarely used.
n Paris there are detailed descriptions of the
music venue and sports stadium where the violence took place. In
Beirut there is little or no mention of the marketplace, mosque or
school that bore the brunt of the explosions.
When the coverage rationalises a tragedy as part
of a military conflict, it both dehumanises the victims and serves
the interests of the attackers by increasing one-dimensional
stereotypes and thus 'othering' those who suffer in faraway places.
Not only do these narratives feed into rightist, xenophobic or
Islamophobic political views, they also colour the perceptions of
readers and editors at mainstream publications.
Take an
analysis piece that appeared in the Huffington Post less than 24
hours after the Beirut attacks which flatly suggested that the
tragedy was to be expected. "It was a matter of time before
residents of Dahiyeh, the Hezbollah-controlled suburb of Beirut
Lebanon, were bombed again," a fellow at a Washington think-tank
wrote.
Can one imagine an article a day after the Paris bombings claiming
it was just "a matter of time" before Europeans were massacred?
Rather than focus on the cruelty of the suicide
bombers, the Huffington Post piece actually interrogates its
victims. The focus was not on terrorist cells or their financiers,
but rather the "predicament" of "the Shia community", a "hijacked
population" which is "trapped", "stuck" and "will always remain
imprisoned by its leaders". The author's only hope for change?
"Perhaps the Lebanese Shia Muslims are just several suicide bombings
and innocent deaths away from questioning Hezbollah's mission in
Syria."
Can one imagine the response if the Huffington
Post published a similar piece suggesting the Paris attacks were
related to a "predicament" in Parisian society? That the innocent
civilians were killed because their leadership had failed them, or
that France's population had been "hijacked" by imperialist military
policies? Would such a piece be given a prominent space in the
publication or be dismissed by editors as Islamic State of Iraq and
the Levant (ISIL) propaganda?
And what if one wistfully wrote that Paris was
just "several suicide bombings away from questioning" its
government's policies in the Middle East? Would the Post's editors
approve such a piece just 24 hours after the tragedy?
Can we imagine how quickly readers and perhaps
even politicians would attack the site and accuse it of being the
bombers' mouthpiece? Similarly, imagine the reaction had a news site
published a piece on September 12, 2001, questioning the 'misguided'
population of Manhattan, a day after planes had collapsed the World
Trade Center towers?
But in Beirut, what is even more problematic than
a geographic or political rationalisation of explaining attacks is
one that identifies a sectarian description as their cause, ie, a "Shia
community problem". Can one fathom the justifiable outrage if an
attack on a church or synagogue or particular 'ethnic' neighbourhood
was explained as Christian or Jewish or an ethnic problem?
In the days and months ahead, the victims of Paris
will be chronicled in greater detail, the tributes will pour in as
the victims of Beirut, Baghdad, Homs and elsewhere slip further into
oblivion.
But technology is increasingly giving voice to
those on the margins, and news organisations are under added
pressure to respond to complaints, which are becoming harder to
ignore when amplified on social media and alternative platforms.
The New York Times, for example, changed its
headline about Beirut several times, from "Deadly Blast hits
Hezbollah stronghold" to "Deadly Blast hits Hezbollah Area" to
"Deadly Blast hit Crowded Neighborhood", amid an outpouring of angry
tweets and posts.
'A mind-set reset, not a headline reset'
The author of the piece, the New York Times Beirut
bureau chief Anne Barnard,
tweeted in response to
questions that the change of headline was requested by her, not
the audience. But in a private message she also admitted that it was
an "annoyed tweet" that alerted her to it. "I would have requested
the change regardless," Barnard wrote. "But social media might have
sped it up by alerting me to the headline…"
New York Times pieces from
2013 and
2014 also used "Hezbollah stronghold" in headlines about bomb
blasts in south Beirut. So will the latest change set a precedent
for future accounts? Will it possibly influence other outlets such
as Reuters, CNN, MSNBC, FOX News and hundreds of English-language
newspapers and websites that continue to employ the "Hezbollah
Stronghold" terminology?
The implications extend far beyond Lebanon and
headlines. It is the entire newsroom and the worldviews of
journalists and editors that is at stake. As commentator Rula
Jebreal
put it: "NYT needs a mind-set reset, not a headline reset."
Beyond journalism, many in the region wonder when
the Sydney Opera House and other world landmarks will project their
Syrian, Yemeni, Palestinian, Iraqi or countless other flags from
places that have been wounded far more frequently than France.
Perhaps in the meantime, those cities need to be spammed with some
photoshopped images of what a more inclusive victim solidarity would
look like.
Habib Battah
is a freelance journalist and editor of the site
Beirut Report.