Making the Case for Lebanon: To Move or Not To Move Here?
A couple of weeks ago, I received a very thought-provoking
inquiry from a Beirutista reader. It went to the tune of this: a family of
Lebanese origin residing in Southern California was debating whether to
transplant their three children aged 11, 9, and 5 to the land of their heritage.
The father had immigrated as a teenager, while the mother had been born and
raised in the US. Their last trip to Lebanon dated back some six years, and
they were seriously contemplating a move here to immerse their kids in the culture
and rigorous educational system. Seeing as I had crossed that bridge, they
wanted my opinion.
My first reaction was to grimace. How would the kids feel, I
immediately empathized? 20 years ago, like almost every family that fled
Lebanon during the civil war, my parents faced the exact same dilemma. The post-civil
war ‘90s witnessed what appeared to be a rebounding economy, the promise of a
rebuilding nation, and the hope of restoring Lebanon to its once golden age.
Many families in the diaspora were hell-bent on coming back, reuniting with
their relatives, and taking their rightful places in the biblical Land of the
Cedars.
My family was one of them. In fact, in 1992, my brothers and
I were among the inaugural class at Sagesse High School in Ain Saadeh, Lebanon’s
premier American-style high school. We had bid our classmates in California
farewell forever, or so we thought, and stuffed duffel bags with toys and
trinkets to tote with us to our new home.
At Sagesse, our measurements were taken for uniforms, both formal
and athletic. We were required to purchase the school’s stationery and textbooks,
a far cry from American public high schools, where you receive both an in-class and at-home set
absolutely free. Notebooks, writing utensils, paper, pencil sharpeners, you
name it – it was all part of the package, totally complimentary.
I remember coming home from Sagesse in tears every day that
first week. I couldn’t stand it. Kids were excessively frivolous, picking on
each other if their Oxford shirts weren’t properly tucked in. Teachers had
questionable English accents. The administration was pretentious with their
noses skimming the clouds in the sky. The only thing I remember enjoying were
the bags of chips at recess, because they enclosed a surprise gift inside. I
found comfort and consolation in those disposable trifles.
After three months, my parents pulled us out and returned to
the US. The timing just wasn’t right. They tried again in the fall of 1994,
determined to give it a second chance. But then my grandfather in California
fell seriously ill, inducing my father to fly back. And my mom couldn’t cope
with shouldering all the responsibility solo in what was a starkly different
landscape from the one she'd left. It seemed Lebanon just wasn’t in the
cards as a permanent dwelling place for my family.
Lengthy summer visits imprinted more positive marks on my mind
than Sagesse had, and I resolved I would one day call Lebanon home. But I ended
up declining admission to the American University of Beirut, which
came tacked with a rare full merit scholarship. A thorough campus visit and brushes
with undergrad professors left a sour taste in my mouth. Why was AUB even on my
shortlist, one counselor probed disdainfully? I would never stand a chance
competing in this climate of cheating, insisted an engineering professor. “Go
back to where you came from” was the unanimous verdict delivered by AUB
personnel.
So I backed out and followed my parents home. The University
of California Irvine groomed me to be a research-oriented mechanical engineer,
and four years later, I claimed an enviable spot at the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology to pursue my PhD. After snatching up an MS, I followed my heart
to Paris, where a unique MBA program for engineers coupled with a junior
consulting position beckoned. Upon graduation, I knew it was now or never.
Either I make the plunge and relocate to Lebanon, or I let the dream shrivel
and die like a raisin in the sun. I chose the former.
Photo source: insightsforprofessionals.com/ |
Seven and a half years have since passed, and I still find
myself wondering whether I settled by settling here. Some days I think, “what
the hell was I thinking?” Other days, I'm proud of having swam against the
tide to apply myself and test my capacity on every level—professionally,
personally, and mentally. I didn’t take the easy path, the paved road
illuminated with streetlights and traffic signs. On the contrary, I
took the pothole-ridden track, poorly lit and totally obscured, a vicious
motorway where you will get pummeled if you abide by the (imaginary) lanes.
Am I a better person for it? What did I gain by losing any
semblance of logic, reason, and sanity? A fleeting, abstract notion called
culture? The opportunity to live in the environmentally-dilapidated land of my
forebears? And what exactly will I be affording my own posterity, now that I
have one, by electing to remain here?
Dear Beirutista reader, you took me back decades, reminding
me of that impressionable little girl once charmed by the ineffable mystique
that is Lebanon. Living in this volatile, toxic country affects our vision, and
we might be guilty of overlooking the boons of existing here. It's true that as soon
as we touch down on foreign soil, we quickly begin to pine for that which we
left so willingly and gladly.
I wish I could advise you one way or the other, but the answer
to your query is hardly black or white. It’s an open-ended question to which
there is no correct solution, only an infinite number of possibilities and
uncertainties.
All I can tell you is this: if you move here, you will
satisfy your curiosity of the unknown and what
if. Your children will be enveloped in an evolving culture that more and more
incorporates elements of the Western world. You will enjoy amenities galore,
and the wafting scent of manakish zaatar
will never be more accessible and alluring.
If you choose not to move here, you will continue on the
fast-track to globally accepted definitions of success. You will never have to
worry about the deprivation of basic rights and utilities, like water, clean
air, electricity, and internet. Your children will be taught to be accepting of all
colors, creeds, and cultures, and they will embrace their unique, mixed
identities.
But that curiosity of the opportunity cost will forever gnaw
at you. And in a perverted state, unquenched thirst becomes inconsolable
regret.
Thank you for this article. We have been in the same dilemma recently, whether to transplant our 2 girls 6 and 10 years old to Lebanon given the recent opportunities we got to move. This is the eternal dilemma of every Lebanese in the diaspora and a curse that will never resolve whether we move or not
ReplyDeleteWell written article. This reflects the dilemma our family has been in for the past year. Should we transplant our 2 daughters 6 and 10 from the US to Lebanon to experience the culture or should I forever regret not pursuing my dream of going back....a very difficult question with no easy answer
ReplyDeleteHi Khalil. I was just rereading this article, in light of what has been transpiring in Lebanon over the past 12 months. And I saw your comments. Now I must ask: what did you decide? I hope you and your family are safe wherever you may be.
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