A displaced Lebanese family rests on a seaside promenade in Beirut on Tuesday. | Photo Credit: AF

Israeli strikes pile more trauma on Lebanon’s weary population

Calls received by suicide-prevention helplines have increased to nearly 50 a day since Israel escalated its air strikes against Lebanese militant group Hezbollah; experts say people are relying on sleeping pills as they cannot afford proper treatment

by · The Hindu

Ask a Lebanese person how they are, and one will most likely to be met with a heavy pause or a pained smile. Years of crises have drained them, and now Israeli air strikes are pushing many to their breaking point.

Cartoonist Bernard Hage, who draws under the name Art of Boo, summed it up a few weeks ago with a layer cake.

These layers are “Financial Collapse”, “Pandemic”, the 2020 “Beirut Port Explosion”, “Political Deadlock” and “Mass Depression”.

“War” is now the cherry on top.

The trauma is never-ending, said Carine Nakhle, a supervisor at suicide-prevention helpline Embrace. “The Lebanese population is not OK,” she said.

The hotline’s some 120 operators take shifts around the clock all week to field calls from people in distress. Calls have gone up to some 50 a day since Israel increased its air strikes against Lebanese militant group Hezbollah on September 23.

The callers are “people who are in shock, people who are panicking”, Ms. Nakhle said.

“Many of them have been calling us from areas where they are being bombed or from shelters.”

Israel’s bombardment of Lebanon, mostly in the south and in Beirut’s southern suburbs, has killed more than 1,100 people and displaced upwards of a million in less than two weeks.

Homeless crowd

Tens of thousands have found refuge in central Beirut, whose streets now throng with homeless people and where the traffic is even more swollen than usual.

Every night, air strikes on the southern suburbs force people to flee their homes, as huge blasts rattle windows and spew clouds of debris skywards.

Ringing out across Beirut, the explosions awaken terrible memories: of the massive 2020 Beirut port blast that decimated large parts of the city; of the last war between Israel and Hezbollah in 2006; and of the 1975-1990 civil war.

This latest affliction comes on the back of years of the worst financial crisis in Lebanon’s history that has plunged much of its middle class into poverty.

Rita Barotta, 45, lives near the relatively quiet Christian-majority town of Jounieh north of Beirut.

She said she cannot hear the air strikes, but also that she no longer has the words “to describe what is happening” to Lebanon. “I no longer know what being me 15 days ago looked like,” said the university lecturer in communications, who has thrown herself into helping the displaced. “Eating, sleeping, looking after my plants — none of that is left. I am another me. The only thing that exists now for me is how I can help.”

Networking on her phone, Ms. Barotta spends her days trying to find shelter or medicine for those in need. “If I stop for even five minutes, I feel totally empty,” she said.

Ms. Barotta almost lost her mother in the Beirut port explosion, and said that keeping busy is the only way for her not to feel “overwhelmed and petrified”.

“What is happening today is not just a new trauma, it is a sense of huge injustice. Why are we being put through all this?”

A 2022 study before the war by Lebanese non-governmental organisation IDRAAC found that at least a third of Lebanese battled with mental health problems.

Accumulated stress

Rami Bou Khalil, head of psychiatry at Beirut’s Hotel Dieu hospital, said all Lebanese were struggling in one way or another.

“Lebanese have a great capacity for resilience,” he said, citing support from family, community and religion. “But there is this accumulation of stress that is making the glass overflow.”

“For years, we have been drawing on our physical, psychological and financial resources. People just cannot any more,” he said.

He said he worries because some people who should be hospitalised cannot afford it, and others are relapsing “because they can no longer take a hit”.

Many more people were relying on sleeping pills.

“People want to sleep,” he said, and swallowing pills is easier when you have neither the time nor the money to be treated.

Ms. Nakhle said many people sought help from non-governmental organisations as they could not afford the $100 consultation fee for a therapist at a private clinic.At the charity’s health centre, the waiting list for an appointment is four to five months long.

Published - October 09, 2024 08:04 am IST