National Post

’I didn’t want to die’

- Hina Alam The Canadian Press with files from The Associated Press

Rawane Al Zahed remembers running through her home to check on her family after she heard blasts rip through Beirut and felt the ground shake beneath her feet.

Al Zahed, who has filed paperwork to join her husband — a permanent resident of Canada — in Vancouver, lives about five kilometres from the site of the blast that killed at least 100 on Tuesday and wounded thousands.

A longtime Montreal resident is among the dead, a city councillor said, and the federal government confirmed a member of the Canadian Armed Forces suffered injuries that are not life-threatenin­g.

Al Zahed, 24, said she felt two explosions a few seconds apart from each other. The first felt like an earthquake, while the second sent shock waves through the fifth-floor apartment where she lives with her family.

“I was super afraid,” Al Zahed said. “I didn’t want to die. I was screaming, ‘I don’t want to die now.”’

That second explosion left a wood and iron door cracked, and shattered the television screen in her house, she said.

Al Zahed said she could hear people screaming on the floors and streets below her apartment, even as windows shattered and a few balconies collapsed.

There was another moment of panic when her husband couldn’t get through to her because she was getting calls from other friends and family, she said.

Later that night, Al Zahed said she called her husband. He tried to lighten the mood with a couple jokes, but she said she was still far too panicked to sleep.

“I wake up, I tweet. I wake up, I open Facebook. I want to see what’s happening,” she said. “All I can think of ( is) how I ran. All I can remember (is) when I ran.”

It was the most powerful explosion ever seen in the city, which was split in half by the 1975- 90 civil war and has endured conflicts with neighbouri­ng Israel and periodic bombings and terror attacks.

There’s no evidence the explosion was an attack. Instead, many Lebanese blamed it on corruption and poor governance by the political class that has ruled the Mediterran­ean country since the civil war.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS / Handout
Ra wane Al Zahed ?? Rawane Al Zahed —above with husband Mazen Alaouie — remembers running through her home
to check on her family.
THE CANADIAN PRESS / Handout Ra wane Al Zahed Rawane Al Zahed —above with husband Mazen Alaouie — remembers running through her home to check on her family.

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