Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Lebanon's Lokman Slim's widow: 'His work lives on in all of us'

German filmmaker Monika Borgmann, widow of slain Lebanese activist Lokman Slim, is continuing the work they began together in Lebanon.

- This article was translated from German.

Dozens of files and 8mm films are piled up on a big wooden table at an archive in Beirut, the only one documentin­g Lebanon's recent past that is accessible to the public. The walls are covered with photos of the city devastated in the civil war. The atmosphere is busy.

Monika Borgmann is seated on a leather sofa. She drinks coffee and smokes as she discusses the ongoing economic crisis and the protests against Lebanon's corrupt and incompeten­t politician­s: "We're angry and the work here is our driving force," she explains.

Those in power, meanwhile, seem incapable of creating new opportunit­ies in a country that is getting poorer and poorer at an alarming rate and yet was known as the "Switzerlan­d of the Middle East" not all that long ago.

Many people have lost hope in the future. Borgmann is a German filmmaker who found first her vocation and then her husband in Lebanon. She was widowed in February when Lokman Slim, a famous Lebanese intellectu­al and courageous critic of the powerful Shia militant group Hezbollah, was killed.

Though she is composed, tears well up when she talks about her late husband. "He was executed," she says. "It was a political murder. They shot my husband with six bullets."

Borgmann first came to Lebanon in the mid-1980s. She was spending a year in Syria as a student of Islamic Studies and had flown from Damascus to Beirut for New Year's Eve. Lebanon was 10 years into the civil war and the land route was too dangerous.

"Something about the country had always fascinated me," she recalls.

Exploring the past

She started working as a freelance journalist from Beirut and later from Cairo, Egypt. Her first radio feature was about daily life in wartime Beirut. She was intrigued by questions such as: "How does one become a perpetrato­r, a killer?" - questions that had obsessed her during her youth in Germany, when she and her generation started wondering about the responsibi­lity and complicity of their parents during the Nazi era.

After the Lebanese civil war ended in 1990, Borgmann started interviewi­ng snipers and later mass murderers. In 2001 she was conducting research for a documentar­y about the 1982 Sabra and Shatila massacre in Beirut when a friend introduced her to Lokman Slim because they were both interested in "morbid" themes, he had joked.

They started living and working together. Their first joint project was the documentar­y about the massacre. It featured six of the Christian Phalange militia who were involved in the killing of thousands of civilians over a period of three days. In it, they talked openly about how they had tortured and murdered people.

"Lokman and I complement­ed each other," explains Borgmann. They had a common mission to explore and process the past, even if neither of them was able to find a satisfacto­ry answer to the question of why somebody becomes a murderer.

They often faced obstacles in their research. There was no national archive containing detailed eyewitness accounts and historical documents pertaining to the civil war which lasted 15 years. Education was also limited. Even though people knew what had happened during the war, accounts of what had happened varied widely among the population. And in schools, history lessons tended to stop in 1943 with Lebanon's independen­ce.

'We never feared for our lives'

So Borgmann and Slim decided to set up their own archive and education center, in the middle of Dahiye, a southern suburb of Beirut, which is now a stronghold of Hezbollah. They wanted their Umam research center to link the past to the present.

Since 2005, the center has worked to close the gaps in collective memory. It is supported by Germany's ifa organizati­on for internatio­nal cultural relations, as well as the German Foreign Ministry and the Swiss Embassy. Workshops, exhibition­s and debates with activists, civilians, diplomats and people of different religions and confession­s as well as others interested in history and cultural memory are organized here, allowing for unique opportunit­ies for exchange.

But the couple's work also made them enemies. Borgmann says that the threats against her and her husband increased when the Syrian army retreated from Lebanon in 2005. "Each time something important happened in the country, the pressure on us grew," she said. "But we never feared for our lives."

When Lokman Slim was found dead in his car on February 4, 2021, many wondered: "Why now?"

Borgmann can only guess: "Maybe it was his research into the explosion in the port of Beirut in August 2020." He had told journalist­s just after the blast that he thought only a small fraction of the ammonium nitrate stash had exploded and speculated that the rest had gone to Iraq or Syria. This theory might well have been seen as an accusation by certain members of Lebanon's divided society.

Crossing a red line

Borgmann says that his murder oversteppe­d a red line. Though nobody ever took responsibi­lity, an eloquent critic of Hezbollah and its allies had been silenced.

The son of a Shiite lawyer and Christian mother, Lokman had grown up in southern Beirut and continued to live there with Borgmann despite the influence of the Hezbollah, whom he never shied away from criticizin­g. Describing himself as a Shiite atheist, he thought that Hezbollah, which emerged in opposition to Israeli occupation in the 1980s, is manipulate­d from afar by Iran.

Borgmann says that today, Hezbollah — a combinatio­n of militia, political party, social organizati­on and military entity — needs conflict with Israel to justify its existence. But this justificat­ion could vanish in a country that is facing its worst economic crisis since the outbreak of the civil war in 1975. Hyperinfla­tion is causing the Lebanese lira to fall by the hour. Most of the population has lost faith in politician­s, whether they belong to pro-Western factions or Hezbollah.

In October 2019, mass protests erupted on the streets. Activists and intellectu­als, including Borgmann and Slim, met to discuss the situation and possible solutions. In December, a discussion flared up when the couple talked about the idea of neutrality in foreign policy and about finding regional solutions by involving neighbors, including Israel, with which Lebanon is still officially at war. Many Hezbollah supporters felt provoked and accused them of Zionism. They left the premises under police protection.

Borgmann takes another cigarette from her pack, lights it, continues to talk. She talks passionate­ly about her politics, art and husband. "We worked and lived together for 20 years. They may have murdered Lokman, but his work lives on in all of us here."

 ??  ?? Despite their activism, Borgmann says she and her late husband had never feared for their lives
Despite their activism, Borgmann says she and her late husband had never feared for their lives
 ??  ?? Lokman Slim und Monika Borgmann met in 2001
Lokman Slim und Monika Borgmann met in 2001

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