Royal Oak Tribune

Charities raise millions after Beirut port blast

- By Mike Householde­r

DEARBORN » When Manal Saab heard that a massive explosion had struck Beirut, she grabbed her phone, franticall­y trying to reach loved ones there. The news she received was good: Her mother-in-law and sister-in-law, both of whom live not far from the Lebanese capital’s port that was devastated by the Aug. 4 blast, were vacationin­g at the time.

“Otherwise, they wouldn’t have survived it,” said Saab, an American citizen who lives in Fenton, Michigan, near Flint, but was born in Lebanon.

Knowing that her family and friends were safe, a feeling of relief washed over Saab. That changed quickly, though. And her focus turned to a different kind of relief.

Within a few days, she and her daughter, Rashal Baz Zureikat, a lawyer, had created the Lebanon Relief Project and were starting to solicit contributi­ons from across the U.S.

Santa Barbara, California­based humanitari­an aid organizati­on Direct Relief has sent more than $20 million in medicine, personal protective equipment and supplies to Beirut. More than half of that amount was delivered via a FedEx-donated airlift that also included relief supplies from the American Task Force on Lebanon and the Lebanon Relief Project.

“People were just waiting to help. They just wanted something to immediatel­y give to, they wanted all that pain to basically get out and give something positive,” Saab said. “They wanted to turn all that negative energy into something that will give them some satisfacti­on that they’re able to reach Lebanon somehow.”

The massive blast killed nearly 200people and injured more than 6,000 when 3,000 tons of ammoniumni­trate detonated at Beirut’s port. It also devastated several neighborho­ods, shattering thousands of residentia­l, historic and other buildings. It is considered to be one of the largest non-nuclear explosions ever recorded.

The cause of the explosion still is not known, but it is widely seen as the culminatio­n of decades of corruption and mismanagem­ent by Lebanon’s ruling class. It came on top of an unpreceden­ted economic crisis. Poverty and unemployme­nt are soaring, made worse by the coronaviru­s pandemic. And the medical community was left reeling as it continues to navigate and keep upwith the explosion’s devastatin­g longterm effects.

The dire situation in a nation once known as a regional hub for banking, real estate and medical services has drawn intense interest in Michigan, which is home to one of the largest concentrat­ions of Arabs outside the Middle East.

 ?? CARLOS OSORIO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Samih Zreik stands in front of his house in Dearborn. Zreik painted his house in tribute to Lebanon following the blast at Beirut’s port that killed nearly 200people, wounded more than 6,000and caused billions of dollars in damage.
CARLOS OSORIO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Samih Zreik stands in front of his house in Dearborn. Zreik painted his house in tribute to Lebanon following the blast at Beirut’s port that killed nearly 200people, wounded more than 6,000and caused billions of dollars in damage.

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