“Lebanon between sea and fire” reflects the situation of a country where peace is constantly hung to a thread. In the last three decades, long and destructive armed conflicts have ravaged the country. The majority of Lebanese have been affected by armed conflict; 75% of the population has direct and personal experience of it, and most others report suffering a range of hardships.
Lebanon is an interesting mix of different ways of life. Since I visited Lebanon for the first time in 2005, I tried to understand the Lebanese society and I started to document the life in Lebanon through two different concepts: the sea with its calmness and its constant permanency and the land and its unstable state.
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Beirut, Lebanon 2007.
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Bent Jbeil, Lebanon 2006.
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Beirut, 2010.
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Beirut, 2007.
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Becharre, Lebanon 2007.
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Beirut. 2013.
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Beirut. 2007.
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Nabatiyeh. 2012
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Beirut, Lebanon 2006.
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Tyr.2006
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Wadi Hmayed. 2013.
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Baalbek. 2013
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Tripoli.2012
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Beirut. 2012
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Beirut, Lebanon 2007.
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Beirut, Lebanon 2006.
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Beirut, Lebanon 2007.
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Al Qaa, Beqaa Valley. 2013
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Beirut, Lebanon 2006.
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Ein El Helue Refugee Camp. 2005
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Beirut, Lebanon 2007.
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Beirut, Lebanon 2006.
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Rasayye, Lebanon 2007.
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Beirut, Lebanon 2007.
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