
Head whirring, get out of bed. Take a shower. Slight improvement. Can
still taste Almaza somehow. Find whatever clothes I have left that
aren't emitting the very essence of 20 Lucky Strike, amble downstairs
and into the morning. Cross the disused railway tracks and walk
alongside them for 10 minutes, through a leafy, quiet Mar Mikhael back
street. The scrapped victims of Lebanon's bad traffic and worse drivers
litter a side road which heads down a hill before passing under the
Pierre Gemayel Corniche flyover. Now minutes away from a hangover's
worst enemy, I pass the antique and book stalls and go straight for a
salty falafel sandwich, oozing with dressing and pickles. I've made it
back to Souq al-Ahad.

The market in Sin el-Fil is a
solid staple of many a Beirut weekend, where you can while away the
hours amusing yourself browsing anything from Saddam Hussein keyrings to
hammer-and-sickle coathangers to Cristiano Ronaldo bathtowels. But the
traders are not to be laughed at and do serious business. Stalls sell
kitchen appliances, electrical goods, fake football jerseys, watches,
belts, books, spices. You can get whatever you need. There are hundreds
of stalls, covered by plastic tarpaulins which are put up and taken down
again every weekend. When I first discovered the souq back in March
these tarpaulins kept out the rain; now they keep in the heat to
steaming hot effect. Behind the main market a large area is taken up by
cages. Inside the cages are kittens, puppies, rabbits, chicks, parrots,
tortoises and even monkeys. I also once saw an eagle.

My
personal favourite stall at Souq al-Ahad is a small used clothes stand
where I've refreshed my flagging wardrobe with diverse 1990s t-shirts
and printed flannel shirts. Every visit to this stall feels a bit like
opening a long-sealed attic storage box, as you sift between the various
items, some smart, some worthless, some plain funny.
Many
of the locals that run and shop at the souq are Syrian and are from the
lower end of Lebanon's socioeconomic ladder. Not many speak English,
apart from 'one thousand' or 'two thousand' as they call out prices on
seeing foreigners approach. Many have cassette players which blare out
the names and prices of their goods on a loop, enabling them to sit back
and smoke a narguileh without having to waste energy doing the
announcing for themselves.

Wealthy Beirutis have a
terrible attitude to the weekend market. When chatting to Lebanese in
bars and mentioning a love for the souq, they commonly react with shock,
asking whether it's safe to go there and why would we even want to go
to such a 'dirty' place full of 'poor people'. This is mainly based on
misconception as most of them have never been there to see it for
themselves. I think it is somewhat symptomatic of a lack of tolerance
towards other social groups by the privileged end of Lebanese society.
The souq is a more welcoming place to shop than Downtown's
pretentious boutiques and I have never experienced anything other than
polite friendliness from the people there. Synonymous with days off,
good friends and the smell, look and feel of the Middle East, it will
stay with me long after I have gone from Beirut.
No comments:
Post a Comment