Hamra

Ras Beirut, and the Hamra area in particular, arouse strong affection in most Lebanese. Older people remember the district fondly from their college days at one of its three universities – the American University of Beirut, the Lebanese American University of Beirut and the Lebanese Univerisity – all of which, but especially the AUB, have beautiful campuses you can stroll around. Students and young people see it as an alternative to downtown, which they perceive to be rather soulless.

But the area that spans the the Corniche and Ramlet el Baida at one end and the main Hamra block on the other remains a hub for shopping, hotels and businesses, a cheaper and more eclectic area than downtown (which took much of Hamra’s business away when it re-emerged in the mid-’90s).

During the war Hamra was the centre of all intellectual activity in Beirut; its famous street cafés – Wimpy and the now defunct Modka, for example – attracted fierce political debate between artists, writers and all those outside the political classes. Today much of the debate has moved on to literary café/jazz bar De Prague and the small, smoky and very Arabic Barometre.

Always bustling during the day, Hamra has become the favourite quarter of Lebanese actors, performers and musicians, with two old cinemas, which have stood decrepit for 30 years, recently being taken over and refurbished as arts and theatrical centres. Check out the Estral and Saroulla, located on the main Hamra high street, for their varied programmes of local and international performances. The Agial and Janine Rubeiz galleries both contain a large collection of works by both old and new Lebanese and regional artists well worth their salt. If art’s your thing, go along and see what you think.

Ras Beirut also contains the upmarket shopping neighbourhood of Verdun, which fights to compete with the boutiques downtown, which has many of the same stores. Sanayeh Park, one of the few parks in Beirut – or rather a sort of concrete square with patches of greenery and trees layered around it – is located here, providing a pleasant space for a stroll in the sunshine. It’s aways full of families and an older, more nostalgic generation trying to cling to a lost Beirut outdoor life now dominated by the joggers on the Corniche.

Ras Beirut and Hamra retain much more of a Muslim Arab feel than Gemayzeh and Achrafieh, and bustle with street life, from shoe-shine boys to coffee and newspaper sellers. Although most of the architecture is modern and uninteresting, if you dig deep and walk around you’ll find some attractive older buildings harking back to more picturesque days.

In the end, a stroll on the Corniche where the air is fresh may be all you need to get away from it all. It’s more cosmopolitan here, and gives a truer impression of Lebanese life.


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