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Port Blast Anniversary

For Beirut blast survivor leaving Lebanon, every day is Aug. 4

Shady Rizk, a survivor wounded during last year’s Beirut port blast, points at the damaged office where he was working at the moment of the explosion. (Aziz Taher/Reuters)

BEIRUT — For Shady Rizk, a Beirut blast survivor, time has stopped since Aug. 4 of last year, when a huge stockpile of ammonium nitrate exploded in the Lebanese capital’s port, opposite his office.

“Every day is Aug. 4 — every day,” the 36-year-old said.

“Every day I remember the blast or remember what happened that dreadful day.”

The gigantic explosion killed more than 200 people, injured thousands, and destroyed large parts of the city.

Rizk was in the office ,where he works for an internet provider, and was filming the smoke rising from an initial explosion at the port when the second blast hit.

It left him with 350 stitches all over his body and face, and partially impaired his vision.

Having survived the near-death experience, Rizk considers Aug. 4 his rebirth, and he now wants to continue this new chapter of his life away from Lebanon.

“I don’t feel safe in my country — this is why I want to leave. ... This is the hardest decision I took in my life,” Rizk said.

He has now applied for immigration to Canada and plans to be there by October this year. Meanwhile, he still lives at his family house in a Beirut suburb with a view of the port, a daily reminder of his traumatic experience.

As Wednesday’s anniversary of the blast nears, Rizk says his “internal angriness” grows, fueled by the stalling of an investigation into the blast. He is one of many Lebanese angry at the lack of accountability a year later.

“No one has yet been arrested, no one resigned, no one is in jail. ... The truth is not yet known,” Rizk said.

Rizk’s doctor is still extracting glass from his body. And even though many of his scars have now been treated, he is “still healing” both physically and mentally.

“The internal scars are even worse, I may physically heal eventually, but psychologically, I don’t know when I will heal,” he said, speaking as he stood in the street of his damaged office, facing the port’s wrecked silos.

Rizk is still unsure of his exact plans on the day of the blast anniversary. He fears it will bring back memories of “indescribable pain” but is certain he wants to be on the streets near the port, expressing his anger.

BEIRUT — For Shady Rizk, a Beirut blast survivor, time has stopped since Aug. 4 of last year, when a huge
stockpile of ammonium nitrate exploded in the Lebanese capital’s
port, opposite his office.
“Every day is Aug. 4 — every day,” the 36-year-old said.
“Every day I remember the blast or remember what happened
that dreadful day.”
...