67. But Will It Make a Difference? (24 February 2026)
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| Billboards everywhere, anticipation abounding for Christian and Muslim alike (2 Dec. 2025 - Autostrade Bourj Hammoud) |
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| Armenian school students lining the Pope's path to the Beirut Port Blast site (2 Dec. 2025 - Autostrade Bourj Hammoud) |
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| Artsakh women are making a difference with their artisanship (30 Dec. 2025 - Gemmayzeh) |
And on the opposite border of this no-man’s land is reconstruction. This is something that Lebanese are constantly doing, or planning to do: spending emotional, mental and financial energies gathering the pieces of their lives torn apart by regional or international conflicts, internecine local struggles, or pervasively poor governance, reinforced with each election cycle. And when they attempt to rebuild their homes, villages and orchards, predictably our “neighbor’s” war machine grinds into action and destroys bulldozers and building equipment, preventing the Lebanese from recovery. At the same time, this “neighbor” is haunted by real or imagined threats, while they rebuild their homes, illegal settlements, watchtowers and walls, largely unmolested, justifying their racist actions as “self-defense”.
The Holy Father’s visit itself, from Nov. 30 to Dec. 2, 2025, came together smoothly, appearing to the casual observer to have been the result of months of planning. In reality, it came together in a matter of weeks, and it included meetings with Lebanon’s officialdom, a pilgrimage to the St. Charbel shrine, an interfaith gathering in the city center, a massive youth rally at the Maronite Patriarchate, a visit to a mental care facility, a prayer at the scene of the 2020 Beirut Port explosion, and an open-air mass for thousands at the Beirut seaside, in addition to private meetings. Pope Leo’s message was consistent in each instance: to highlight the people’s longing for peace with justice, calling people and leaders alike to play a positive role in making that peace a reality. It expressed the theme of his visit, namely, Jesus’ words “Blessed are the peacemakers” (Matt. 5.9). The Pope repeatedly, even scoldingly, stressed this to local and regional leaders: “Listen to the cry of your peoples, who are calling for peace!”
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| Making a difference in my nourishment with my favorite grilled liver sandwich! (31 Dec. 2025 - Nor Hadjin) |
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| Making a truly Beiruti Christmas from old tires, rather than burning them... (16 Jan. 2026 - Mar Mikhael) |
When the people pray to God for deliverance from their sojourn of misery in this no-man’s land, they, knowingly or not, are appealing to God to change each human heart. As Ebenezer Elliott’s poem, “When Wilt Thou Save the People?” so plainly expressed, “From vice, oppression, and despair, God save the people!”
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| LebCat 67 - Keeping watch over comings and goings at the American University of Beirut Medical Center! (22 Jan. 2026 - Beirut) |
(apologies for the 2-1/2 month delay in posting)






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