Sara lives in a timber-framed and woven plastic sheeted single-storey structure in an “informal tented settlement” with her mother, father and three younger brothers that has been home to the family for almost five years. To one side of their home, Bedouins’ goats graze the hard thistle plants in the shadows of Mount Lebanon; to the other there is a clear view across the numerous vineyards of the Bekaa Valley towards the Anti-Lebanon mountain range.
When we arrive Sara is inside with her mother performing her daily chores of watering the pot plants, wiping down all the surfaces and washing the concrete floors, after which she emerges from the darkness of her home to greet us.
Sara is joined by her mother Fatima, 30, her father Ghadeer, 37, and her three brothers Ali, 10, Deeb, 8, and Hadi, 2. Speaking perfect English, Sara welcomes us into her home and offers us seating. She begins recounting the day of “violence”, as she called it. She was at home with her mother and siblings when the shelling started, her father was at work in his tailoring shop where he made and sold leather jackets.
