BEIRUT: Fears of a major escalation between the Zionist entity and Hezbollah have left many Lebanese on edge, exacerbating mental health problems and reviving traumas of past conflicts in the war-weary country. One 29-year-old woman, who lives near the southern city of Sidon, said she dreaded the thunderous, explosive boom of Zionist jets regularly breaking the sound barrier. "I feel the house will fall down on top of me ... Sometimes I freeze ... or start crying,” said the woman, a contract worker for a non-governmental organization.

She was 11 years old when the Zionist entity went to war with Hezbollah in the summer of 2006, and said bombs fell near her house. "Sometimes, unconsciously, you remember it,” said the woman, requesting anonymity in a country where mental health issues are often stigmatized. "These sounds give you flashbacks — sometimes you feel you’re back at that time,” she said.

Lebanon has been on a knife’s edge since a Zionist strike on Beirut’s southern suburbs killed Hezbollah’s top military commander, just hours before the assassination, blamed on the Zionist entity, of Hamas’s political leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran. Iran and Hezbollah have vowed revenge, amid fears that retaliatory attacks could spiral into all-out war, with airlines suspending flights to Lebanon and countries imploring foreign nationals to leave.

BEIRUT: A man walks on an overpass beneath a giant billboard that reads " Enough, we are tired, Lebanon doesn't want war" on a street in Beirut on August 7, 2024. — AFP photos

Panic attacks

"I already had been suffering from anxiety and depression ... but my mental health has deteriorated” since October, said the woman, who can no longer afford therapy because her work has slowed due to the hostilities. "You feel afraid for the future”, she said.

Before 2006, Lebanon endured a grueling 1975-1990 civil war in which the Zionist entity invaded the south and in 1982 besieged Beirut. Laila Farhood, professor of psychiatry and mental health at the American University of Beirut, said "cumulative trauma” has left many Lebanese with stress, anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. "Individuals transmit their anxieties to their children as cross-generational trauma,” she told AFP. "What is happening now triggers previous traumas,” causing some people to have panic attacks, said Farhood, who specializes in war trauma and its impact on Lebanese civilians.

On Tuesday, Zionist jets broke the sound barrier over central Beirut, causing intense sonic booms that rattled windows and nerves, just two days after the anniversary of a catastrophic blast at Beirut’s port in 2020. "I had my first panic attack,” said Charbel Chaaya, 23, who studies law in France and is living with his family near Beirut. "I couldn’t breathe, my legs felt numb ... in that very first moment, you don’t know what the sound is — just like what happened on August 4,” he said.

‘Uncertainty’

Layal Hamze from Embrace, a non-profit organization that runs a mental health center and suicide prevention hotline, said people in Lebanon now are "more susceptible to any sound”. "Baseline, the adrenaline is already high. It’s a stressful situation,” said Hamze, a clinical psychologist. "It’s not only the Beirut blast,” Hamze added. "The natural or automatic response” is to be frightened, she said, and while "maybe the older generation ... are a bit more used to” such sounds, they could trigger "the collective trauma”.

Some on social media have urged people to stop letting off fireworks — a ubiquitous practice for celebrations — while humorous skits making light of difficulties like flight cancellations have also circulated. With coping mechanisms varying greatly, some people are "going partying”, while others "are reaching out to the community more”, which helps them feel they are not alone, Hamze said.

Dancer Andrea Fahed, 28, whose flat was damaged in the port blast, said she panicked when she heard this week’s sonic booms. She said she felt "lucky” to be a dancer, because with her community "we laugh together, we move together ... you let go of a lot of things”. But she said the "uncertainty” was a constant struggle, and now leaves her windows open, fearing another blast could shatter everything. "Anything can happen,” Fahed said. "If it’s happening with that intensity in Gaza, why wouldn’t it come here?” — AFP