Israel’s invasion of southern Lebanon has forced thousands of people there to grapple with some urgent questions: What should I pack before I evacuate? What should stay behind? And where can I go that might be safe?
Gazans have some hard-won answers, and some are sharing them on social media.
One of them is Hala Bassam Al-Akhsam, better known as Chef Hala, a Gazan TV and social media personality with 20,000 followers on TikTok. Ms. Al-Akhsam has evacuated from her home in Gaza City three times since Israel invaded Gaza in response to the Hamas-led attack last Oct. 7, so she has plenty of experience.
In a recent post, she advised Lebanese evacuees to start with a lightweight pouch for valuables and important documents — gold, cash, diplomas and birth certificates. Make one member of the family responsible for holding onto it at all times. Everyone should have their own small bag of clothes, books, hygiene products and a reusable water bottle. And make sure everyone has a coat, she says, because “winter is coming.”
Once a prolific poster of cooking hacks and recipes, Ms. Al-Akhsam now uploads scenes of the war’s devastation alongside practical advice for staying safe and sane amid chaos. “Have a predetermined safe location in mind,” she said. “A house or an area to move to, without losing time deciding.”
Israeli airstrikes, raids and evacuation warnings have sent hundreds of thousands of Lebanese fleeing their homes, with no certainty of when they would be able to return or what might remain when they do. For the uprooted and those who soon might be, Ms. Al-Akhsam’s displacement tutorials have become a source of solace and solidarity.
Lebanese viewers have reached out with thanks on public forums, and private requests for more specific advice. In one recent video, she obliged with a packing list of essential medicines. “I have faced starvation, famine, and extreme pollution,” Ms. Al-Akhsam explained in an interview. “My struggle throughout this war has inspired me to share with the people of Lebanon what to expect.”
Ms. Al-Akhsam, 36, said she started the tutorials when she first heard that Lebanese, too, were being displaced by Israeli airstrikes. “I really wish someone had explained to me what to do when I first evacuated,” she said. “I didn’t realize what I would need. Once you leave your house, you never know how long you’ll be away. A day? Two days? A month?”
Some Gazans who have used social media to speak to the people of Lebanon focus on solidarity, others on grief. A few have expressed regret that those in Lebanon seem to be paying the price for the support of Hamas by Hezbollah, the Lebanon-based militant group.
Mahmoud Abusalama, a 35-year-old landscape photographer turned war reporter from Jabaliya in Gaza, urged his Lebanese viewers on Instagram to record their experiences. “Documentation is crucial for preserving truth,” he said in a recent post, “especially amid the ongoing war.” Before the war, he sought to capture what he described as “the beauty of Gaza.” Now, his posts are full of bloodshed and destruction.
Mr. Abusalama has been evacuated twice, and he has just one thing to say to those who haven’t fled yet: Don’t. “Displacement is humiliating,” he said. As Israel’s invasion pushes on, many in Lebanon may feel they have no choice but to ignore that advice.
The post On Social Media, Gazans Share Advice for Those Under Fire in Lebanon appeared first on New York Times.