The Basta tramcar and my favorite Empire Cinema |
The French versus English schooling debate rages on
to this day. My parents proposed a happy medium: French elementary and
secondary schooling followed by higher education in English. So,
I began with French at the Collège
du Sacré-Coeur in Gemmayzé
and finished with English at the American University of Beirut (AUB) in Ras
Beirut.
We
lived on Mohammed el-Hout Street in Ras el-Nabeh all through my secondary
education. Riyad as-Solh,
Lebanon’s first prime minister and independence hero, who was assassinated in
Amman, Jordan, in July 1951, lived within 200 yards. So did a brother of Beirut
port’s mooring master Radwan
Baltaji, who rescued crew and passengers of French liner
Champollion after it ran aground off the Beirut coast in December 1952. Our three
households were the chief customers of a modest grocery across the street.
My parents' neighbor, Riad as-Solh |
For
some years, getting to school in Gemmayzé from Ras el-Nabeh was fun, great fun
indeed.
Classes
at the Sacré-Coeur started at 7:30. But I set off from home at 6:00. That gave
me a 15-minute window to chitchat, link fingers or hold hands in the building’s
entranceway with a sweetie who lived on the floor below. Her school bus picked
her up not later than 6:20.
I had an hour left to get to the Collège
on time, starting with a brisk seven- or
eight-minute walk to Ariss tramway
station.
The tramline from Ariss
to Beirut’s commercial center, Bourj or Martyrs’ Square, went first through Basta al-Fawka, or Upper Basta. The marker
there was a blue-painted coffeehouse opposite Basta Police Station.
The coffeehouse was renowned for a hakawati (raconteur), who recounted
every night the heroic deeds of pre-Islamic Arab warrior Antar.
Then came Basta
at-Tahta, or Lower Basta, which boasted a roomy mosque and a cluster of
shops that sold handmade furniture.
Next on the tramway route was a sizable Moslem
cemetery, Bashoura. Two-way tram and
car traffic alongside Bashoura usually
stopped just before or after Moslem noon or afternoon prayer times. That was
when funeral processions to the mosque or cemetery took place.
The custom was for seated tram passengers to stand up
as a sign of respect for the dead when a procession passed by. Drivers stepped
out of their cars as well. And you knew if the deceased was male or female from
whether a tarboush (fez) or a
headscarf topped the coffin.
From Bashoura heading
to Martyrs’ Square, the tramcar went
past the landmark Kazaz (glass) Café.
The café was packed at
all hours with customers puffing at shishas,
sipping tea or coffee, or playing cards, backgammon or dominoes.
Once in Martyrs’
Square around 7:00, I walked to the nearby Sacré-Coeur. That saved
me switching tramlines and paying
another five-piaster fare for a one-stop ride. The walk first took me past my
favorite “Empire Cinema.”
I valued Empire because it gave students half-price
tickets for afternoon shows. But what I resented in movie houses then was the
mixed audience reaction to the Lebanese national anthem at curtain openings. Most
in the audience stood up when the anthem was played, but a good number, still
grappling with dissociation from Syria, remained seated.
After Empire Cinema, the stroll took me past
alleyways ahead of the school’s main gate that led to Beirut’s now-defunct
Red-Light District.
The Red-Light District and Gemmayzé were associated then with Lebanese serial killer
Victor Hanna Awwad, who was hanged in January 1949. He reportedly filled jute
sacks at a coal shop in Gemmayzé and preyed on some of his victims in the Red-Light District.
My Alma Mater, the Collège du Sacré-Coeur in Gemmayzé |
In my six years at the Sacré-Coeur, I don’t remember having once missed entering the
classroom at the strike of 7:30. My grades were outstanding throughout my six
years there and I secured my Brevet and
Baccalauréat
diplomas comfortably.
Chance camaraderie during my first term at the Sacré-Coeur molded a key phase of my life starting age 13.
Early on in the term, I occasionally practiced roller-skating
in the school courtyard with Louis, a French student colleague whose surname escapes
me. He was a year older and one class higher. He was also taller and much
better built.
On leaving school one afternoon, Louis told me he
was heading to the nearby Cercle de la Jeunesse Catholique (CJC) for a quick
workout at “La salle de culture physique.”
He meant at “the physical education hall” -- or fitness gym in today’s language.
He asked me if I wanted to go with him there. I said yes spontaneously and off
we went.
The only fitness training I knew then was a twice
weekly “cours de gymnastique” for
students at the Collège.
The collective sessions focused on stretching, breathing and muscle strengthening
and relaxing movements directed by a former firefighter.
The CJC turned out to be a sizable, mixed membership
club. It had tennis courts, table tennis tables and volleyball and basketball courts
plus a proper gym subleased to a fitness guru and professional bodybuilder,
Elie David (pronounced Daveed). The gym was decently equipped. It had a High Bar,
Parallel Bars, Rings, a Climbing Rope, Weight Training Benches, Dumbbells and
Barbells, Weight Plates and a half dozen shower units.
After introducing me, Louis took his training
session instructions from David and went about his workout. David later
explained that he tailored separate workouts and diet regimes for each of his
gym members. Some of them were overweight and needed to lose fat. Others were
skinny and wanted to build muscles and put on weight. Some were teenagers while
others were fully developed…
David’s impressive physique, conduct and refined approach
to body training captured my imagination.
I told Louis when we walked out of the CJC that I would
seek the LL.10 monthly gym membership fee from my parents in the evening.
By opting to do so, I was embarking on a thrilling seven-year
chapter of sports in my life…