TheJakartaPost

Please Update your browser

Your browser is out of date, and may not be compatible with our website. A list of the most popular web browsers can be found below.
Just click on the icons to get to the download page.

Jakarta Post

A life’s work shattered: Stained glass artist counts cost of Beirut blast

m Perry and Imad Creidi (Reuters)
Beirut, Lebanon
Mon, August 17, 2020

Share This Article

Change Size

A life’s work shattered: Stained glass artist counts cost of Beirut blast Stained glass maker Maya Husseini poses inside her workshop in Hazmiyeh, Lebanon August 13, 2020. (Reuters/Mohamed Azakir)

T

wo decades of Maya Husseini's work to restore stained glass windows destroyed in the Lebanese civil war was lost in an instant in the seismic port explosion in Beirut.

"I can say that in this blast, 20 years of my professional life was on the ground," said Husseini, 60, who has worked on historic landmarks including many of Beirut's churches.

"Part of me has gone."

The Aug. 4 detonation of a massive quantity of explosive chemicals stored unsafely at Beirut port killed at least 178 people, injured some 6,000 and damaged buildings across a swathe of Beirut, carpeting streets in broken glass.

Damaged buildings included the Sursock Museum, a modern and contemporary art museum reopened in 2015, whose vibrant stained glass had been painstakingly restored by Husseini.

Its windows, which were particularly eye-catching at night when they were illuminated, were blown out by the blast.

At least 10 of the projects Husseini has worked on since the 1975-90 civil war have been destroyed. "Every day I am getting phone calls," she said at her workshop on the outskirts of Beirut.

Husseini learnt her craft in France, sent by her father, a church engineer who used to order stained glass from overseas as leaded, stained glass was not common in Beirut prior to the war.

Read also: Mar Mikhail: Beirut's 'beating heart' snuffed out by blast

One of the projects in which she took greatest pride was the 19th century St Louis Capuchin Cathedral in the Bab Idriss district of Beirut's historic city center, an area where she recalls going to drink lemonade with her friends as a child.

The windows of the church, which was destroyed in the war, were restored by Husseini over two years in a project completed around four years ago.

"I had tried, as much as possible, to feel the history of this church," she said. "At that point I broke down, it was as if I was injured, certainly not physically, but emotionally."

Husseini said she had been thinking about stopping work in two years but her plans had now changed.

"Even if 20 years of my work has gone - and perhaps I won't last in this work for another 20 years ... we will rebuild."

Your Opinion Matters

Share your experiences, suggestions, and any issues you've encountered on The Jakarta Post. We're here to listen.

Enter at least 30 characters
0 / 30

Thank You

Thank you for sharing your thoughts. We appreciate your feedback.