Shaar's project "Soufra" - which means a table laden with food -
drew the attention of Hollywood actress and social activist
Susan Sarandon, whose documentary - also called "Soufra" - was
screened for the first time this week in Beirut.
The film tells the story of Shaar's efforts to set up a food
truck and harness the culinary talents of the women living in
the refugee camp of Burj al Barajneh, which was established in a
southern suburb of Beirut in 1948 and is still home to thousands
of Palestinians.
The documentary premiered at the El-Gouna film festival in Egypt
in 2017 and created a stir that helped Shaar's NGO, the Women's
Program Association (WPA), to raise funds to build a pre-school
that will create jobs and educate about 100 children.
Visiting the 'Nawras' school on Monday, Sarandon expressed her
joy at Shaar's success.
"It just goes to show you that when people pull together, you
know, things get bigger and bigger and bigger - and especially
the school, how fabulous to have that happen," said Sarandon as
she sang English nursery rhymes with the kids.
With the United States "whipped into a fearful state of being"
over immigrants and asylum seekers, she added, it is vital "to
redefine the word 'refugee', to put a face on that story and
show how important it is to support people was are displaced or
trying to survive in very difficult circumstances."
"SAFE PLACE"
Shaar, who escorted Sarandon around the camp, said she also had
plans now to establish a small restaurant which could serve as
"a safe place for women to come and relax mentally and
physically, to come to eat, drink and express themselves more".
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Another NGO, Alfanar (Arabic for beacon), helped the WPA to set up
Soufra, providing management support, funding and training.
Alfanar executive director Myrna Atalla said the Soufra project was
all about giving refugees the tools to take charge of their own
lives.
"Otherwise we're just throwing money at problems and not actually
empowering people to shape their destiny," she said.
Echoing that view, the documentary's director Thomas Morgan said the
project had helped to change how Shaar and the other women viewed
themselves, "like they were contributors for the first time, (that)
they were able to do something".
Later Shaar, Saradon, Morgan and the refugee women watched the
documentary at a screening also attended by U.S. actor Ben Stiller,
local artists and philanthropists.
Morgan gifted the "Soufra" team the awards that the film has
garnered worldwide over the past two years.
Nearly half a million Palestinian refugees live in mostly
overcrowded, impoverished conditions, in 12 camps in Lebanon. They
are descendants of families who fled or were forced to flee during
fighting which created the state of Israel in 1948.
(The story has been refiled to correct name of organisation in
paragraphs 10 and 11 to Alfanar, not al-Fanar)
(Writing by Gareth Jones)
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