The person leading the restoration efforts is 35-year-old actor and director Kassem Istanbouli, known for his theater work throughout Lebanon.
Several days a week, his team â which includes a Syrian, a Palestinian, a Lebanese and a Bangladeshi â drives three hours from their homes in the countryâs south to work on the space, built in the early 1940s but abandoned for decades.
The restoration project launched last month is the first of its kind in hardscrabble Tripoli, Lebanonâs second largest city more often known in recent years for sectarian and other violence.
âWhat we are trying to say is that Tripoli is a city of culture and art,â Istanbouli said. âWhen you open a cinema and a theater, people will come and attend. But if you give them a gun, of course they will shoot at each other and kill each other,â he added.
For much of the rest of Lebanon, Tripoliâs artistic history is considered a relic of the past, overshadowed by crushing poverty, corruption, and migration.
But Tripoli has an especially long cinematic tradition, once boasting up to 35 movie houses, including Lebanonâs first.
Cinema Empire is the last of five historic cinemas still standing in Tripoliâs Tell Square, which encircles a clock tower gifted by Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid II in the early 20th century. It shut down in 1988 as massive cinema complexes opened inside malls, and home video players grew in popularity.
Istanbouli, founder of the Tiro Association for Arts in the southern city of Tyre, has already transformed three abandoned cinemas there into theater and film venues.
Much like Tyreâs Rivoli theatre which he restored in early 2018, Istanbouli aims to transform the Empire into a multi-purpose venue featuring not only arts festivals and plays, but also a library, a visual arts studio and area for workshops.
Thatâs no small order these days, given a crippled economy and over 80% of the population living in poverty.
Even before a financial crisis led to the current depression, Tripoli was already Lebanonâs poorest city â plagued by government neglect and a lack of investment. It has been a major point of departure for illegal migration, with Lebanese now following the same precarious path as Syrians fleeing their civil war, trying to reach Europe via the Mediterranean.
The directorâs project was inspired by his father, an electrician who used to repair movie houses in the south, and his grandfather, who was a sailor and hakawati â a storyteller who sported a red fez while recounting folkloric tales in Tyreâs old cafes.
âThis project will improve the city economically. It will bring tourism and change to its reputation,â Istanbouli said.
Charles Hayek, a 39-year-old historian and conservationist said that Istanbouliâs project will do more than just fight negative perceptions.
âKassem is saving one of the heritage buildings and giving it back life,â he said.
Tripoli has lost much of its architectural heritage â especially around Tell Square â in the past decade due to neglect. Before the 1975-1990 civil war, the squareâs oldest cinema, Inja, once attracted two of the Arab worldâs biggest music celebrities: Umm Kalthoum and Mohamed Abdel Wahab.
That building has now been demolished, replaced by a parking garage.
For rehabilitation funds, Istanbouli has partnered with the DOEN Foundation and The Euro-Mediterranean Foundation of Support to Human Rights Defenders.â¯The cinema contract from a private owner is for five years, and he hopes to officially open within six months.
One afternoon, Istanbouli led volunteers who had finished with repairs through acting exercises.
âPretend that youâre an animal,â he said to a woman who then announced she was a panda. âNow I want you to face off against a dog⦠who wants to be a dog?â he asked.
Maha Amin, one of the attendees from Tyre who was sweeping dust off mirrors in the morning and was now on stage, never thought about the possibility of acting, let alone visiting Tripoli.
âThe environment we live in doesnât accept a woman who is my age to do this,â the 57-year-old special needs teacher said. She initially went to Istanbouliâs Rivoli theater in Tyre to enroll her seven grandchildren, but ended up joining them.
âEspecially in the tough times today, people need to breathe and express themselves,â she said. âItâs here on stage after a long day of work that Iâm able Iâm able to say what I want, in total freedom.â
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