Dahiyeh, Lebanon – Ahmad Wehbe didn’t anticipate his restaurant, Fries Lab, to outlive Israel’s warfare on Lebanon.
The restaurant in Haret Hreik, Dahiyeh – a neighbourhood closely focused through the warfare – was hit by an Israeli strike in late November.
“I woke as much as a name from a buddy in Qatar,” Wehbe, 28, advised Al Jazeera. “He mentioned my restaurant was on a map of focused buildings printed by the Israeli military. I rushed to test.”
When he arrived, all that was left of his tiny, open-kitchen burger joint was a pile of rubble.
“I used to be unhappy however not devastated,” he mentioned. “So long as my household and family members have been secure, I knew I needed to transfer on. I couldn’t dwell on one thing I anticipated to occur.”
Lights amid destruction
Haret Hreik’s major road nonetheless sports activities vivid, vibrant indicators and exteriors of fashionable eating places like Falafel Khalifeh and Al Agha.
As daylight fades, the eating places’ vibrant neon lights take over, masking the scenes of destruction throughout.
Not all of them survived – Wehbe is amongst many restaurant homeowners who misplaced companies as Israel destroyed entire swaths of Dahiyeh, though he was a bit extra lucky.
As quickly as a ceasefire deal was introduced on November 27, individuals returned to their Dahiyeh houses, salvaged what they may, and those that may afford repairs reopened their companies.
Wehbe’s restaurant was an entire loss, however his delivery-only kitchen remained intact, permitting him to maintain the enterprise operating.
Meals is a ardour for Wehbe. He has been running a blog about his love of meals on Instagram for a couple of years and left his job at a media evaluation firm two years in the past to deal with his restaurant.
“I didn’t examine at culinary college, however I’ve a ardour for meals. I really like road meals and perceive the analogies and combos of flavours,” he mentioned.
Fries Lab’s supply department is on a nook close to the destroyed location, sitting, intact, subsequent to a badly broken constructing bearing the scars of Israeli strikes.
Seven supply drivers wait exterior, taking orders in fast succession as employees work inside at full velocity, making ready a number of orders of fries and burgers layered with vibrant sauces.
Their signature rooster wraps overflow with mozzarella, fried rooster, and selfmade condiments, all in beneficiant parts.
Regardless of the kitchen rush, everybody had their function – grill station, fry station, meeting, high quality management – the area’s quiet solely disrupted by supply drivers asking when their orders can be prepared.

Outdoors, one batch of supply drivers departs as one other arrives.
“We’re busier now than earlier than the warfare,” Wehbe mentioned. “I opened a brief kitchen in Hamra through the warfare, however the orders there didn’t evaluate to the orders to Dahiyeh.”
‘We knew we’d reopen’
Al Qaysar, in Chiyah, can also be up and operating once more.
It had solely been open for 10 days earlier than the warfare compelled it to shut – 10 days after the ceasefire it had new home windows and was open once more.
The restaurant sits on the outdated Saida street, a busy entry level to Dahiyeh, and escaped with solely its home windows damaged, though the buildings round it have been severely broken.
“We knew we’d reopen as quickly because the warfare ended. That was non-negotiable,” Zahraa Hammoud, who co-owns Al Qaysar along with her brother Ali, advised Al Jazeera.
However now, the environment inside is calm, with Western classical music enjoying softly within the background.
The scent of shawarma greets guests on the door, mixing with the savoury aroma of grilled rooster and BBQ wings, a preferred menu merchandise typically seen leaving the kitchen in giant batches.
![Al Qaysar [Raghed Waked/ Al Jazeera]](https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/1-1737550061.jpg?w=770&resize=770%2C513)
The area is full of chatter as households and mates focus on politics – the presidential elections being probably the most frequent subject – and household, checking on one another’s siblings and family members.
Close to the street, passing vehicles swish by, whereas inside, the open kitchen offers diners a view of the motion as their meals is ready.
On the bigger household tables, there’s a variety of conventional Lebanese mezza like hummus and tabbouleh, with farrouj – chargrilled rooster – taking centre stage.
Smaller tables, typically occupied by buddy teams, are piled excessive with wings, arriving in a gentle rotation from the kitchen.
Although not intentional, the format divides the restaurant into two sections: mates normally sit within the part close to the street, whereas households desire the extra intimate setting inside.
The challenges of rising from the rubble
Whereas Dahiyeh’s restaurant trade stays in excessive demand, the shortage of readability about compensation for damages leaves many house owners in limbo, financial skilled Ziad Nasser El Dine explains.
“Many house owners are nonetheless looking for reasonably priced areas to reopen or struggling to fund repairs,” Nasser El Dine advised Al Jazeera.
Wehbe estimates his losses at $25,000 and is not sure if he’ll obtain any monetary compensation. Nonetheless, he plans to open a brand new Fries Lab throughout from his outdated location.
![3- Photo of the outside destruction of Al Qaysar restaurant after the Israeli airstrike taken on co-owner, Zahraa Hammoud's phone on January 19, 2025. [Raghed Waked/Al Jazeera].](https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/3-1737550180.jpg?w=770&resize=770%2C513)
“It’s powerful as a result of materials prices have skyrocketed after the warfare, and I’m alone on this, so I’m utilizing all my financial savings,” he mentioned.
Nonetheless, he’s assured his new location will succeed and even hopes to show it right into a franchise.
The Hammouds additionally had their challenges in reopening Al Qaysar, as a lot of their Lebanese employees had fled the world, and Syrian employees – who had been in Lebanon all through Syria’s warfare – have gone house.
General, they misplaced about eight employees members, Zahraa estimates. They have been fast to rent new employees and saved the identical menu and costs, with particular gives to draw new clients.
Nasser El Dine says the way forward for the trade depends upon how briskly residential areas will be rebuilt and what options will be discovered for returning displaced individuals whose houses are destroyed.
In areas like Dahiyeh, house to almost one million individuals, many depend on quick meals for its affordability and comfort, he notes.
“Since Lebanon turned cash-only through the financial disaster, demand for low-cost eating choices surged,” he added, referring to the crises which have gripped Lebanon’s financial system since 2019, pushing most Lebanese over the poverty line.

Wehbe, who opened Fries Lab in 2022, says the surge in new eating places in Dahiyeh, which is predominantly Shia, over the previous three years as a result of “the Shia like to eat,” he joked.
The federal government is working with the World Financial institution, which can also be contemplating an emergency help mission for areas that want it most, to evaluate the injury.
“The individuals of Dahiyeh love life. They take pleasure in going out and attempting new locations,” Hammoud mentioned, including that they have been seeing elevated footfall in Al Qaysar.
She believes it gained’t take lengthy for Dahiyeh’s restaurant trade to get well, as individuals have already “shaken the mud off themselves and began to look extra cheerful”.
As clients fill the restaurant, Zahraa juggles a number of roles, liaising between employees and clients and checking on orders within the kitchen earlier than switching gears to grow to be the social media supervisor, pulling out her telephone to seize content material. It’s uncommon to see her sit down.
“The loss is large, and all these martyrs died to make sure we will maintain going – to dwell, work, and preserve our dignity,” she mentioned.
“The enemy [Israel] invested all its effort and cash to destroy us, however we’re right here to indicate them that it takes us lower than a month to get again on our ft.”
