Ryan Calder, a Ph.D. candidate in sociology at the University of California, Berkeley, is traveling in rebel-held eastern Libya this month, interviewing the revolution's participants and witnesses. You can read earlier installments in this series here.
BENGHAZI, Libya — If you had told Benghazi residents three months ago that within a matter of weeks they would be throwing Molotov cocktails at Qaddafi loyalist tanks, they would've looked at you like you were crazy. Even after the Egyptian revolution began on Jan. 25, Muammar al-Qaddafi's iron grip on Libyan society seemed too strong to allow an uprising of the sort that occurred in Tunis and Cairo. Ahmed, a 26-year-old medical student in Benghazi, told me about a joke that was making the rounds in recently liberated Tunisia in February: "The Tunisians," he said, "were telling Libyans to bend over so they could see the real men over in Egypt."
It's not surprising, then, that when the revolution happened, few people here had much of an idea about what to do next: how to keep a society dominated by the government sector running once that sector was gone. Just as the opposition's Transitional National Council (TNC) has faced the problem of managing its volunteer-heavy rebel army, people trying to manage quotidian aspects of life during the war have faced the problem of what to do with the thousands of volunteers who want to help but don't have anyone giving orders. This is true in medical care, aid distribution, and other state services: While the TNC has managed to restore many of the functions of government previously handled by the Qaddafi regime, volunteers continue to shoulder much of the burden.
In the revolution's early days in February, civilians took matters into their own hands. With traffic lights not working, ordinary Libyans stood at intersections and directed traffic without pay. They also formed watch groups to patrol their neighborhoods. More recently, the TNC has restored police functions in Benghazi, largely through an organ called National Security (al-Amn al-Watani). Essentially a revamped police force, it includes many of the same police officers who patrolled Benghazi's streets before the revolution -- or at least the ones who have passed a screening by the new government.
Nevertheless, some citizens still feel ill at ease on Benghazi's streets, especially as rumors of lurking Revolutionary Committee cells -- the ideologically devoted Qaddafi loyalists -- abound. "I don't feel like there's proper policing," says Farah El-Sanousi, a 20-year-old dental student. "I don't feel safe." Near Benghazi's Hawari Hospital, she explains, "the traffic lights aren't working, and ordinary people are directing traffic."
Enas Mahmoud, a 20-year-old dental student, worries about going out as well. "There's always fear -- going out of the house, going places," she says. "Especially after sunset." State and society focus on the threat to women in particular; Libya Alhurra TV, the opposition's channel, has advised that women stay home between 6 p.m. and 7 a.m.
Others see a mixed picture when it comes to public safety during the revolution. Shawg Najem, a 26-year-old anesthesiologist who is volunteering to teach first aid to adults, gets calls from her parents all the time when she's away from home -- they want to make sure she's safe. "It's because of the lijan al-thawriyah [Revolutionary Committees]," she says. "They're crazy, and you never know what they're going to do. But other than that, I feel safer now, after the revolution." She describes taking a walk with her mother in the center of town recently, without a male family member accompanying them. "Before the revolution, we couldn't do that," she said. "It wasn't so safe for women to do that by themselves anywhere other than one of [Benghazi's] shopping streets."
Nuha Naas, a 36-year-old chemist at Libyan International Medical University (LIMU), recalls the first days of the revolution in Benghazi in February, when unarmed demonstrators were storming government security buildings, taking heavy fire from Qaddafi's security forces. She called doctors she knew at the city's Jala Hospital and the Benghazi Medical Center, who asked her to come join the many volunteers already helping.
"When I got to the hospitals, everything was a mess," Naas recalls. "There was no one to tell us how to help." The volunteers did their best to figure it out on their own what help was needed. "We cleaned blood off the floor, carried food, made beds for patients, took people to get X-rays."
Chris Hondros/Getty Images
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