The feminist movement in Lebanon can be described as diverse, complex, and filled with and encompassing all the issues women face under patriarchy in Lebanon, with a strong feeling of solidarity. ‘Every struggle is priority and solidarity is the solution.’[1]
This issue constitutes one small piece of many years’ worth of private and public interactions with psychologists, psychiatrists, physicians of all specializations, friends, family members and strangers - but also, importantly, a continuous search for answe