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Thu 12 Nov One hundred days since the blast in the heart of Beirut, memories are not fading. I feel it shake. Flashbacks are not her only record of what she and her family underwent on the evening of 4 August. The detonation of more than 2, tonnes of ammonium nitrate housed at the Beirut port for more than seven years was one of the largest non-nuclear blasts ever recorded β and the first of its scale in the smartphone era.
As soon as a fire erupted at the port shortly before 6pm that day, people in Beirut started filming, taking pictures and recording messages. What they captured forms an extraordinary record of the disaster in the city as its residents experienced it.
The Guardian, in collaboration with the Arabic podcasting network Sowt , has collected some of their accounts and presented them in the timeline below. In his apartment in Gemmayze, a suburb a few hundred metres from the port, Jean-Paul Rahal had been watching a political talk show with his mother when the host mentioned reports of the fire.
She filled a bag and he grabbed his passport. Before they left, Jean-Paul noticed the balcony door was still open and went to close it. In the basement of the home goods showroom, Tilda had also heard the first explosion. The floor beneath them was rumbling. The explosion blanketed the city in dust and rubble. Over the next hours - depicted in our timeline - Tilda and others fought to save themselves and each other, and piece together what had happened.
The explosion plunged the basement where Tilda was working into darkness, and sent the glass wall of an elevator crashing over her. She was conscious, she says, but knew she was bleeding.