Beyond the Storm: Why 2026 is the Year of the Lebanese ‘Empowered Citizen’

As the sun sets on another year, I am reminded of an old maritime analogy: a captain cannot control the storm, but he can absolutely control how he shifts the sails. In Lebanon, we have spent a few years battling a hurricane, yet as I look across my window overlooking beautiful Beirut, I don’t see a shipwreck. I see a fleet of resilient, empowered citizens ready to catch the first winds of change.

For me, 2025 was a year of building transformative resilience. Whether I was in boardroams with development sector executives through RPS MENA, or with private sector representatives as part of the Lebanese Private Sector Network (LPSN), convening our local Consulting Community of Practice, or mentoring aspiring youth of Aie Serve and connecting with WEF’s Global Shapers locally and globally, one truth became undeniable: The era of the “waiting citizen”, the survival mode is over. The era of the “Empowered Citizen” has begun.

From Survival to Strategy

For too long, we’ve defined progress in Lebanon as mere survival. But survival is not a destination; it’s a baseline.

My vision for a brighter tomorrow for myself and my children isn’t based on a gift from abroad or on some decision by a foreign government to give us a break. It is based on self-reliance, reason, building a sense of agency among Lebanese, and respect for the law. We often talk about “Social Justice” as a handout, but I see it as an essential right and a source of empowerment. Through my work with the Youssef Tabsh Foundation and RPS MENA, I’ve seen that when you provide a citizen with the right tools, access to a community, and opportunities, they don’t just survive, they build and thrive.

We need a Lebanon, state and non-state actors, that act as regulators and enablers. A country where a young professional, for example, doesn’t need a “wasta” to thrive; they just need a functioning system, a digital/unified ID perhaps, and a sense of security that comes from a stable, growth-oriented economy. They don’t need handholding or someone to tell them what to do; they just need a paved way in front of them, and they’ll figure it out.

Conveners & Builders

My belief is that for the coming period, we need people who serve as conveners and builders. Not “political representatives” in the old sense, but individuals from across the Lebanese mosaic bringing people together, and to rally everyone to a shared vision, narrative, dream, to take action and build. We need thought leaders, nation “rethinkers”, and reform inspirers.

I believe the top priorities would be:

  • Architecting a New National Narrative: The days when Lebanon was “Switzerland of the Middle East”; the banking, health, education, and hospitality center of the region are long gone. We need to envision a new “value proposition”, an inspiring set of “differentiating factors”, and an innovative “modus operandi”. Lebanon 2050 should be something we can all envision, work towards, and get inspired by.
  • Engineering Blueprints: Moving beyond “protest” toward “policy”, beyond “rhetoric” toward “action”. We need to double down on practical, technical, law-based frameworks that are simple, understandable, and implementable. From anti-corruption to fiscal decentralization, from foreign policy to economic strategy, ensuring that our “institutional health” is the priority and our citizens are at the center.
  • National Self-Reliance: Championing a “positive neutrality” where Lebanon leverages its greatest asset, its citizens, whether local or the diaspora, to build an economy that can withstand global shocks. I’m all for having friendships and positive diplomatic relations with Arab states and others. Still, we should plan to grow independently of foreign investment and aid and focus more on our capabilities, which are plentiful.
  • Empowering the Middle: Continuing to convene the academicians, thinkers, professionals and experts who are the backbone of this country, and encouraging those who travelled to return and build the dream with us, is of utmost importance. If we move in sync, we move the nation.

A Message of Hope: The Lebanese Mosaic

Hope, in the Lebanese context, isn’t blind optimism. It is the calculated belief that our diversity, our “mosaic”, is our competitive advantage. When we finally detach our public posts from confessional quotas and attach them to KPIs and merit, we don’t just fix the government; we heal the nation. More than 18 years ago, a team from all walks of life that co-founded Aie Serve believed in the values of respecting, accepting, and loving others, and today those values are more important than ever.

To my fellow Lebanese, at home and in the diaspora: do not let the headlines dim your light. We are a nation of “Good Shepherds”; we are dreamers, builders, creators, and consultants, ready to charter a new way forward for our own destiny.

Let’s step into 2026 not just hoping for change, but engineering it.

Afif Tabsh

http://www.LinkedIn.com/in/AfifTabsh

An Added Value of Being Lebanese

Lebanon

The more I interact with people from around the world, the more I travel, the more I work with different cultures, nationalities and what not I become prouder and prouder of being Lebanese.

I’ve realized that as Lebanese, we become hard wired to be resilient, adaptable, expansive and global.

I’m yet to see a country where you don’t find a Lebanese community in it, and you somehow always find them adapting to that community, learning its ways, spreading their wings and flying high among the community members.

If you were born to a Lebanese origin, you automatically entered a network of individuals spread all around the globe. You automatically grow to understand your role in this ever changing world, you get to consider wider perspectives and ambitions than many other nationalities I’ve seen…you get the mindset that the world is just a small village, and no matter where you go…you’ll manage, not because you got some super powers, but rather because we grow up engaged with the globe…studying in one country, working in another, having relatives and friends around the globe…and that’s not only because of the political or economic situation in Lebanon, even ages ago when things were all better in Lebanon…Lebanese still were wide spread.

So in a nutshell, being Lebanese, you got that added value of being, by default, a global citizen!

To all my fellow Lebanese around the globe, I’m proud of you…shine on!