Charlie Kirk has always been a polarizing figure — an activist who refuses to stay quiet, a man who built a platform to amplify voices others tried to silence. To some, he is an inspiration; to others, a provocation. But whatever you think of him, one thing is undeniable: Charlie represents something deep and human — the refusal to live in fear of speaking one’s truth.
I know this feeling personally.
Since 2020, I have lived a life of activism that few would dare attempt. I was one of the first to write about the cash economy in my country, pulling back the curtain on a system no one wanted to expose. I tracked money flows, names, faces — people who, if they had known I was following them, would not have hesitated to kill me. I played a dangerous game of cat and mouse with intelligence agencies, never knowing whether they would come to arrest me or protect me. I relied on my wits, my faith, and yes — my feminine charm — to stay off their radar just enough to keep working.
But danger has a way of reminding you it’s real.
One morning, I woke up to find two bullets shot at my door. A message. A warning. Perhaps an invitation to be quiet. I didn’t stop. I carried on like nothing happened. While army intelligence came to investigate, I took a walk alone into the bush — the perfect place for someone to finish the job if that’s what they wanted. I came back alive. Maybe God wasn’t done with me yet.
On the next day, I went to places a blonde woman is never seen. I went where the danger was, but I went smiling — letting them believe I was just another tourist. Terror is powerful, yes. But so is a smile. So is the ability to disarm a room with kindness. So is faith that God is watching, that friends in power are watching, that perhaps even my enemies are watching — and deciding, just for today, to let me live.
Every night, I drive home sometimes knowing I’m being followed. Sometimes I lose the cars.
Sometimes I don’t. Sometimes I pray the man tailing me is tired, that he goes home to his family, that tonight, like me, he chooses life over fear.
Because Lebanon deserves better.
The soldiers, the officers, the men and women in uniform — they all want a better Lebanon. So do I. So does every Lebanese citizen who has seen corruption steal their money, their dignity, their future. I speak for them because someone has to.
And that’s where Charlie Kirk’s story comes full circle.
Charlie — love him or hate him — spoke loudly, even when it was unpopular. He built a movement that challenged power. He woke people up to their right to speak, to pray, to dissent. And though Charlie may no longer be with us, there is a Charlie in all of us.
There is a part of each of us that wants to speak our mind, to practice our faith in God freely, to state our political opinion without fear — even when facing a system so corrupt it can steal an entire nation’s savings.Charlie is gone, but his spirit is not.
I wake up every day knowing I might not make it home alive if I keep writing, if I keep speaking, if I keep pushing. But I do it anyway. And so can you. Because until we find the courage to speak, the corruption wins.
There is a Charlie in all of us — the Charlie that says no more. The Charlie that dares to speak, dares to fight, dares to live free.
And as long as that Charlie lives, there is hope. For me. For Lebanon. For all of us.
