“They want to start a religious war; we want to extinguish it” – Mufti of Syria
by alethoBy Eva Bartlett | Crescent International | June 1, 2014
Leading
figures in Syria such as the Mufti of Syria who lost his own son to a
terrorist attack, want to extinguish the fires of hatred. The
overwhelming majority of Syrians agree, isolating the foreign-backed
mercenaries inside and outside Syria.
Most
news accounts of Syria paint a desolate, sectarian picture of the
country where people in areas secured by the Syrian army are miserable
and where people, above all, want to see President Bashar al-Asad gone.
During my visit, I found the exact opposite. In particular, I found
widespread, and usually ardent, support for the president.
I
entered Syria as part of an international Peace Delegation, comprising
more than 40 people who believe in a political, Syrian-led solution for
Syria. In the course of one week, we visited Latakia, Homs, and areas of
Damascus, sat with the top religious leaders and numerous grassroots
leaders. We heard testimonies from survivors of massacres — Haram,
Kasab, Maaloula — and met with various internally-displaced from
Yarmouk.
After
the week had passed, I stayed on independently, moving freely on my own
throughout Damascus, engaging with various strata of Damascene life.
The
streets of the three cities I saw were far busier and more alive than I
had expected possible and, aside from the mortars fired daily by armed
insurgents on Damascus and environs, I felt safe and welcomed. All over,
I saw groups of mixed faiths comfortably chatting, sharing meals and
shisha, and proudly answering “I am Syrian” to my taboo question, “Are
you Muslim, Druze, Christian…?”
Damascus,
unsurprisingly, has upscale shops and historic markets, but also
newsstands with papers found in any North American city, including those
which have propagandized so heavily against Syria’s government and for
the need for Western intervention.
Yarmouk
has now, strangely, all but disappeared from mainstream reporting. Is
it because the story is old, or because the actions of these armed
insurgents controlling vast areas of Yarmouk have been so documented
that it is difficult to any longer purvey the standard line: that the
government is assaulting its own people? Still suffering under the
presence of largely foreign militants, with a heavy presence of Jabhat
al-Nusrah, Islamic State in Iraq and Sham (ISIS), and other al-Qaeda
affiliated groups there since December 2012, numerous attempts at
cease-fire have been foiled. The Palestinians and Syrians (yes, there
are Syrians in Yarmouk) continue to need food, medicine, hospitals, and
the exit of the armed groups.
At
the edge of the camp, where Yarmouk and Palestine streets converge, I
could see some of the massive damage: shells of cars, houses and a
hospital with walls studded with machine gun bullets and mortars. But
venturing beyond the concrete barriers would have been inviting sniper
bullets to the head. “For two kilometres in that direction, it’s
completely open. If you walk another five meters, you’ll be in the
snipers’ scope,” security told me, himself not going any farther.
Abu
Kifah Ghazzi, a PFLP spokesman, outlined events of the past two years
relating to Yarmouk, noting that there are Palestinians from Yarmouk
alongside the Syrian army fighting against the militias and for Yarmouk.
I ask about food aid and starving residents. “The civilians are
suffering terribly, but the armed gangs have ample food,” he said,
adding, “Food aid has entered Yarmouk, but the militias often took it.”
In
the most recent attack on aid distribution, on May 13, one person was
killed and another injured when a centre for humanitarian aid
distribution was targeted, the Daily Star reported. We also
visited two different schools now housing displaced Palestinians and
Syrians from Yarmouk. Their words were the same. “The terrorists took
over the camp, took over our houses, and stole our food. We want the
camp back. Tell your governments to tell those terrorists to leave
Yarmouk.”
The
growing trend of Syrian fighters laying down their arms in exchange for
amnesty from the government was most notable in Homs, now secured by
the Syrian army. This “Musalahah” (Reconciliation) movement, dubbed the
“third way,” looks toward a political solution for Syria.
Amnesty
and the laying down of arms doesn’t apply to the over 5,000 foreign
fighters, nor have they shown any intention to stop shelling,
kidnappings, beheadings and the countless other atrocities largely void
from many Western reports on Syria.
As
of April 2014, “1416 fighters have laid down their weapons. At first,
the fighters were afraid that they would go to jail, but now, every day
people are asking for reconciliation. Yesterday 10, the day before 29, I
feel that peace is close,” said a priest in Homs. The highest numbers
of those laying down weapons are from Homs, a city which was often
dubbed in the media as the “heart of the revolution.” It seems these
“rebels” realize that the ideology they thought they were fighting for
is not shared by their armed takfiri brothers.
The
mortars being fired at Damascus by militants in the Jobar district east
of Damascus (and until recently the Mliha, now secured by the Syrian
army) are not guided, yet they are designed to create maximum damage.
One day I got a lesson on mortars from two men in the National Defense
Forces (NDF). Most mortars the armed groups are using are homemade. Some
have just enough explosives to make them fly, with as many pieces of
metal, nails, sharp bits stuffed inside, to cause wider injury when
exploded.
Online
videos document the insurgents making these crude but deadly shells,
and the firing of them toward Damascus. While the Old City has been
particularly hard-hit, the mortars also reach central and western areas
of Damascus. On April 15,
insurgents in Jobar shelled the Manar elementary school, killing one
child and injuring at least 60 more. They shelled a kindergarten the
same day, injuring three more children. On April 29, four mortars hit Shaghour district, killing 12 students and wounding at least 50.
Deputy-Foreign
Minister Faisal al-Miqdad had said earlier this year (January 2014),
“In the past 4 months, terrorists fired 12,000 shells,” not including
the mortars in other areas of Syria. A friend, a member of Syria’s rugby
team, was one day at a match in Beirut, another day in the hospital,
injured by shrapnel from these mortar attacks. At the time of his
injury, he had been assisting civilians injured in a prior attack in the
area.
Staying
in Bab Sharqi, the East Gate area of the Old City, I got a more
personal lesson on mortars, some as close as 50 metres from where I
stayed, a residential area. On another occasion, outside the walls of
the Old City, from the direction of insurgent-held Jobar, sniper bullets
flew within a few feet of me. So while the city has a secure and
strangely normal feel to it, the attacks of these militants are
constant.
Driving
to Homs, the roads were secured by military checkpoints, cars were
searched for explosives and weapons. Evidence of the past three years of
fighting is everywhere. In Homs City, I saw the site of a double car
bombing just the week prior, which killed 25 civilians. Houses and
businesses torn apart, families of martyrs told of the bombings,
mid-afternoon, timed one after another, to ensure hitting any rescuers.
These people were some of the most ardent supporters of President
al-Asad and the Syrian army, again saying al-Asad is the only means of
unifying Syria, and the army is protecting them. Having endured years of
car-bombings and mercenary snipings, they would know best.
In
Latakia, northwest of Damascus and closer to the Turkish border, to
some of the current hot spots like Aleppo, I was surprised by the sense
of normalcy: people picnicking, busy seaside streets as the Sun set.
Lilly Martin, an American 22 years in Syria, mentioned that yes, Latakia
is in general safe, but that they are assaulted from afar, from the
Turkish border, by long-range missiles.
As
Latakia is largely unscathed, it is host to refugees from areas being
assaulted by militant groups, including the displaced from the village
of Kasab, attacked March 21
by mercenaries originating from, and with the support of Turkey. The
mercenaries continue to hold Kasab, and reports cite the desecration of
churches there.
In
Latakia, Homs, Damascus, and on the roadside, posters of President
al-Asad are everywhere… the President in a suit, to the President in
army fatigues and sunglasses. The support voiced by the various
civilians I met in all three cities is not exclusive to minorities or
‘Alawites or Ba‘th party members. In fact, within Syria, there are a
number of registered opposition parties who, while seeking change in the
country, support President al-Asad.
At
a joint meeting with the peace delegation, I met members of six
different leftist opposition parties who do not support foreign
intervention, but instead support the reconciliation movement. They
resoundingly agreed that this “conflict” was a Syrian issue, to be dealt
with by Syrians in Syria, that the foreign mercenaries had to go, and
that elections were imperative. Despite their differing sentiments three
years ago, they said they would now vote for Bashar al-Asad this June.
“In
Syria we have real opposition parties, demanding reforms for the Syrian
people. We are the real opposition, rooted in the streets of Syria,”
said Shaykh Nawaf ‘Abd al-‘Aziz Trad al-Milhim, head of the People’s
Party. Berwin Ibrahim, chair of the National Youth Party for Justice and
Development said, “We don't agree with the regime on many things, but
we insist that our homeland comes first. We have corruption in the
government. But that is like any government. The conspiracy, terrorism,
and interference from Western countries have united supporters of the
government and the opposition,” she said.
One
of the opposition who had formally called for al-Asad to step down,
Mohammad Abu Qasem, Secretary General of the Solidarity Party, said,
“What’s happening in Syria is international terrorism, with many
countries interfering in Syria. Since the elections were announced, the
insurgents started working harder in Kasab and in Aleppo.”
Feminist
activist, Suheir Sarmini, Deputy Secretary General of the Syrian
National Youth Party, said, “President Obama and Congress have armed
these gangs to kill our children, our people. Tell Obama and Congress to
stop killing the Syrian people and not to interfere in Syrian
sovereignty.”
In
contrast to accusations that no “real” opposition could exist within
Syria, Mazen al-Akhrass, a member of Syria’s NDF and a political
analyst, pointed out that two very vocal (and far more critical than
those I met) opposition members remain in Syria, unscathed. “Louay
Hussein and Hassan ‘Abd al-‘Azeem are very well known and extremely
against the regime, and they ask for more than ‘reforms.’ Yet they have
been living in Damascus — the ‘stronghold of the regime’ — during the
events, and their lives weren’t threatened. They are not in jail, and at
this point they seem to have settled for partial reforms as a step
toward full regime change.”
We
met with Syria’s Grand Mufti, Dr. Ahmad Badr al-Din Hassoun. He spoke
of the need for reconciliation and forgiveness amongst Syrians. He is
notable for walking the talk: Shaykh Hassoun’s 21-year-old son Sarya was
assassinated in October 2011, on the same day that it was announced
he’d be engaged. During the funeral, while sobbing, the Mufti called for
forgiveness and reconciliation, even for those who murdered his son.
“All of the churches and masjids that have been destroyed, we can
rebuild. But who will bring back our children? Who will bring back my
son Sarya? When we have violation against any child, it is a violation
against God.”
He
mentioned that in March he had been granted a prestigious Italian peace
prize, by The Ducci Foundation, for his non-sectarian preaching of
interfaith peace. But the Mufti never got to Rome. “I was granted a visa
for only ten days. They were afraid I’d stay longer. But Europeans are
among those killing our people. ... I reject this [kind of] ‘democracy.’
We in Syria are not Sunni or Shi‘i or ‘Alawi nor Muslim nor Christian.
We are human beings and must be respected. They want to start a
religious war. We are going to extinguish this fire.”
On
a personal note, I would echo the Mufti’s call, and those of so many
others I met in Syria. Come to Syria, see for yourselves. Very quickly
you can get a taste of the senseless mortars, and the horrific
testimonies of those assaulted by foreign mercenaries and takfiri
ideologists. But also of the strength and resistance that is the Syrian
people, who don't intend any time soon to fall to occupation, and who
will vote for President al-Asad in June.
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