(Photo by Ryan Hueglin)

“It seemed unshakeable”

(Photo by Ryan Hueglin)
• RYAN HUEGLIN PHOTOGRAPHY MANAGER

 

 

 

Syrians living in Kitchener-Waterloo share thoughts on crisis

 

Lindsay Purchase
CCE CONTRIBUTOR

 

“It seemed unshakeable.” This was Omar Salaymeh’s impression in 2009, the last time he visited Syria, his home for 12 years before moving to Canada. He was shocked when the revolutionary Arab Spring movement came to Syria, leading to a conflict that has claimed more than 100,000 lives since 2011.

“There was a general sense of fear from the regime, a general resentment to the corruption that was going on, but it was just … that’s the way it’s always been.”

Salaymeh, 29, now works at The Tannery in Kitchener.

University of Waterloo second-year student Zeina, who declined to give her last name because of security concerns, had a similar impression. She lived in Aleppo, Syria until the end of high school, but has dual Canadian citizenship.

“I never thought that there could be a president other than Assad ruling. That wasn’t something to question,” she said.

Zeina recalled having to memorize a book of quotes from President Assad in school, something they were required to know with greater precision than even the Qur’an.

Comments made by Syrian Deputy Prime Minister Qadri Jamil last week suggested that the government would seek a ceasefire, but such action has yet to take place.

This comes just over a month after the Aug. 21 chemical weapons attack in the capital city Damascus, which killed more than 1,000 people. Western governments attributed the attack to the Syrian government, while Russia maintains it may have been rebel forces.

Rafah Hawa, a 23-year-old engineering student who currently lives in Damascus, heard news of the attack as it was happening.

“We heard like strange noise coming from rocket launcher, which is located inside the area that is controlled by the regional forces,” she said.

“And awhile after, we heard that hundreds of people had been killed by these chemical attacks.”

While she said that sometimes “it’s normal,” and she’s able to go to school, other days are too dangerous. Recently, a mortar shield landed in her neighbourhood, killing six people.

“We are afraid for our lives,” Hawa said.

The chemical attacks in particular have led to increased discussion among international actors about the possibility of international military action against the Assad regime. While the government and some components of the rebel forces do not support this option, Hawa believes it’s what the average Syrian wants.

“Russia isn’t going to stop supplying this region with all kinds of weapons. So unless there is military action into Syria, there is no solution of any kind,” she said. “Force is the only way this regime can be forced to actually sit down at a table and diplomatically support a solution.”

It’s difficult to imagine, however, what a solution might look like. Mass human rights abuses have been committed by the government and rebel forces, and to complicate things further, groups fighting against the government aren’t united under one leadership.

“We always said, from day one, the longer this conflict goes on, the more muddy the waters will be and the harder the solution will be afterwards,” Salaymeh said . “I think Assad will go eventually, but I really fear for the one after him.”

Zeina used to believe in taking sides. Seeing the atrocities committed by the government fueled her hatred.

But on her most recent trip to Syria, in August, staying in a government-occupied city where posters of martyrs line the streets, she had a change of heart.

“I used to say I wish they’d all die, but when I went there and I saw their pictures, they’re all between 20 and 25 years old; in the end, who are they?” she said. “They’re the Syrians who have to serve their army. They are either forced to do that or they believe they are seriously serving their country.”

She continued, “People are dying from both sides and I just wish people could stop thinking, this is the right side and this is the wrong side, because there is no such thing as that.”

Living in Canada, Zeina expressed that she feels “blessed,” but struggles with being safe in Canada while her family remains in Syria.

“I can’t, for example, go to the cinema. It makes me feel so bad. Or anything, just to do something for fun. It’s out of the question,” she said.

One of the main impacts of the conflict on Syrians, including Zeina’s family, is mass dis- placement. More than 2 million Syrian refugees have been recorded internationally, with an additional 4.5 million internally displaced people.

She believes that Canadians should pres- sure their government to accept more refugees.

As for Hawa, she has a simple request for Canadians when dealing with people who have been forced to flee their own nation: “Please be kind to us in your country.”