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Syrian Christians Face Bleak Christmas

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  • Syrian Christians Face Bleak Christmas

    Voice of America
    Dec 21 2012


    Syrian Christians Face Bleak Christmas


    James Brooke
    December 21, 2012

    BEIRUT, LEBANON - Christmas trees and lights decorate this city on the
    eastern edge of the Mediterranean. As Christmas approaches, however,
    Syria's 2 million Christians are not celebrating. They are worrying.
    If an Islamist government replaces the secular government of Bashar
    al-Assad, they wonder what the future will be for Syria's religious
    minorities.

    Daniel, an Armenian Orthodox, escaped from Syria three months ago with
    his wife and five children.

    "I had to come here. Because we as a Christian sect are targeted.
    Salafis and Muslim Brotherhood, and al-Qaida people, came and
    displaced us," he said.

    Tolerance fades

    Before the civil war, he said, Syria was a secular nation of religious
    tolerance.

    `At the garage where I worked, there were Armenians, Christians,
    Muslims,' Daniel, a 48-year-old car mechanic, said. `We ate together,
    I would go eat at their place. We would not ask if someone was Muslim
    or Christian.'

    After Egypt, Syria has the second largest population of Christians in
    the Arab world - about 2 million people.

    Christians dwindle

    Kamal Sioufi, president of Caritas Lebanon, a Christian charity,
    worries about the future of Christianity in the region.

    "The problem is in all the countries of the Middle East: the number of
    Muslim is increasing, the number of Christians is decreasing, and the
    power is for the Muslim, it is not for Christians," said Sioufi.

    The losers in Syria's civil war could be the Christians, about 10
    percent of the population.

    "The problem is the minority because they haven't any power is Syria,
    so they have... they will be people of a second category," said Sioufi.

    Christian refugees are hard to track in Lebanon. They often disappear
    into relatives' houses and keep hidden.

    Embracing life

    Daniel has two sisters in Beirut. To boost his spirits, Lidia sings
    "Silent Night" in Armenian. She described the Christmas feast,
    starting with a turkey stuffed with chestnuts.

    "We make rice and sprinkle nuts on it. And our mother has taught us a
    Syrian recipe, ham stuffed with garlic, carrots and the like. Kebbe we
    stuff with meat. And we do chicken breast with sesame seed paste," she
    said.

    But with half of his extended family trapped in Syria, Daniel is
    concerned about the future.

    He recalled that his family survived only because his grandparents
    left Turkey ahead of the mass killings of Armenians in 1915.

    "In 1915 my grandparents were very wealthy. They left everything and
    moved. Because of them we are alive today. And I left everything
    because of my children. We don't have Christmas."

    This Christmas, Daniel's gift to his children may be life.

    http://www.voanews.com/content/syrian_christians_face_bleak_christmas/1570239.html



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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