Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A Tourist In Damascus

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • A Tourist In Damascus

    A TOURIST IN DAMASCUS
    by Paolo Martino

    Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso
    Oct 10 2012
    Italy

    Damascus. When I get there, in December 2011, the uprising against
    Bashar Al Assad has been going on for ten months. In the city, under
    the ever-present eye of the dictator, everything seems calm, though at
    the same time absent and precarious. Even for the historical Armenian
    community, once again prey to its destiny of chronic lack of safety.

    The thirteenth episode of "From the Caucasus to Beirut"

    "Reason for visit?" The cigarette is burning slowly on the neck of the
    ashtray. "Tourism". The customs officer tilts the passport, studying
    its filigree reflections. "Where are you staying and for how long?".

    With his chest thrown out, Bashar al Assad towers in a portrait over
    the officer's shoulders. "At the Al Rabie hostel". The cigarette is
    almost half-way. "I'm staying for the week-end, I have to get back to
    work on Monday, in Beirut". The Lebanese annual work permit is open
    on the desk, next to the ashtray. "You sure?". Before I can answer,
    the stamp beats on page 11. The cigarette, now only a butt, falls in
    the ash. "Welcome".

    The border unwinds on a desert ridge, a stony yellow surface swallowing
    the no man's land between Lebanon and Syria. As if the thick green
    in the Bekaa valley - only a handful of kilometers away - had been
    set on fire on the border line. A truck lies solitary on the side
    of the road, a remainder of the caravans striving up these ramps
    up until a few months ago. The only passage of land between Lebanon
    and the rest of the world is a silent line of tarmac, beat only by
    the wind of bad news. A giant poster of the President bids welcome:
    "Syria united belongs to the Syrians only". In the shade of the poster,
    a shepherd is feeding his dog.

    Damascus is announced by Soviet-style buildings, desert embankments,
    austere and indelible witnesses of the alliance that once bound
    Syria to the Kremlin until the fall of the Communist bloc. A vain and
    repeated effort made by the regimes to bind their longevity to that
    of the concrete. The taxi rides under the blocks, quickly through
    the junctions and roundabouts that in other times would have cost
    hours in traffic, whilst an imminence-filled atmosphere seems to be
    looming over everything. Stores, lights, people on the sidewalks:
    everything is in its place, but is somewhat distant, precarious,
    absent. Down the avenue, the statue of Salah ed Din on a horse guards
    the entrance to the old part of the city.

    >From my journal. December 9th

    In old Damascus, guarding an urban civilization more ancient than
    the Italy of the Communes, a drilling replication of Bashar Al
    Assad's portrait makes its way anti-historical and vulgar through
    the protective alleys of the city. The leaderism achieved by the Arab
    power in long decades of dictatorships is not able to renew itself in
    the bony built of this slouching man. Lacking the mass of Gheddafi
    and Moubarak or the puffed up bearing of Ben Ali, his counterparts
    already swept away by the Arab Spring, the picture of Assad resists
    as it relies on a glassy and sharp look, a frown with no character
    that vibrates like a muffled sound in the daily life of Syrians. The
    cold eyes of a power that has drowned the people's uprising in blood.

    Bab Sharqi, the Gate of the Sun, Eastern border of the old city.

    Beyond a white-stone surrounding wall, the bell of the Armenian Church
    of Saint Serkis tolls the Sunday Calling. Prayer after prayer, the
    liturgy is attended by about a hundred faithfuls for the whole morning,
    while two distinguished gentlemen linger smoking in the bright sun
    flooding the courtyard. I observe a marble bas-relief portraying the
    deportations of 1915. "Tourist?" The older gentleman cannot curb
    his curiosity towards a new face. "Yes. Italian" A look of wonder
    crosses his eyes: tourism in Damascus has practically disappeared
    in the last few months. In approaching me, the man offers a packet
    of cigarettes. "You are welcome". He then turns to his friend in
    Armenian sending him off to a gate: he immediately comes out of the
    same gate with three coffees.

    'An ill wind is blowing over Syria'. When mass ends, tens of people
    greet each other in the courtyard, a space that is made intimate
    by the walls around it. Vartan, a retired merchant who used to sell
    Italian products, recalls his youth years. "I used to go to Vigevano
    to buy shoes, Milan to buy fabric, Venice to buy jewels. But those
    were other times, Syria was a rich Country. Now only those who can't
    leave remain". Of the 150.000 Armenians who populated Damascus and
    Aleppo until twenty years ago, less than 100.000 are left. "Up until
    the '80s we were a strong community, in money and in numbers". While
    we are walking towards his home through the alleys of the Christian
    quarter, tens of shutters rolled down testify the hard times affecting
    the Country. "It's different, today. We no longer have certainty for
    the future".

    Down an alley, its knob made smooth by the touch of hands, a small
    door made of boards and wrought-iron squeaks as it opens onto a
    courtyard. "We only come here on the week-ends, to be all together".

    The whole family is gathered round a table ready for the Sunday lunch,
    while the presence of a stranger is no longer reason for embarrassment
    and everyone discusses what is happening to the Country. "Every day,
    the news gets worse. The rebels are more and more organized, armed by
    foreign Countries to bring the war right inside Damascus". The fear
    of war is expressed like an oppressing sense of being under siege:
    the enemy is at the gates.

    "Why don't you take part in the change?" All at once, silence sinks
    at the table. The spontaneity of my question is mistaken for naivety.

    "What is happening will bring us no good" Vartan speaks up, while
    everyone listens. "This uprising is organized by Sunnite terrorists who
    want the power to rule over everybody else, with the support of Saudi
    Arabia. It is not the first time they've tried this. The same happened
    in Hama in 1982. And the only one who can keep the fundamentalists at
    bay, now as then, is President Assad" While speaking quickly, Vartan
    reveals something much deeper than his words: as in every violent
    clash, the positions of the opponents are polarized, definitive,
    lacking legitimacy for the adversary. "But there are also Christians,
    among the opponents." Vartan almost does not let me finish. "They
    are paid, just like everybody else."

    Damascus breathes by the rhythm of history. In the darkness of the
    alleys, as in the large hectic avenues of the suks, there is a thread
    linking the present to a monumental past. The thick and resigned
    humanity populating the city moves head low among the great ruins of
    ancient civilizations, gracefully integrated with the city's living
    architecture. Today as in the seventh century, the Umayyad Mosque,
    legacy of the Arabic dynasty, the first to rule from the Atlantic to
    the Indian Ocean, is attended by families who, during winter days,
    warm themselves on white marble inundated by the sun, among high
    Roman columns and the stately facade of the Byzantine temple.

    >From my journal. December 9th From this symbolic place, ten months ago
    Damascus let out its cry of uprising, fully embracing the purposes of
    the Arab Spring and dragging the capital out of a passiveness that
    had lasted 40 years. Were those who took part in that demonstration
    driven by sectarian interests or did they have a different, fairer
    and more just idea of society in mind? Before exiting Syria, I have
    to meet one of those guys: in a while, History will no longer have the
    time to understand who did what... it will be busy counting the dead.

    P.S.

    Only a few weeks after the events herewith narrated, the few visitors
    still in Damascus disappeared from its alleys. Since the beginning of
    2012, Syrian authorities have not released tourist visas at the border.

    http://www.balcanicaucaso.org/eng/Dossiers/From-the-Caucasus-to-Beirut/From-the-Caucasus-to-Beirut/A-tourist-in-Damascus-123693

Working...
X