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A letter from Aleppo

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  • A letter from Aleppo

    World Magazine
    Sept 7 2013



    A letter from Aleppo

    Syria | A firsthand account from inside Syria's humanitarian disaster

    Below is a letter out of Aleppo, Syria, that was written in late July
    by a physician. A lifelong Aleppo resident of Armenian heritage, this
    man has remained in one of the ancient city's Christian neighborhoods
    throughout a 14-month siege by rebel forces. He is a trusted source to
    WORLD, not named for security reasons, with a long history of medical
    aid work throughout the Middle East and Asia. This letter is reprinted
    with permission of Barnabas Aid, which first published it.

    Since he wrote, the rebel blockade of Aleppo has now entered its third
    month. Water, electricity, and communication are cut off,
    infrastructure has collapsed, and residents cannot leave, nor can aid
    be brought in. For Aleppo residents, all necessities of life are in
    short supply and prices have soared. A bag of lentils that only a year
    ago cost 50 Syrian pounds, or about $1, now may cost anywhere from $5
    to $10. Because of shortages and the exorbitant cost, churches - one in
    Aleppo was providing meals for 35,000 displaced Syrians only a few
    months ago - have been forced to halt help for the needy.

    Aleppo - Syria's largest city, with more than 2 million people in the
    country's industrial and agricultural heartland - has a historically
    diverse religious and ethnic makeup. The rebels' success at taking
    over much of the city suggests they stand a chance at toppling the
    government of Bashar al-Assad. But the humanitarian crisis they have
    created will make anyone wonder what kind of government the opposition
    forces might deliver were they to successfully replace Assad. The
    blockade, meanwhile, has gone uncontested by the United States and its
    allies, making many Syrians doubt the U.S. move toward military
    strikes is designed to relieve their humanitarian crisis, or address
    the many atrocities of this war. - Mindy Belz

    Our situation in these hectic, unpredictable days in Aleppo, with no
    food or meat or bread at ease, no free movement, no security and no
    encouraging good news on the horizon, reminds me of the words of
    Habakkuk:

    `Though the fig-tree does not bud and there are no grapes on the
    vines, though the olive crop fails and the fields produce no food,
    though there are no sheep in the pen and no cattle in the stalls, YET
    I will rejoice in the LORD, I will be joyful in GOD my Saviour'
    (Habakkuk 3:17-18).

    Many sounds heard and continuing to be heard!! Are you still there?
    How come you don't move out? What about your family? How they can do
    without you? Many questions such [as] these and no one can find the
    proper convincing answers to them.

    Is it right to say, `Gone with the wind!' Of course not. My hope and
    trust is in the Lord who is my light and my salvation, who is the
    stronghold of my life (Psalm 27:1).

    Where are we heading after two and a half years since the beginning of
    the war in Syria in mid-March 2011? And now it is more than one year
    since the beginning of the war in Aleppo in late June 2012. Everyone
    among our friends abroad may be wondering.

    At the national level, nothing has changed since then apart from more
    suffering and more losses of souls and belongings. The two sides of
    the war continue to confront each other with no clear winner or loser
    at a cost of: more than 100,000 killed, more than a million and half
    refugees in the neighbouring countries, and more than 3.8 million
    internally displaced people (IDPs). Hundreds of thousands have
    migrated to Europe and the Americas.

    The economy is in ruins and no one can predict how long it will remain
    like this. Sectarianism and extremism are flourishing and there is no
    glimmer of hope for a settlement to such mounting conflict. Following
    the retaking of al-Qusayr (a strategic region in the centre of Syria,
    southwest of Homs and near the border with Lebanon) by the Syrian army
    and the defeat of the rebels there, the leaders of the Western world
    declared that the fall of al-Qusayr showed that the balance of power
    had shifted to the government side and that it was necessary for them
    to arm the rebels in order to re-establish equilibrium! What a way of
    thinking!! They simply want to re-establish equilibrium so that both
    sides will continue to fight ... to the last Syrian? Just imagine the
    satanic way of thinking! `But as for me, I watch in hope for the Lord,
    I wait for God my Saviour; my God will hear me. Do not gloat over me,
    my enemy! Though I have fallen, I will rise (with my nation). Though I
    (we) sit in darkness (since no electricity), the Lord will be my (our)
    light' (Micah 7:7-8; italics are mine).

    http://www.worldmag.com/2013/09/a_letter_from_aleppo

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