Letter to
My Friend in Damascus
By Barbara
Nimri Aziz
March 14,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
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I am afraid to ask you
you’re feelings about the recently announced
American invasion
into your country. In our talks these past months,
we’ve spoken only about hardships: the increasing
scarcity of electricity, water and food shortages,
an absence of home heating fuel. This in the
capital, Damascus, where people can still go to
school and to work, where some local buses can
navigate through the mud and debris, where drivers
can sometimes find petrol for their cars.
When we’re
able to connect by phone, you talk about people I
know: parents unable to pay for their child’s
surgery, a family with no means of keeping warm in
winter.
You could
easily leave to live abroad with your children. But
you’re in charge of a children’s home, and you
simply can’t abandon the staff—those few who remain.
Before, donations were adequate and teachers
sufficient. Now teachers are leaving to find work
and safety abroad, following many hundreds of
doctors who’ve emigrated. You spend more time
searching for assistance from the few remaining
families offering charity. Syrians have always been
especially generous to the homeless (few though they
were in the past), and to any charitable effort by
any faith. How can able Syrians sustain this deeply
embedded principle when they themselves are in need,
dependent on their children abroad?
Do you have
someone outside who supports you while you provide
succor to others inside? I don’t know what sustains
you, apart from your love of country, something few
speak about these days, and hardly anyone outside
Syria recognizes.
On
international women’s day here, I broadcast some
interviews from my audio archive,
conversations with women in Damascus 6-7 years ago.
Each spoke with such pleasure about her work,
delighted too that their voices, Syrian voices,
might be heard (and felt) in America. I don’t know
where those patriotic souls are today. None would
have chosen to leave, I know that. In 2010 their
lives had been full and promising. Yours, too. And
those of your office staff and everyone at the
children’s center, and your youngest son, just
graduated.
You and I
witnessed many favorable changes under the new,
young president. Tourists were arriving in large
numbers. Shopping malls were lively and welcoming.
Colleges were vibrant centers of learning and hope;
new private universities were flourishing. “Why
should our bright young people go to Lebanon or
Europe to study?” you declared: “We can educate them
here, providing more work for our professors, for
contractors who build these colleges, and for staff
who drive buses and manage college dorms and
cafeterias.”
Nowadays,
students who can’t find a way to leave, face
military service. There are no figures about all the
soldiers killed and wounded; it’s tens of thousands,
for certain. Only a few families can manage to pay
for their sons to avoid the draft. “We are losing
all of our young people,” you sigh. That
proclamation lies in the shadow of every one of our
conversations.
Five years ago, after I returned to
New York from Syria, I followed news reports and
forwarded you an occasional report from writers
Joshua Landis, Robert Fisk or Patrick Cockburn which
I thought might shed light on events; you asked me
what I thought the U.S. administration was planning
and what American commentators were saying about
Syria. Then we ended these exchanges. They were
useless; they simply offered false hope.
In the
months preceding the American election your interest
and hope returned; a new U.S. administration might
somehow bring the war to a close. Then however, you
decided that whoever prevailed, Democrats or the
Republicans, Syria could hardly expect relief,
peace, a settlement:-- nothing but worsening
conditions and the loss of youths, teachers and
doctors.
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We haven’t
spoken about the new U.S. leadership. Nor did I ask
you for your reaction to Israel’s bombing of Syria
last month, an aggression that garnered almost no
attention here. Was that attack more unsettling and
ominous that earlier Israeli assaults?
I expect
that Syrians can think about little except: “Can it
get worse? And, “How can we find some heating fuel,
more medicine, a pair of shoes?”
On
top of all this comes this major political
development:-- the unconcealed
arrival of American military presence
on your soil. Marines and heavy armaments are moving
into Syria as I write. According to U.S. generals,
their troops are deployed to help Washington’s
Syrian allies—not the Syrian army-- to dislodge and
eradicate ISIS from Raqqa. This move comes in the
wake of remarkable gains by the Syrian army backed
by Russia, Iran and Lebanon’s Hezbollah forces.
While the
U.S. troop arrival is (to the American public)
optimistically presented as ISIS-motivated, you and
I know that it’s likely a pretext; it’s really
another step in The U.S.’s Syria ‘mission creep’.
Has Washington ever limited military incursion to
the announced goal? Has it left anything behind its
wars on Arab soil except destruction and
deprivation, chaos and animosity?
Five years
ago, following initial uprisings in Syria, many
there might have welcomed an American military
presence. But in time, you and your compatriots
understood America’s support for the cruelest, most
extreme opposition (rebel) fighters; Washington’s
endorsement of Saudi and Qatari plans to sow chaos
in Syria was clear within a few months. As Syrians
comprehended the real US agenda--to destroy and
disrupt at any cost--their view changed.
So what
now? This most nationalist of Arab states is still
somehow intact, against all odds. All those Syrian
boys martyred; those barefoot children, those empty
colleges, those ghostly shopping malls wait.
I could
find no public response here to this week’s American
surge in Syria, no indication that it’s a noteworthy
U.S. policy change, no journalist asking for
Syrians’ reactions. An unsettling silence engulfs
the first hours of a new American invasion.
Barbara Nimri Aziz, a New York-based anthropologist
and writer, hosted RadioTahrir on Pacifica-WBAI in
New York City for 24 years. Her 2007 book Swimming
Up the Tigris: Real Life Encounters with Iraq is
based on her 13 years covering Iraq. Aziz’ writings
and radio productions can be accessed at
www.RadioTahrir.org, Syrian stories at
http://podcast.radiotahrir.org/?s=syria
The
views expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing
House.
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