Syrian Jews hope for revival of ancient heritage

A local security guard, affiliated with the new administration in Syria, stands next to Syrian US-based rabbi Youssef Hamra as he talks to people outside the Ifrange Synagogue in the Jewish quarter of Damascus' Bab Sharqi district, on February 19, 2025. (AFP)
A local security guard, affiliated with the new administration in Syria, stands next to Syrian US-based rabbi Youssef Hamra as he talks to people outside the Ifrange Synagogue in the Jewish quarter of Damascus' Bab Sharqi district, on February 19, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 1 min 54 sec ago
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Syrian Jews hope for revival of ancient heritage

Syrian Jews hope for revival of ancient heritage
  • Syria’s millennia-old Jewish community was permitted to practice their faith under Assad’s father, Hafez, and had friendly relations with their fellow countrymen

DAMASCUS: Syria’s tiny Jewish community and Syrian Jews abroad are trying to build bridges after Bashar Assad’s ouster in the hope of reviving their ancient heritage before the community dies out.
This week, a small number of Jews living in Damascus, along with others from abroad, held a group prayer for the first time in more than three decades, in the Faranj synagogue in Damascus’s Old City.
“There were nine of us Jews (in Syria). Two died recently,” community leader Bakhour Chamntoub told AFP in his home in the Old City’s Jewish quarter.
“I’m the youngest. The rest are elderly people who stay in their homes,” the tailor in his sixties added in a thick Damascus accent.
After Islamist-led rebels finally toppled Assad in December last year after nearly 14 years of conflict, the country’s dwindling community has recently welcomed back several Syrian Jews who had emigrated.
Syria’s millennia-old Jewish community was permitted to practice their faith under Assad’s father, Hafez, and had friendly relations with their fellow countrymen.
But the strongman restricted their movement and prevented them from traveling abroad until 1992. After that, their numbers plummeted from around 5,000 to just a handful of individuals, headed by Chamntoub, who oversees their affairs.
AFP correspondents met with Chamntoub, known to neighbors and friends as “Eid,” after he returned from burying an elderly Jewish woman.
“Now there are seven of us,” he said, adding that a Palestinian neighbor had looked after the woman during her final days.

The 1967 Arab-Israeli war cast a heavy cloud over the Jewish communities in several Arab countries.
Syria lost most of the strategic Golan Heights to Israel, which later annexed them in a move never recognized by the international community as a whole.
Chamntoub said the community did not experience any “harassment” under Bashar Assad’s rule.
He said an official from the new Islamist-led administration had visited him and assured him the community and its properties would not be harmed.
Chamntoub expressed hope of expanding ties between the remaining Jews in Syria and the thousands living abroad to revive their shared heritage and restore places of worship and other properties.
On his Facebook page, he publishes news about the community — usually death notices — as well as images of the Jewish quarter and synagogues in Damascus.
He says nostalgic Syrian Jews abroad often make comments, recalling the district and its surroundings.
At the Faranj synagogue, Syrian-American Rabbi Yusuf Hamra, 77, led what he said was the first group prayer in decades.
“I was the last rabbi to leave Syria,” he said, adding that he had lived in the United States for more than 30 years.
“We love this country,” said Hamra, who arrived days earlier on his first visit since emigrating.
“The day I left Syria with my family, I felt I was a tree that had been uprooted,” he said.

His son Henry, traveling with him, said he was happy to be in the synagogue.
“This synagogue was the home for all Jews — it was the first stop for Jews abroad when they would visit Syria,” the 47-year-old said.
When war erupted in Syria in 2011 with Assad’s brutal suppression of anti-government protests, synagogues shuttered and the number of Jews visiting plummeted.
In the now devastated Damascus suburb of Jobar, a historic synagogue that once drew pilgrims from around the world was ransacked and looted, with a Torah scroll believed to be one of the world’s oldest among the items stolen.
Chamntoub said his joy at publicly worshipping in the Faranj synagogue again was “indescribable.”
He expressed hope that “Jews will return to their neighborhood and their people” in Syria, saying: “I need Jews with me in the neighborhood.”
Hamra said that like many emigrants, he was hesitant about returning permanently.
“My freedom is one thing, my family ties are another,” he said, noting that many in the 100,000-strong diaspora were long established in the West and reluctant to give up their lives and lifestyles there.
Chamntoub said many Jews had told him they regretted leaving Syria but that he doesn’t expect “a full return.”
“Maybe they will come for trips or to do business” but not to stay, he said.
He expressed hope of establishing a museum in Syria to commemorate its Jewish community.
“If they don’t return or get married and have children here, we will end soon,” he said.

 


Sudan’s heartland city limps back to life after army recapture

Sudan’s heartland city limps back to life after army recapture
Updated 6 sec ago
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Sudan’s heartland city limps back to life after army recapture

Sudan’s heartland city limps back to life after army recapture
Just weeks ago, this market in the central Sudanese city of Wad Madani lay mostly deserted Traders had shuttered their shops, gripped by fear of the paramilitaries who controlled the city

WAD MADANI, Sudan: In a bustling market in central Sudan, vegetable seller Ahmed Al-Obeid dusts off his wooden stall, carefully arranging fresh cucumbers and tomatoes in neat piles as customers cautiously return.
Just weeks ago, this market in the central Sudanese city of Wad Madani lay mostly deserted. Traders had shuttered their shops, gripped by fear of the paramilitaries who controlled the city.
Now, voices ring out again, bargaining over fresh produce as the city tentatively stirs back to life after the army reclaimed it from its rival Rapid Support Forces (RSF) last month.
“We are feeling safe again,” said Obeid.
“People are buying and selling like old times,” he told AFP, adjusting a pile of onions.
Since April 2023, Sudan has been engulfed in a war between the forces of army chief Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and his former deputy Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, who commands the RSF.
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres this month called it “an unprecedented humanitarian crisis” in Africa, and the United States has sanctioned both Burhan and Dagalo for abuses.
Wad Madani — the capital of pre-war breadbasket Al-Jazira state — became a battleground when RSF forces descended on the city in December 2023, forcing hundreds of thousands to flee the city and Al-Jazira.
But today, signs of recovery in the city are palpable, if restrained.
Buildings bear the scars of war. Blackened walls and piles of rubble are constant reminders of the destruction the city has endured.
Storefronts, restaurants and other businesses remain gutted by fire.
At a maternity ward in the city’s main hospital, expectant mothers wait with their families while nurses in white scrubs hurry through the corridors, attending to patients.
“Medicine is available. Life is finally back to normal. Things have completely changed, thank God,” Rehab Moussa, a patient receiving care, told AFP.
Yet, obstetrics and gynaecology specialist Khalid Mohammed said that although the hospital is slowly recovering, there are still serious shortages in staff, medicine and equipment.
“Our surgical supplies, including sutures, are nearly expired and we really need more anesthesia equipment,” Mohammed told AFP between surgeries.
When the RSF controlled Wad Madani, Mohammed was the only doctor on duty juggling multiple surgeries.
Even now, he dashes between operating rooms to manage the patient load.
Following the army’s recapture of Wad Madani in January, jubilant chants of “we’re going back” echoed in displacement centers across the country, including the de facto capital on the Red Sea, Port Sudan.
According to AFP journalists, dozens of buses carrying thousands of people have embarked from Port Sudan, Gedaref and Kassala — where around 1.5 million people in total have sought shelter — back home to Wad Madani.
Many of them had no idea what they would find, after the RSF had looted their way through the city, while others told AFP they knew their homes had been ransacked.
The city’s electricity has not yet been restored, water is unavailable most days and a communications blackout has only just been lifted, according to recent returnees.
However, near the market in Wad Madani, Mohammed Abdel Moneim, a tuk-tuk driver, is upbeat.
“The city is safe now. Everything is fine,” he said, weaving through the crowd in a search for passengers.
“But it is still missing one thing: the people. We need everyone to come back and rebuild the city,” he told AFP.
In addition to killing tens of thousands of people, the war in Sudan has created the world’s largest internal displacement crisis.
Across the country, more than 11.5 million people are internally displaced, including 2.7 million uprooted during previous wars in Sudan.
Most are suffering a rapidly worsening humanitarian situation as shortages of food, medicine and basic supplies plague even safe areas under army control.
Local monitors and the UN have also reported abuses following the city’s recapture, including targeting of minority communities and accusations of collaboration with the RSF.

Dancing in Damascus: Syrians cling to culture under Islamists’ rule

Dancing in Damascus: Syrians cling to culture under Islamists’ rule
Updated 24 min 38 sec ago
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Dancing in Damascus: Syrians cling to culture under Islamists’ rule

Dancing in Damascus: Syrians cling to culture under Islamists’ rule
  • Anas Zeidan, an official in the interim administration responsible for museums and antiquities, told Reuters that the government welcomed “all types and forms of art”
  • “The government is not against art. The government encourages art. Art is part of humanity”

DAMASCUS: On a wintry night in Damascus, hundreds of people packed into a courtyard in the Old City, dancing and singing during a joyful evening of music — a concert held with the approval of the Syrian Arab Republic’s new, Islamist-led authorities.
It was the kind of scene that the singer, Mahmoud Al-Haddad, feared might be in jeopardy as Islamist rebels led by Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS), a group with origins in global jihad, were advancing on the city in December. “Everyone was afraid,” Haddad said. “Would we be able to have a concert or not?“
The downfall of President Bashar Assad ended more than five decades of iron-fisted rule by his family and their secular Baath Party, making way for HTS, which emerged from a group that was affiliated to Al-Qaeda until it cut ties in 2016.
Islamists have taken different approaches to artistic expression and cultural heritage in territories they’ve ruled. The Taliban in Afghanistan have been among the most hard-line, stunning the world in 2001 by obliterating the giant Buddhas of Bamiyan. In 2024, the Taliban’s morality ministry reported destroying 21,328 musical instruments over the previous year.
But in Syria, following a brief interlude after the fall of Assad, cultural life in Damascus has, for now, flickered back to life – with a nod from the new authorities.
Before resuming his concerts in January at the Beit Jabri restaurant, Haddad first checked with the new authorities: “The answer was surprising to us — ‘You can have your concert, and if you want protection, we will send you protection’,” he said.
Anas Zeidan, an official in the interim administration responsible for museums and antiquities, told Reuters that the government welcomed “all types and forms of art” and encourages the preservation of cultural heritage.
“The government is not against art. The government encourages art. Art is part of humanity,” he said.
Indeed, an exhibition by a prominent artist reopened last month at the National Museum, including a large painting with images of bare skin. At the Higher Institute of Dramatic Arts, students of contemporary dance have resumed rehearsing. Syria’s National Symphony Orchestra held its first performance since the fall of Assad, who ran a secular police state but allowed space for art and culture that didn’t challenge his rule.
HTS seized power after their fighters burst out of their enclave in Idlib province in northern Syria, where they had governed since 2017, and toppled Assad after more than 13 years of civil war. The group was formally dissolved in January when its leader, Ahmed Al-Sharaa, was declared interim president.
The Islamism of Syria’s new rulers has surfaced in several ways since they swept southwards and into Damascus in December: recruits to a new police force are being schooled in Islamic law, for example, while proposed changes to school textbooks have emphasized Muslim identity.
More secular-minded Syrians and members of minority communities have been kept on edge by incidents of intolerance — a Christmas tree was torched in the western city of Hama, an attack swiftly condemned by the new ruling authorities.
Attempts to encourage conservative norms — posters have gone up encouraging women to cover up — have also stirred concerns.

IDEOLOGICAL SHIFT
Sharaa, declared Syria’s interim head of state in January, has stressed a message of inclusivity as he has tightened his grip and sought recognition from Western and Arab governments, who would be alarmed by any slide toward extremism.
Andrew Hammond, a senior lecturer in Islamic Studies at the Australian National University, said the approach suggests the authorities are ready to challenge the hard-line fringe which view the arts as a waste of a believer’s time and fueling unwholesome behavior, and could become a point of contention.
Such hard-liners often have a particular aversion to depictions of the human form as well as music, which they see as in competition with Qur’anic recitation, he said.
The ruling group’s policy also reflect an ideological shift from its roots in transnational jihad toward a more moderate form of political Islam based on Syrian nationalism, in tune with the approach of Islamist groups in other Arab states such as Egypt, Jordan and Tunisia, as well as Turkiye, he added.
Hammond said he didn’t expect the new administration to adopt radical policies that could alienate Western and regional states, as well as many Syrians themselves, meaning they wouldn’t crack down on the arts.
“There might be some who object to it ... but it’s not going to be stopped or banned,” he said.
In Idlib under HTS, playing loud music in cars once led to a reprimand at checkpoints, water pipe smoking was banned, and mannequin heads in shop windows were often removed or covered, reflecting hard-line aversion to depictions of the human form.
HTS relaxed efforts to enforce conservative behavior in Idlib several years ago, withdrawing morality police from the streets — part of what experts see as part of its gradual shift toward the mainstream.
Syrian artist Sara Shamma said some artists had been worried that creative freedoms could be curbed with the change of government. “They thought that some people might not accept sculptures or figurative work,” she told Reuters, referring to art based on real-life objects like humans and animals.
But nothing like that happened, said Shamma, adding she was optimistic about the future.

’A GOOD SIGN — FOR NOW’
Her retrospective exhibition, “Sara Shamma: Echoes of 12 years,” opened at the National Museum in November before Assad was toppled. Her first exhibition in Syria since leaving early in 2012 early in the civil war, it comprises works from each of the years she spent outside the country.
The museum closed for a month following Assad’s ouster, reopening in January with her 27 works still on display.
Aaron Zelin, an expert on HTS at the Washington Institute for Near East policy, said the group was “trying to avoid making waves with anyone while they’re still consolidating control.”
In Idlib, HTS had “come to realize they have to work within the reality of society rather than trying to force something upon society in a way that might cause a backlash,” he said.
“The question is if and when they feel comfortable enough, whether they might reverse things or cancel certain types of activity they deem outside of the bounds of their world view,” Zelin said. “For now, it’s a good sign.”
Since assuming power, Sharaa has sidestepped media questions about whether sharia law should be applied in Syria, whether women would have to wear the hijab and whether alcohol would be permitted, saying such issues were matters for the new constitution and not for individuals to decide.
He has also dismissed comparisons with Afghanistan, saying Syrian society was very different and its government would fit with its culture and history.
Mustafa Ali, a prominent sculptor, also said artists’ initial apprehension about the new government had subsided.
Works on display at his atelier in the Old City include a life size horse sculpted from metal and an imposing bust carved from wood. Ali explained how Islamic art generally tends toward abstract forms such as geometric decoration, but also noted that figurative art had continued throughout key phases of Islamic history, such as the Umayyad Caliphate, which ruled the Islamic empire from Damascus from 661 to 750.
Following Assad’s ouster, the Higher Institute of Dramatic Arts closed for several days, with Islamist fighters deployed around the building and the adjacent Damascus Opera House.
Director of dance Nawras Othman said many students had feared the Islamists would ban dance altogether but were calmed by representatives of HTS who came to meet them in December: “They’d been worried, but afterwards they relaxed a lot.”
Ghazal Al-Badr, a 22-year-old in her fourth year of study, said dancers decided to return to class within a few days to demonstrate the importance of their art to the new authorities and their determination to continue.
“We felt a sense of responsibility – that now it’s time for us to step up, to be present,” she said.


Syria’s northeast begins supplying oil to Damascus, oil ministry says

Syria’s northeast begins supplying oil to Damascus, oil ministry says
Updated 22 February 2025
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Syria’s northeast begins supplying oil to Damascus, oil ministry says

Syria’s northeast begins supplying oil to Damascus, oil ministry says
  • Suleiman said the oil was from fields in the provinces of Hasakah and Deir el-Zor
  • The United States issued a six-month sanctions exemption in January allowing some energy transactions

BEIRUT: Kurdish-led authorities in northeast Syrian Arab Republic have begun providing oil from local fields they manage to the central government in Damascus, Syrian oil ministry spokesman Ahmed Suleiman told Reuters on Saturday.
It was the first known delivery from Syria’s oil-rich northeast to the Islamist-run government installed after former leader Bashar Assad was toppled by rebels in December.
Suleiman said the oil was from fields in the provinces of Hasakah and Deir el-Zor but did not provide further details, including the amount provided or other terms of the deal.
Syria exported 380,000 barrels per day (bpd) in 2010, a year before protests against Assad’s rule spiralled into a nearly 14-year war that devastated the country’s economy and infrastructure — including its oil.
Oilfields changed hands multiple times, with the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces ultimately capturing the key northeast fields, although US and European sanctions made both legitimate exports and imports difficult.
The United States issued a six-month sanctions exemption in January allowing some energy transactions and the European Union is set to suspend its sanctions related to energy, transport and reconstruction.
In the interim, Syria is seeking to import oil via local intermediaries after its first post-Assad import tenders garnered little interest from major traders due to sanctions and financial risks, several trade sources told Reuters.
Internal oil trade is also a key part of talks between the semi-autonomous northeast region and the new authorities in Damascus, which want to bring all regions in Syria under centralized control.
Sources said the SDF would likely need to relinquish control of oil revenues as part of any settlement. SDF commander Mazloum Abdi said last month that his force was open to handing over responsibility for oil resources to the new administration, provided the wealth was distributed fairly to all provinces.


US says killed a senior member of Syria Al-Qaeda affiliate

US says killed a senior member of Syria Al-Qaeda affiliate
Updated 22 February 2025
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US says killed a senior member of Syria Al-Qaeda affiliate

US says killed a senior member of Syria Al-Qaeda affiliate

BEIRUT: The US military said Saturday it had killed a senior member of Al-Qaeda’s Syrian branch Hurras Al-Din, which announced its dissolution last month, in an air strike in the country’s northwest.
It is the latest US strike this year against the group in Syria. Along with its Western and Arab allies, the United States has emphasized that Syria must not serve as a base for “terrorist” groups after the toppling of president Bashar Assad in December.
On Friday, US Central Command (CENTCOM) forces “conducted a precision air strike in northwest Syria, killing Wasim Tahsin Bayraqdar, a senior leadership facilitator of the terrorist organization Hurras Al-Din,” the military said in a statement.
The northwest was the stronghold of interim president Ahmed Al-Sharaa’s Islamist Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham group before it led the rebel offensive that toppled Assad in December.
The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor said a drone strike on a car killed Bayraqdar.
Last Sunday, CENTCOM said it killed “a senior finance and logistics official” in Hurras Al-Din.
That came after CENTCOM last month reported killing another senior Hurras Al-Din operative, Muhammad Salah Al-Zabir, in an air strike also in the northwest.
The US-based SITE Intelligence Group said Hurras Al-Din was founded in February 2018.
The group did not publicly confirm its allegiance to Al-Qaeda until its dissolution announcement in January.
Hurras Al-Din dissolved in line with orders from Sharaa, who has called on all armed group to disband.
The United States designated Hurras Al-Din as a “terrorist” organization in 2019.


Turkiye probes opposition mayor’s ‘falsified’ university degree

Turkiye probes opposition mayor’s ‘falsified’ university degree
Updated 22 February 2025
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Turkiye probes opposition mayor’s ‘falsified’ university degree

Turkiye probes opposition mayor’s ‘falsified’ university degree
  • Ekrem Imamoglu will be questioned Wednesday over ‘falsification of an official document’

ISTANBUL: Turkiye has begun investigating allegations that Istanbul’s opposition mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, already the subject of a clutch of other legal proceedings, falsely obtained his university degree, the official Anadolu news agency said Saturday.
Imamoglu, who Friday submitted his candidacy to stand for the social democratic Republican People’s Party (CHP) main opposition for the next presidential election, will be questioned Wednesday over “falsification of an official document,” Anadolu said.
The stakes are high for Imamoglu as constitutionally, any presidential candidate must have a higher education degree.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has faced similar claims from opponents — which he denies.
Following allegations by a journalist, the Istanbul municipality last September published a photocopy of a business management diploma which Imamoglu received from Istanbul University in 1995.
The opposition mayor, who was last year re-elected having in 2019 won control of Turkiye’s largest city from Erdogan’s ruling Islamist-conservative Justice and Development Party (AKP), is the subject of a further five investigations, two of which were opened last month.
Regularly targeted by Erdogan, likewise a former mayor of Istanbul, Imamoglu was sentenced in December 2022 to a jail term of two years and seven months and banned from political activities for “insulting” members of Turkiye’s High Electoral Committee, a sentence he has appealed.
A vocal opponent of the president, Imamoglu denounced what he termed judicial “harassment” last month on leaving an Istanbul court where he had been questioned as part of an investigation opened after criticism of the city’s public prosecutor.