Muslims
throughout the world have been marking Eid al-Adha, but in war-torn Syria there
is nothing to celebrate. Most people are struggling to meet the most basic of
needs: food, water, and shelter.
Their plight has
been highlighted by Arabic media reports which cite a fatwa, or religious
ruling, by a local imam which allowed people who are desperately hungry to eat
dogs and cats.
Eating dog, cat
or donkey is forbidden under Islamic dietary laws.
The imam in the
Yarmouk Palestinian refugee camp in the capital, Damascus, reportedly said at a
mosque Friday that dog, cat and donkey meat could be eaten "after reaching
a desperate need and the stores of food were inadequate to feed the population
under the siege."
Yarmouk has been
besieged for months by Syrian government forces seeking to flush out rebel
fighters.
During the Eid
al-Adha holiday, considered one of Islam's most revered observances, many
Muslims around the world sacrifice a sheep and share the meat with the poor. It
corresponds with the height of the Hajj, the pilgrimage to Mecca in Saudi
Arabia that annually draws 2 million Muslims.
A YouTube video
posted Monday purports to show a group of religious leaders outside Damascus
issuing a fatwa permitting the eating of cats, kittens, donkeys, and animals
killed in shelling.
The man reading
the statement appeals to the world, and particularly to Muslims who are
completing the Hajj pilgrimage, to think of the Syrian children "dying of
hunger" while their stomachs are full.
"How can't
they just stand for us, for our children?" the sheikh asks. "Do they
want us to get to the point when we are forced to eat the flesh of our dead
martyrs and our beloved just to survive?"
CNN cannot
independently confirm the authenticity of the video.
'We are living in despair'
At the Atmeh
refugee camp in Idlib province in northern Syria, some refugees set up
improvised vendor stands for the celebration -- but few people could afford to
shop at them.
One mother, Suad
Zein, said: "Before the crisis, during Eid, we used to go to the shops and
buy items, we were happy. Eid was a wonderful holiday here. Now these days I
can't even buy my boy a pair of trousers, or shoes, or even a loaf of bread.
"I have
eight children. I can't support them all. We are living in despair."
Another woman
said, "We are not celebrating Eid. We have nothing for Eid, we have
nothing to celebrate. We used to celebrate with food, drink, desserts. We used
to make pastries. ... Now there's nothing."
Some refugees in
Aleppo, Syria, are more fortunate. A benefactor has donated sheep for the
traditional animal sacrifice, which will be slaughtered and distributed among
families in need, a man in charge of the slaughter said.
The U.N. food
agency, the World Food Programme, warned last month that the violence in Syria was
making it hard for aid to get through to those in need. Its assessments
indicate some 4 million people in the country are unable to produce or buy
enough food.
Eid al-Adha
commemorates when God appeared to Abraham -- known as Ibrahim to Muslims -- in
a dream and asked him to sacrifice his son as an act of obedience. As Abraham
was about to perform the sacrifice, God stopped him and gave him a sheep to
kill in place of his son. A version of the story also appears in the Torah and
in the Bible's Old Testament.
The four-day
celebration is also known as the Feast of Sacrifice, or Greater Eid. It is the
longer of two Eid holidays observed by Muslims. Eid al-Fitr, or Little Eid,
follows the conclusion of the holy month of Ramadan.
Asma al-Assad makes rare appearance
A rare interview
with Asma al-Assad, wife of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, aired Tuesday on
Syrian state TV, showing her as she visited the Daughters of Martyrs' school in
Damascus.
The first lady,
wearing a gray sweater with the Syrian flag in the center, is shown being
greeted by applause from dozens of Syrian girls and planting olive trees with
them.
The olive tree
is a symbol of giving and peace, she says, as well as "a symbol of life
and endurance, those who sacrificed and are sacrificing for this homeland are
doing that for us so we can live and prosper in this land."
The interviewer
asks Asma al-Assad, who lived in Britain before her marriage to Syria's
president, about past rumors that she had left the war-torn country for Russia,
Lebanon or Britain.
Smiling, she
replies, "I am here, I exist here. My husband and my children are present
here in Syria. It is quite rational for me to be here with them. And just like
the majority of the Syrians, I was raised to love the homeland and I grew up with
that notion that wherever I'd travel or lived before, and no matter how long
people stay away, there is nothing more precious than the homeland."
The first lady
has also been a star of the recently establishedInstagram
account of the Syrian presidency, where she is usually seen smiling,
showing off her volunteer work and attending social events with her husband.
Activists: Truck carrying civilians hit
Syria's descent
into civil war began in March 2011, when Bashar al-Assad's regime forcefully
cracked down on peaceful anti-government protesters.
That conflict
spiraled into an armed uprising and a crisis that the United Nations says has
claimed more than 100,000 lives.
At least 21
people died when their truck was hit by an explosive device in southern Syria,
opposition activists said Wednesday.
Four children
and six women were among the fatalities in the blast in Daraa, the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights said.
The truck
carrying civilians was hit as it passed through an area controlled by troops
loyal to the Syrian government, according to the group. Government officials
did not immediately respond to the allegations.
On Tuesday, 41
people were killed in clashes between a Kurdish faction and Islamist fighters,
among them members of the al-Nusra Front and the al Qaeda-linked Islamic State
in Iraq and Syria, known as ISIS, the Syrian Observatory said.
The fighting
broke out in and around Tal Alo village, in eastern Hasaka province in northern
Syria, near the border with Iraq, it said.
Meanwhile, the
Turkish army has reinforced its positions near a strategic border gate between
Turkey and opposition-controlled northern Syria, where ISIS fighters have been
active. Last month, ISIS fighters pushed more moderate Syrian rebels out of the
nearby Syrian town of Azaz.
Weapons inspectors
As the civil war
rages on, international inspectors continue their mission to inventory and
eliminate Syria's entire chemical weapons arsenal.
Experts from the
Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, supported by the United
Nations, have now conducted verification activities at 11 sites identified by
Syrian authorities, the OPCW said Wednesday.
They have
overseen the destruction of "critical equipment" at six sites, as
well as the destruction of some unloaded chemical weapons munitions, it said.
On Monday, Syria
became formally bound by the international treaty banning chemical arms, the
Chemical Weapons Convention, which is implemented by the OPCW.
An advance team
of OPCW inspectors entered the country on October 1. The joint mission is
tasked by a U.N. Security Council resolution with eliminating all chemical
weapons in the country by mid-2014.
(CNN)
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