The sound of 
battles echoes from the outskirts of the capital as Christians in 
Damascus celebrated the Easter weekend, briefly ignoring the conflict 
for the yearly ritual. At the gates of Saint 
George Syrian Orthodox Church - just a few minutes walk from a school 
where a mortar attack killed several children and injured dozens earlier
 this week - incense was burning as several uniformed and armed men 
stood patrol before Good Friday evening services. They joked with each 
other and did not check ID cards or handbags as people entered. Inside
 the ancient city walls of the Old City where the church is located, the
 cobbled streets bustled with evening shoppers and diners, a rare sight 
reminiscent of pre-war Damascus. However,
 a traditional procession that usually sees hundreds of worshippers 
follow an effigy of Jesus on the cross accompanied by drums and a church
 band was cancelled. Christians, many belonging to ancient denominations found only in Syria,
 form about 10 percent of the country's population. Most fear the rising
 power of Islamist groups within the rebel movement fighting to 
overthrow President Bashar al-Assad, although many are also wary of the 
authorities. Only a small 
percentage of Christians have taken up arms on either side of a civil 
war that broadly pits minorities, in particular Assad's Alawite sect, an
 offshoot of Shi'ite Islam, against the Sunni Muslim majority. Two Armenian Syrian women chatted with others in the courtyard of the church. Asked if they felt optimistic about the events in Syria, they launched into a short debate. "No, I don't feel good at all. I'm sad and I'm here to join Christ in his pain," said Rula Khoury. Khoury's friend, Tamar Barashelian, disagreed. "No,
 we can't just be sad and stay at home all the time and get depressed. I
 overcome my sadness and force myself to go out and continue with life,"
 she said. Like other 
Syrians, many Christians have been displaced, seen their sons killed in 
fighting or been forced to flee mandatory military service in Assad's 
army. Many support the 
government, which says it is protecting the country from foreign-backed 
Sunni Muslim militants who will persecute non-Sunni minorities, 
including Christians. The
 pastor's wife, among a group of women expressing pro-Assad views, said:
 "I can forgive any Syrian who shed Syrian blood. But I won't forgive 
the Arab countries that conspired to kill us." Another woman said: "The Syrian Army is always victorious." There
 are also Christians who oppose the authorities but they generally keep a
 low profile, especially in Damascus where government surveillance is 
common. Syria's exiled opposition includes a few prominent Christians, 
while others identify with a small grassroots movement called the Third 
Current which condemns violence by both sides. Churchgoers
 on Good Friday were relaxed despite the occasional sound of government 
shelling, now so routine in Damascus that hardly anyone flinches at the 
sound of blasts in rebel-held districts surrounding the city. Inside
 the church, the congregants prayed in Syriac, an ancient Semitic 
language spoken in the pre-Islamic Levant and closely related to the old
 Aramaic probably spoken by Jesus. AN ENGAGEMENT In
 the interior courtyard, the church scout group marching band mingled. 
One young couple, recently engaged, leaned on the courtyard wall and 
accepted congratulations. "I
 was blown away when I heard. Rami and Juliette? Who knew you were an 
item? Congratulations my dears," one young man told the couple before he
 shook their hands and kissed them. More than 150,000 people have been killed in the civil war, a third of them civilians. Millions have fled the country. The
 conflict has been broadly stalemated for months, with the government 
generally dominant in Damascus, the main central cities and western, 
coastal regions of Syria, while the rebels hold wide swathes of the 
north and east. Hardline Islamists have become more prominent among the 
rebels, alienating many who once supported the call for greater 
democracy. Later in the 
evening, the mood on the road out of the Old City returned to its usual 
tenseness, and additional shelling could be heard. Traffic was jammed as
 usual at several checkpoints, where nervous armed men vet each car for 
bombs. Passengers inside 
an idle minivan waited their turn in silence to show ID and be searched,
 their faces solemn and tired, their windows rolled down in the warm 
breeze. A popular folk song played on their radio. Its chorus repeated the words: "Beautiful is my country. Beautiful is my country." By Reuters
In Damascus, Christians briefly ignore war for Easter
 
			Zaman Alwasl
                
				
					
				
				
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
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