The Syrian Revolution is not dead. It's alive and kicking but very
different from the revolution of March 2011. Syrians talk about 3/2011 with
fondness -- "the good old days" -- when the villagers faced
government soldiers and protested with their voices and banners. They talk
about the nonviolent activities they did to mystify and craze the government.
The remote controlled recorder placed inside a box in a famous Damascene souk.
The box was then sealed and locked with metal chains. From afar, revolutionaries
turned the recorder on and it repeated "irhal ya Bashar" (leave oh
Bashar) over and over again. The soldiers tore apart the souk to find the
source of treason and never succeeded. The green laser lights that beamed onto
the presidential palace that spelled out a similar demand for Bashar to depart.
That revolution of wit and nonviolence is long gone, but not the Revolution.
The Revolution is not dead.
"How can you call this a
war?" asked a young Syrian man. "We don't have an army. We are not
trained and our weapons are mostly stolen from government troops. A war
necessarily means two sides fighting one another. We are civilians fighting the
State. This isn't war, this is self-defense. This is a Revolution."
Whatever you call it, it's
all-consuming. Hardly anyone works anymore. Jobs are few and far in between.
Men have devoted themselves to the Revolution. They spend their days morphing
from humanitarian workers to fighters to husbands and fathers. They also spend
a large part of their day and night visiting one another, exchanging stories
and reporting the news of their village and the local areas. There is no
electricity, so no television. Internet is even scarcer. This socializing has
become the life line for the locals and can mean the difference between life
and death; which village(s) are being targeted and which roads are off limits.
Without taking heed of these conversations, one can pay a dear price.
One of the villagers was hit by a
rocket because he took a road that exposed him to government troops. While
drinking tea, the men talk about this young man. "He wanted to take a
short cut," one says. "Everyone knows that road is exposed to
government troops," says another. "He had just gotten married a few
months ago," says a third. "Wallah, if you're going to be a
revolutionary, you should never get married," says a fourth. So go the
conversations of the Revolution.
In the distance, we hear the rockets.
While theses villages are not being directly targeted at the moment, one never
knows when they will be. They are "liberated" with quotes. There are
no soldiers, no pictures of Bashar, no government flags, no Baathist songs. But
the villages are not fully theirs. "You can't be fully liberated when the
government still controls the skies," I am told over and over again. Nor
can you be liberated when the government controls the utilities and the
currency.
"The government is
distracted," says one man as we look at the skyline. It lights up as
rockets are being launched. We see red lights in the sky and then hear an
explosion. "Lak yil3n rohok," mumbles another. We add another day to
the tally. It's been 11 days since this village was last targeted. "Its a
dangerous quiet," says a man almost in passing. I realize that everyone
around me has long accepted death as a reality. Many of them doubt they'll
outlive the Revolution. "I can't imagine life without that noise,"
says one man as we hear an explosion. He doesn't flinch or raise his head. It
might as well have been a fly whizzing in his ear -- an accepted nuisance.
"Knowing what you know
now," I ask three men, "Would you have kept the Revolution
peaceful?" Two immediately say "no" and the third says
"yes." "We would have picked up arms the very first day,"
say the two men. "We were stupid, naive. We thought that there was
something called an international community, human rights, the United Nations.
We thought that this was the age of the Internet. We thought that the world
would watch our videos and not allow us to suffer and die the way that we have
these past two years. But we were stupid. Had we known the world would turn its
back on us, we would have fought from day one rather than wait and be
slaughtered."
"But," I ask, "didn't
you ever think there would be a price to be paid for the world to intervene?
Didn't you know that there is no selfless intervention? Look at Iraq or Libya.
Didn't you think that geopolitics would be an issue, that Israel would be part of
the equation?"
"My dream in life is to cast a
ballot, to be counted," says one of the men. "When I joined this
Revolution, I just wanted freedom, a voice. I didn't realize I had to learn
everything there is to know about foreign policy and geopolitics and Israel and
warfare and the price of international and humanitarian intervention. I just
wanted to be treated like a human being and vote. And that remains my
dream."
Whoever says the Syrian Revolution
is dead has not been inside Syria. It lives in the every breath, action,
thought, in the every atom of the Syrians here. It is not a glorious Revolution
nor one that should be romanticized. It is full of pain and suffering, full of
death and loss, full of costs and risks, full of mental and psychological anguish,
and full of mistakes. But until every Syrian revolutionary dies, until the
villages are fully exterminated of their inhabitants, until the human spirit is
crushed and hope is completely extinguished, the Syrian Revolution remains
alive.
By Reem Salahi
Source: Huffington Post
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.