Loading...
Back to home

“The old laws that had governed war since WWII are being flouted. It’s no surprise that such a historic number of Syrians are headed to Europe, many to the promised land of asylum in Germany.”

It was a singular act of dissent in the southern desert city of Dara’a, five miles from the Jordanian border, that first ignited protests across Syria. In March 2011, a group of 15 kids spray-painted a cryptic message on the wall of a school. It read: “now It’s your turn, doctor” – a reference to Syria’s longtime ruler, Bashar Al-Assad, who had once studied to be an ophthalmologist.

In the wake of the Arab Spring, which had resulted in regime change across the Arab world, the message struck a nerve. In the days that followed, the secret police swept Dara’a and hunted down those thought responsible. The kids were imprisoned, interrogated and tortured. On the 18th of March, after Friday prayers, protesters filled the streets of Dara’a calling for their release, and that day saw the first public death of a demonstrator at the hands of the security police. Ten days later, on the 28th of March, even more took to the streets of Dara’a, and now the capital Damascus too. The police responded by killing 100 protesters, and a vicious pattern began: a funeral wake for those killed during a peaceful demonstration would turn into a protest, to which the regime would respond by firing on the crowds, killing even more, and so on.

In the six years since, Syria has become a maelstrom of sectarian violence and proxy war. The war has already displaced more than half of the population, while a full third of Syrians have had to flee the country. Now, one of every five displaced persons in the world is Syrian. And the numbers keep rising.

Syria once enjoyed widespread stability, but in the regions of the country controlled by extremist groups like ISIS, beheadings, rape and enslavement are now commonplace. The old laws that had governed war since WWII are being flouted – through the use of poison gas and barrel bombs, mass execution of prisoners, and so on. The country has been hollowed out by war. It’s no surprise that such a historic number of Syrians are headed to Europe, many to the promised land of asylum in Germany.

 
 
 
 
 

Wars are by their very nature almost impossible to accurately explain. Information is used as a weapon of war – facts and figures are manipulated, individuals are wrongly mythologized and heroes are vilified, or simply forgotten. And as history has shown, it is often the victors that get to define war. Yet, the Syrian Civil War is probably the most documented war in history; from the first days of protest in Syria “citizen journalists” have provided us with a live unedited feed of the conflict via social media, blogs, and news outlets. The Syrian conflict has quickly evolved from a civil war into a proto-world war, but it began with a small spark – a group of kids and a spray can in that desert city on the border with Jordan. It was the straw that broke the camel’s back.

“The old laws that had governed war since WWII are being flouted. It’s no surprise that such a historic number of Syrians are headed to Europe, many to the promised land of asylum in Germany.”

It was a singular act of dissent in the southern desert city of Dara’a, five miles from the Jordanian border, that first ignited protests across Syria. In March 2011, a group of 15 kids spray-painted a cryptic message on the wall of a school. It read: “now It’s your turn, doctor” – a reference to Syria’s longtime ruler, Bashar Al-Assad, who had once studied to be an ophthalmologist.

In the wake of the Arab Spring, which had resulted in regime change across the Arab world, the message struck a nerve. In the days that followed, the secret police swept Dara’a and hunted down those thought responsible. The kids were imprisoned, interrogated and tortured. On the 18th of March, after Friday prayers, protesters filled the streets of Dara’a calling for their release, and that day saw the first public death of a demonstrator at the hands of the security police. Ten days later, on the 28th of March, even more took to the streets of Dara’a, and now the capital Damascus too. The police responded by killing 100 protesters, and a vicious pattern began: a funeral wake for those killed during a peaceful demonstration would turn into a protest, to which the regime would respond by firing on the crowds, killing even more, and so on.

In the six years since, Syria has become a maelstrom of sectarian violence and proxy war. The war has already displaced more than half of the population, while a full third of Syrians have had to flee the country. Now, one of every five displaced persons in the world is Syrian. And the numbers keep rising.

Syria once enjoyed widespread stability, but in the regions of the country controlled by extremist groups like ISIS, beheadings, rape and enslavement are now commonplace. The old laws that had governed war since WWII are being flouted – through the use of poison gas and barrel bombs, mass execution of prisoners, and so on. The country has been hollowed out by war. It’s no surprise that such a historic number of Syrians are headed to Europe, many to the promised land of asylum in Germany.

 
 
 
 
 

Wars are by their very nature almost impossible to accurately explain. Information is used as a weapon of war – facts and figures are manipulated, individuals are wrongly mythologized and heroes are vilified, or simply forgotten. And as history has shown, it is often the victors that get to define war. Yet, the Syrian Civil War is probably the most documented war in history; from the first days of protest in Syria “citizen journalists” have provided us with a live unedited feed of the conflict via social media, blogs, and news outlets. The Syrian conflict has quickly evolved from a civil war into a proto-world war, but it began with a small spark – a group of kids and a spray can in that desert city on the border with Jordan. It was the straw that broke the camel’s back.

asashttp://especiales.univision.com/refugiados-alemania/1163/?lang=en