This post was written by Rita, who spent many years living in Aleppo.
This is the souk I remember in Aleppo. When I live there I was in this place daily
for my regular shopping. I would go and
sit with the merchants and talk to them and just have a great time and also
talk to the tourist as they were coming in.
During those days they were mostly British, French, and Italian, and only
a few Americans. Then after I moved from
Aleppo and came back to the US and opened Caravan-Serai Tours I would take
people on the tours to one of my favorite places - the souk - to get their
olive oil soaps and their spices and then some other things that they wanted. This was not a tourist market this was a
market that the locals would use so you saw all different kinds of people in
all different modes of attire. I have talked to my spice man who I used for
over 20 years and he is safe and at home with his family, but his shop is no
longer there. This was a shop that was
owned by his great-great-grandfather and was passed down through the
family. This was a man that would tell
me not to put the cinnamon next to the pepper since it would drink the smell
away and it would be overpowered by the cinnamon - do not put your dry mint
next to your saffron since everything will then smell like mint, etc, etc. This was a part of my life and history so you
can imagine what he is going through and what the Syrian people are going through
that were so proud of their city.
The souk now has been burned by both the rebel forces and
the military. The rebels had taken
refuge inside the souk and then the firing started between the different
groups. The reports are stating about 1500 shops have been burned, since the
doors that the shop keepers had were all made of wood. The market dates back
about 2500 years ago. It stood up to all
kinds of foreign invasions over the centuries, earthquakes, but not the
powerful tools of war of the 21st century.
I talked to Faez in Aleppo to see how they were all
doing, he said “how do you think we are doing- we are listening to the news ad
hearing what they have done to the old city. The destruction of one of the Old
World Heritage Sites is something hard for us to accept. We have 7 different Old Heritage Sites in
this area and all have taken some sort of damage.” I said, “I know, and I want to cry - what can
we do?” He says to tell people to talk to their government officials and try
and get this to stop. Get the foreign soldiers out of the country. Let just the Syrians handle this. The foreign soldiers and the others that are
trying to help are not helping. We have
foreign mercenaries that have nothing to lose by burning these ruins and raping
and abusing the children- this is a war and they are being paid.
We need to get the different sides to sit and talk and
negotiate peace- this is something that can't keep going on - a solution is
needed immediately.
This is what the souk is looking like now. Syria is in need of foreign intervention.
I also, talked to Alaa in Damascus today and he says it
is relatively ok there - way better than in Aleppo. His kids are going to
school and the businesses are open, but that is for now.
You can see that both the government and the rebels are
going from one area and destroying that and then moving on. We saw that in Homs and in Hama that are
pretty much ghost towns at this point.
We can't say this will be happening to Aleppo. The museum in Palmyra has been destroyed and
the artifacts have been stolen. For a
lot of you that used to travel with us to Syria I have been told that the young
men that would sell us the jewelry, tablecloths, scarves etc. while at the
sites are now gone and have joined the FSA.
Some have taken their families across the border to Jordan, walking thru
the desert for days to get to the camps.
They do not have their documentation so they have to sneak into the
country.
There is talk today that Jordan might have to close its borders
to deal with the refugees they have if they are not able to get international
aid for them. We are asking for your help.
Please forward these emails to friends and other people that you know
that are worried or care for human lives and helping the children of the region.
We thank you for reading and listening.
~Rita
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