Hundreds of people celebrate Good Friday in Homs with a procession at night through the damaged neighborhood of Bustan Al Dewan. (Liliana Nieto del Rio / For The Times)
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Patrick
J. McDonnell
They
marched past bullet-riddled storefronts, bombed-out apartment blocks and
makeshift shrines to pro-government “martyrs” lost in the war.
Clergymen
hoisted on their shoulders a miniature coffin filled with flowers, a symbol of
the death of Christ on this most solemn day of Holy Week. Soldiers and
black-clad militiamen toting AK-47s provided a measure of security in a
pulverized city where rebel car bombs and suicide attackers remain a constant
threat.
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The
Good Friday evening procession through the narrow streets of this
war-traumatized city highlighted how a reeling but resilient Christian
community is gradually coming back to their roots in Homs’ Old City,
traditional hub of the city’s ancient Christian minority. In keeping with the
message of Easter, their measured return marks a rebirth, however halting.
That
return comes amid widespread fears that sectarian-tinged conflicts such as the
Syrian war could drive much of the Christian population from the Middle East.
Participants in Friday’s procession, however, vowed never to abandon their
beloved albeit war-ravaged neighborhoods in central Homs.
“Christians
will always be in Syria,” declared Archbishop Selwanor Boutros Alnemeh in an
interview shortly before presiding over services at Our Lady of the Holy Belt
Syrian Orthodox Church in Old Homs, famed for a venerated relic said to be a
portion of a belt worn by Mary, mother of Jesus. “This is our home. We will
never leave Syria.”
The
celebrated church, which traces its origins to the early days of Christianity,
has been largely rebuilt after suffering heavy damage.
During
the two-year rebel occupation of the zone, clerics said, opposition fighters
dug up portions of the church interior seeking the relic or rumored stashes of
gold. But church authorities had removed the relic for safe-keeping, preserving
the cherished item that is a vivid symbol of Hom’s Christian pedigree.
Most
Old City residents fled the area during heavy fighting that erupted here in in
2012. Two years later, in May 2014, the rebels decamped from the Old City in a
United Nations-brokered deal.
Since
then, Christians and other former residents have trickled back to the Old City,
undertaking massive repairs on their damaged homes. But many buildings could
not be salvaged. Large-scale reconstruction awaits the end of the war. The Old
City still has the eerie feel of a ghost town.
Today,
authorities say, Homs’ Old City is home to perhaps 50,000 people, compared with
a pre-war population of more than 300,000. Returnees recount the grief they
felt at having been away from the familiar streets and places of worship. And
they also speak with exhilaration about being back.
“I
still feel something is missing in my life, we lost so much time,” said
Victoria Jabbour, 16, who said her family of four recently returned after being
away from the Old City for five years. They all live in one room. Even so,
“it’s wonderful to be here now,” added Jabbour, who was among many young and
old participating in the torch-light procession. “It’s like being home again.”
Joseph
Farkough, 63, came back to the Old City and opened a cafe where patrons sip
coffee and tea and smoke shisha pipes just across the street from the church of
Our Lady of the Holy Belt. Photos on the wall of the cafe document residents’
return to the rubble-filled district. A proclamation, in English, captures
people’s resolute attitude amid many hardships:
“In
this neighborhood, we suffered, we went through difficult times and we fled our
homes. Today, we may still suffer, difficult times remain, but we are holding
on to our land … believing the sun will rise again.”
While
there are no precise figures, Christians today are believed to represent less
than 10% of Syria’s population. The war has accelerated the emigration of many
Christians.
Throughout
the Syrian conflict, some hard-line Sunni Islamist opposition groups have
targeted Christian churches and clerics. Christians, like other minorities, are
generally viewed as supportive of the government of President Bashar Assad.
Two
Syrian bishops were kidnapped outside Aleppo in 2013 and remain missing. An
Italian Jesuit, Father Paolo Dall'Oglio, went missing the same year in northern
Syria. Rebels linked to Al Qaeda abducted 13 Catholic nuns from the historic
Christian town of Maaloula in 2013; they were later released in a prisoner exchange.
Here
in Homs, a Dutch Jesuit, Father Frans van der Lugt, who had spent decades in
Syria, was executed in April 2014 by a masked gunman at the Jesuit residence in
the Old City. A month later, government forces recaptured the zone.
The
elderly priest, known as Father Francs and just three days shy of his 76th
birthday, had refused to leave the rebel-occupied neighborhood, staying behind
to help remaining residents, many of them elderly Christians who faced
starvation. He bicycled about the zone, providing food and other aid to those
stranded inside.
Van
der Lugt, also known as Father Francis, was buried in the garden of the Jesuit
residence where he spent the last years of his life. His grave has become a
kind of pilgrimage site, a testament to the legacy of a priest who sought to
build bridges between Syria’s diverse communities.
“To
Father Francis, we were all the same, Muslim, Christian, Jewish — we are all
humans,” noted Father Magdi Seif, the current Jesuit superior in Syria, who
spoke Friday at the Jesuit residence in Homs alongside the grave of the slain
Dutch cleric. “Every day we see more and more people returning to the Old City,
more shops open, more children playing in the streets. This is what Father
Francis would have wanted.”
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