Syria's Christian refugees facing a grim holiday
Families shelter in Damascus after rebels drive them from their homes
After fleeing a rebel assault on the historic Syrian town of Maalula, hundreds of Christian families sheltering in Damascus are preparing for a bleak Christmas away from home.
The picturesque hamlet - where residents still speak the ancient Aramaic of Jesus Christ - is a symbol of the long Christian presence in Syria's ethnic and religious mosaic, now shattered by war.
The residents of Maalula are among the millions of Syrians displaced by a war that shows no sign of abating, and what should be a joyful holiday season is instead the latest painful reminder of all that has been lost.
"The most beautiful gift I could possibly receive for Christmas would be to return to Maalula," whispered Hneineh Taalab, who fled in early September after jihadist fighters entered the town. She is now sheltering at a Damascus convent.
Taalab said jihadists from the Al-Nusra Front, a rebel group linked to al-Qaida, murdered her 20-year-old son Sarkis Zakhem when they took over Maalula on Sept 8, after four days of fighting troops loyal to President Bashar al-Assad.
"Al-Nusra also killed my brother and my cousin because they refused to convert to Islam," she said.
The army briefly retook Maalula from rebels, but the troops were again expelled earlier this month as the Al-Nusra Front and other rebels swept into the mostly deserted town.
Before the war, tourists flocked to Maalula to visit cave dwellings dating back to the earliest years of Christianity and to escape the summer heat.
As Greek Catholic Patriarch Gregorios Laham III meets with the refugees in a dark and drafty church in Damascus, he prays "for the return of love and hope" to Syria and mourns those who have been killed and kidnapped.
Christians, who make up 5 percent of Syria's population, have largely avoided taking sides in the conflict, leading hard-line rebel groups to charge them with being complicit with the regime.
Some 1,200 Christians are among the estimated 126,000 people killed in the conflict, according to Laham.
Another 450,000 Christians have been displaced, while 60 churches have been destroyed. Residents of 24 villages were forced to flee, he said.
No one knows exactly what happened to 12 nuns taken by rebels from their Maalula convent in early December, or to two kidnapped Orthodox bishops, or to an Italian Jesuit priest who went missing.
"It is terrible. We are all under threat, Christians and Muslims," Laham said.
Laham distributed gifts to children from Maalula and money to "the families of martyrs" as he made his way through the freezing church in Damascus, where this year's winter has been unusually cold.
The Maalulans were listless as they receive the handouts. This year, Christmas is a sealed envelope filled with cash.
'No tree, no manger'
Their thoughts return to Maalula, to an earlier time when the streets were decked with lights and wreaths and the cooking of holiday feasts filled their homes with warmth.
"Christmas in Maalula was joyful. We would decorate the Christmas tree, and friends and relatives would get together for midnight mass. People were happy," said Juliana, a 22-year-old refugee.
"This year, we will attend mass, of course, but there won't be any Christmas tree or manger. We are refugees now."
Najar Fadel, another refugee, recalled how Maalula was once filled with Christmas cheer.
"Families would gather around their decorated Christmas trees; wreaths would hang from their balconies; they would welcome the New Year with banners everywhere; and the women of the house would spend time cooking a good meal," she said.
"But there's none of that now. Even if there is some celebration, it will be a sad Christmas. We don't have money anymore, so the churches will take care of distributing gifts to the children."
Agence France-Presse
(China Daily 12/25/2013 page10)