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Syrian Christians attend services, schools reopen a week after Assad's overthrow

Dec 16, 2024

Damascus [Syria], December 16: Syrian Christians attended regular Sunday services for the first time since the dramatic overthrow of President Bashar al-Assad a week ago, in an early test of assurances by the new Islamist rulers that the rights of minorities will be protected.
As the Islamist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) swept to power last week, it sought to reassure Syria's minority groups that their way of life would not be at risk.
Before Assad fell, historic religious minority groups, including Christians, worshipped freely and some remain jittery at the prospect of an Islamist government.
Streets in the heavily Christian Damascus neighbourhood of Bab Touma filled with worshippers returning from church on Sunday morning but some struck a note of caution.
"We're scared, we're still scared," said local resident Maha Barsa after attending Mass at the local Greek Melkite Catholic church.
Barsa said she had barely left her home since HTS took over one week ago, though she said that nothing had happened to warrant her concern, adding: "Things are ambiguous."
In the coastal city of Latakia, long an Assad stronghold, Lina Akhras, a parish council secretary at the St George Greek Orthodox Cathedral, said on Sunday that Christians had been "comfortable" under his rule in terms of freedom of belief but that they just wanted to live in peace and harmony.
"(Assad's fall) happened all of a sudden, we didn't know what to expect. Thank God, we received a lot of assurances and we saw that members of the (HTS) committee reached out to our priest," she told Reuters.
"God willing, we will return to our previous lives and live in our beautiful Syria," Akhras added.
Syria is home to multiple ethnic and religious minorities including Christians, Armenians, Kurds and Shi'ite Muslims. The Assad family itself belongs to the minority Alawite faith, an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam, in Sunni Muslim-majority Syria.
Tens of thousands of mostly Shi'ite Muslims have fled Syria for Lebanon in the last week out of fear of persecution by the country's new rulers, a senior Lebanese security official told Reuters last week.
The protection of Syria's minorities was a key concern on Saturday when top diplomats from Arab nations, Turkey, the United States and European Union met in Jordan.
Source: Fijian Broadcasting Corporation

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