http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/11/world/middleeast/assault-on-christian-town-complicates-crisis-in-syria.html?ref=global-home&_r=0&pagewanted=all
Assault on Christian Town in Syria Adds to Fears Over Rebels
 
Anwar Amro/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
The funerals on Tuesday of three Christian Syrians who were killed over the 
weekend in the town of Maaloula. 

By ANNE BARNARD and HWAIDA SAAD
Published: September 10, 2013

BEIRUT, Lebanon — For Syrian rebels fighting in recent days around the ancient 
Christian town of Maaloula, any gains made in battle could be wiped out in the 
war of perceptions. 

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SANA, via Associated Press
In a photo released by the Syrian official news agency, a Syrian soldier fired 
a heavy machine gun during clashes with rebels over the weekend in the 
Christian town of Maaloula. 

Enlarge This Image
 
SANA, via Associated Press
The entrance to the town of Maaloula. The rebel incursion into the town, led by 
extremist Islamists, reinforces the worst fears of Syrian Christians and risks 
bolstering President Bashar al-Assad’s claims that he is the Christians’ 
protector. 

Enlarge This Image
 
SANA, via Associated Press
Maaloula is one of the last places where Aramaic, the language of Jesus, is 
still spoken by Christians and some Muslims. 

Their incursion into the town, led by extremist Islamists, reinforces the worst 
fears of Syrian Christians and could bolster President Bashar al-Assad’s claims 
that he is the Christians’ protector. It may also complicate President Obama’s 
task as he struggles to convince Americans that a military strike against Mr. 
Assad will not strengthen Islamic extremists. 

Some of the rebels, apparently aware of their public relations problem, said in 
interviews that they meant Christians no harm. They filmed themselves talking 
politely with nuns, instructing fighters not to harm civilians or churches and 
touring a monastery that appeared mostly intact. They said they had withdrawn 
from most of the town, posted videos of shelling there by Mr. Assad’s forces 
and argued that the government had given the fight a sectarian cast by sending 
Christian militiamen from Damascus to join in. 

But the damage was already done. Most of the town’s residents have fled, and 
Maaloula, one of the last places where Aramaic, the language of Jesus, is still 
spoken by Christians and some Muslims, has become a one-word argument against 
Western support for the rebels — at the worst possible time for Mr. Obama and 
the opponents of Mr. Assad. 

Syrian-Americans lobbying against the proposed American missile strike flooded 
Congressional message boards with appeals for Maaloula. A common refrain was 
that Mr. Obama was throwing Syria’s Christians “to the lions.” 

It was a powerful accusation in a region where a decade of unrest and rising 
sectarianism, from Iraq to Egypt, has threatened and displaced large sectors of 
the Middle East’s Christians, a population that had already shrunk 
significantly through emigration over the past century. 

Reached by telephone on Monday night, Mother Pelagia Sayaf, who is in charge of 
Mar Taqla, a monastery in Maloula that is among the country’s oldest, said that 
the 53 nuns and orphans staying there had not been harmed and that the 
principal damage was shattered windows. Another nun said some of the fighters 
were local men who promised to protect the monastery. 

But the encounter with the rebels had done little to reassure the nuns that in 
the long run Syria’s Christians would retain the peaceful existence they had 
long enjoyed. 

“If Maaloula survives, it will be a miracle,” Mother Sayaf said. “Maaloula is 
empty. You see ghosts on the walls.” 

The situation in Maaloula underscores the core problems that bedevil the 
movement against Mr. Assad: the opposition, rooted in Syria’s Sunni majority, 
has failed to win over enough Christians, who make up 8 percent to 10 percent 
of the population, or other religious minorities. More than 450,000 Christians 
have fled their homes, church leaders say, during more than two years of war. 

On the battlefield, well-armed radical Islamist groups, including foreign 
fighters, show little inclination to coordinate with local battalions, and 
sectarian killings and references to non-Muslims as infidels further intimidate 
Christians. In Maaloula, according to fighters, the rebel attack was led by 
members of the Nusra Front, a group with ties to Al Qaeda in Iraq, even after 
local fighters affiliated with the Western-backed Free Syrian Army tried and 
failed to dissuade them. 

Last week, as the battle began, opponents of American military action in Syria 
circulated a recent video of a Syrian Christian woman accosting Senator John 
McCain, a proponent of military action, accusing him of abandoning Christians. 
“I could trace my family’s name to the Bible,” she said. “We refuse to be 
forced to leave.” 

Maaloula has long symbolized Syria’s history of diversity and coexistence. 
Legend has it that as an early Christian saint, Taqla, was fleeing persecution, 
the cliffs parted to help her escape, giving the town its name, which means 
entrance in Aramaic. More recent lore says a small Sunni population sprang up 
after a Christian man converted to marry a Muslim. 

Even after a movement for political rights morphed into a civil war, local 
Sunni and Christian leaders worked to maintain calm. Local groups of rebels 
have long occupied the Safir hotel on the edge of town. But until last week, 
Mother Sayaf said, residents moved unmolested between rebel and government 
territory. 

“We don’t have any problem with Christians, they are living among us for 
thousands of years,” said Abu al-Majd, a rebel from nearby Yabroud who, like 
others, gave only a nickname for safety. “Before, with and after Assad.” 

But on Wednesday, fighters from Homs, to the north, attacked an army post 
outside the town that had long shelled surrounding areas. The Nusra Front sent 
a Jordanian fighter to blow himself up, and a Free Syrian Army unit from Homs 
took part over angry objections from local fighters, rebels said. 

“Wrong timing, wrong location,” said Mahmoud, an antigovernment activist in 
Yabroud. “Now the regime has the perfect excuse to show us in a bad light.” 

On Saturday, rebels seized the town. One leader was filmed telling his men to 
safeguard civilians and churches. Another video showed masked rebels with 
grenade launchers saying they had entered for “military reasons” because the 
checkpoint was “harming Muslims.” 

The nuns huddled in monastery rooms tunneled under the cliffs. About 25 
fighters entered, including some who appeared to be Saudi, Mother Sayaf said, 
and one who did not understand Arabic. But one fighter, a local worker, gave 
his phone number and told the nuns to call if they needed help. 

A rebel video shows Mother Sayaf flinching at the crash of shells but otherwise 
calm — at one point answering the phone, “We’re in a meeting,” and saying all 
is well. That statement angered some residents who fled to Bab Touma, a 
Christian enclave in the old city of Damascus, said Abu Tony, a leader of a 
neighborhood militia there. He said three residents were taken hostage and 
others were told, “Convert and you’ll be safe.” 

Rebels and Bab Touma residents said the government sent reinforcements that 
included Iraqi Shiites and Christians from Bab Touma who joined “popular 
committees,” local government militias that are said to protect neighborhoods 
but that analysts and residents say are increasingly being deployed elsewhere. 

The government has been shelling near the hotel and a monastery, according to 
rebels and Russia Today, an official television outlet that supports Mr. Assad. 
Rebels say they pulled out of the town to minimize the damage; others say they 
still occupy much of it. 

The nuns could not tell what was happening outside but heard shelling and rocks 
falling from the cliffs, Mother Sayaf said. She tried to look on the bright 
side, seeing evidence of miracles. 

“Neither crosses nor statues were broken,” she said. “I’ve never seen anything 
like it.” 


An employee of The New York Times contributed reporting from Beirut, Lebanon.

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