http://forusa.org/blogs/mohja-kahf/syria-its-still-revolution-my-friends/12398

Syria: It's Still a Revolution, My Friends
  By
Mohja Kahf <http://forusa.org/members/mohja-kahf>
 on
Thursday, September 5, 2013, 10:52am
 [image: Syria: It's Still a Revolution, My
Friends]<http://forusa.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/725px-width/images/blogs/20130905-syria-its-still-revolution-my-friends.jpg>

No matter what your position on the potential U.S. strikes on Syria (I’m
against), all I ask is, DON’T be a hater who denies the existence of the
grassroots youth who began the Syrian revolution out of hope for real
freedom and out of their rising expectation for real change, hope that had
nearly died in the fifty-year police state that has ruled Syria. Try to
remember to have some compassion for a Syrian who might be in the vicinity,
before you mouth off in the abstract on the issue; we face news every day
of our friends and our relatives being killed and imprisoned. Take time to
get to know about a few of them, the Syrian rev youth activists who started
it all, in hundreds of towns across Syria, before you speak about Syria
based on what happened in Iraq or Lebanon or Country X.

In SYRIA, this is a REVOLUTION (and yes I understand it meets the technical
definition of a civil war, yes it does, AND, yet, still: This is a
Revolution). In SYRIA, a Revolution has been happening, and the will to
freedom that began it will not simply be erased; it is a bell that cannot
be unrung in the hearts of young Syrians. It is a consciousness change.
That is why Syria is not now and will not become, despite all the [chaos]
that has ensued inside the revolution, “like Iraq” (and by the way, I
marched in the United States against the Iraq War, and over the years have
written and published pages of poems based on the unimaginable sufferings
narrated to me by Iraqis).

In SYRIA, a broad spectrum of twenty-somethings across every province were
inspired by Bouazizi’s self-immolation, by 26-year-old Asma Mahfouz’ call
to Tahrir, by the movement for Khaled Said, a young activist murdered by
Egyptian police in 2010, NOT by some U.S. president’s call for regime
change as in Iraq. By the will to “live like human beings,” as one after
another has told me when I have met them and asked for their stories. ASK for
their stories, please. They will TELL you what motivated them to risk their
lives as they did. Syria’s revolution youth hit the streets out of
grievances they have EXPERIENCED, in their own bodies, in their own lives;
this revolution was not begun by some Syrian version of Iraq’s Chelebi, nor
by established oppositionists, but by geographically widespread rural and
small-town women and men ofALL sects, young people whom the CIA never even
heard of, coming together in a new spirit. They are nobody’s proxies, no
matter how much outside agendas want to make them somebody’s proxies.

And please, do not create a callous denial narrative that erases the masses
of mainstream Syrians in this revolution, as if they don’t count, in favor
of the Salafist extremists who are trying to take it over from its fringes
as, thousands of miles away, you run screaming “Taliban! Al Qaeda!”
wringing your hands but not knowing in the slightest the measure of their
(nasty) influence. Do not abandon those revolution youth — whether they are
still in the civil resistance or have joined the secular, mainline armed
resistance — who are now themselves beset by the Salafists even while still
fending off the brutal regime. For example, I just Facebook-chatted with a
friend inside, one of the original protesters, who refuses to flee Syria,
and incidentally he is Alawite, who has received death threats by name from
the regime, and from the Nusra front on the other hand.

Above all, do not become so ethically ugly as to deny the massacres the
regime has committed against civilians, or become a dictator-defender.
Bashar is a Butcher; let’s establish that as a common fact between us, no
matter your other views. I have spoken out against atrocities committed by
the rebel sides; they AREheinous, AND they in no way come close to the
horrors committed by the regime, which vastly outguns all the rebel sides.
So the “symmetry” thing, where you say “oh, they’re all about as bad as
each other” is ethically reprehensible. If you don’t have time to educate
yourself, at least refrain from that moral repulsiveness, please. Do not
commit the inhumanity at this time of getting on a devastated Syrian’s last
nerve, by denying our bloodied dead, or our desperate need for justice.

Here are some links for further reading:

   - The Syrian Revolution, Then and Now (PDF
download)<http://www.fnvw.org/vertical/Sites/%7B8182BD6D-7C3B-4C35-B7F8-F4FD486C7CBD%7D/uploads/Syria_Special_Report-web.pdf>
   - International Crisis Group’s analysis of the potential U.S.
strikes<http://www.crisisgroup.org/en/publication-type/media-releases/2013/mena/syria-statement.aspx>
   - The Syrian Nonviolence Movement (English and Arabic
pages)<https://www.facebook.com/SyrianNonviolence>
   - Kamishlo House <https://www.facebook.com/QamishloHausee> (secular,
   nonsectarian, democracy activism)

Please write for the release of nonviolent Syrian prisoners of conscience
HELD OVER A YEAR, many over two years, by cutting and pasting the text
under each picture in this album, on a Revolution
page<https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.380614048692905.94198.109718805782432&type=3>
 that ALSOreports prisoners held by extremist groups on the rebel side.

(Photo: Rukn Eldeen, Damascus, Syria, November 20, 2012. Rallying around
the nonsectarian, secular democratic values of the Syrian Revolution.)

-------------------------
Obama Isolated at G20 on Syria, No ‘Coalition of the
Willing’<http://www.juancole.com/2013/09/isolated-coalition-willing.html>

Posted on 09/06/2013 by Juan Cole

President Obama
found himself isolated on the Syria issue at the G20 conference in St.
Petersburg on 
Thursday.<http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/09/05/us-russia-g-idUSBRE98315S20130905>
Among
the world’s largest 20 economies, only France agreed with his plan for a
military attack on Damascus.

China expressed fears that US military action in
Syria<http://www.moneycontrol.com/news/wire-news/china-backs-russiasyria-at-g20_945671.html>
would
cause a spike in oil prices and slow the world’s economy.

The BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) are often
anti-intervention. As rising world economies, they feel they suffered from
imperial interventions themselves. They do not want the Syria attack by the
US.

But the big surprise was that the European Union came out with position
closer to Russian President Vladimir Putin than to Obama.

France24 Reports <http://youtu.be/jRMIj8_F5PE>

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jRMIj8_F5PE


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