Youth exodus takes joy out of festivities in Syria

Matanios Dalloul, 62, one of the 20 remaining Christian residents of the central Syrian town of Al-Qaryatain in the Homs province, assesses the damage in the fifth-century monastery. (AFP)
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Updated 25 December 2021
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Youth exodus takes joy out of festivities in Syria

  • Daesh “has gone, but the sadness remains,” he lamented, the scent of molasses filling the air around him

AL-QARYATAIN: Inside a Syrian monastery desecrated by Daesh, Matanios Dalloul stood alone by the shattered altar where a once-thriving community celebrated Christmas before the threat of death drove them out.
The 62-year-old is one of 20 Christians remaining in the central town of Al-Qaryatain out of the community that boasted 900 members before conflict broke out a decade ago.
Tracing a cross against his body between piles of broken stone, the lone parishioner prayed for long life for the remnants of a dwindling community which has nobody left under the age of 40.
“The holidays need people, they need young boys and girls, not just piles of stone,” Dalloul said, gesturing at what remains of the mud brick walls of the Mar Elian monastery.
“It is people who generate holiday cheer, and if people do not return, there will be no joy.”
The town of Al-Qaryatain in Homs province was once viewed as a symbol of coexistence between Christian and Muslim communities who had lived together for centuries before Daesh seized the area in 2015.
Daesh razed the fifth-century Syriac Catholic monastery of Mar Elian (Saint Elian) and abducted hundreds of Christians, who were locked in an underground dungeon in the desert for 25 days before being freed.

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The last time the churches of Al-Qaryatain celebrated Christmas was in 2015 before the arrival of Daesh, said 62-year-old Matanios Dalloul whose three children have all emigrated to Europe or Canada.

Six years have passed since Russian-backed regime forces ousted Daesh from the town but most of the Christians who fled have not returned and those who remain have neither a church nor a priest to turn to this holiday season.
The last time the churches of Al-Qaryatain celebrated Christmas was in 2015 before the arrival of Daesh, said Dalloul whose three children have all emigrated to Europe or Canada.
“Now, there are no open churches, nor a priest to oversee Christmas mass,” he said.
Dalloul is not alone in his disappointment.
Bassam Debbas said he does not have a single relative left in Syria and will therefore spend Christmas alone, working in a small workshop where he produces grape molasses.
“I don’t have anyone left, not a father, nor a mother, nor siblings, nor a wife ... I will spend the holiday as though it is any other day, any other working day,” the 61-year-old said.
Debbas returned to Al-Qaryatain this year to resume the family trade of molasses production from a small workshop where grapes are fermented and then cooked.
Constant power cuts make the cooking a challenge but he is trying to maintain bare minimum production levels despite the odds.
Outside his home, the street is empty. Traces of Daesh rule are still visible on the crater-riddled walls of neighboring buildings, most of which are either leveled or abandoned.
“The holidays have become completely different since Daesh arrived and brought sadness into the hearts of the people,” Debbas said.
Daesh “has gone, but the sadness remains,” he lamented, the scent of molasses filling the air around him.
Inside Samira Khoury’s home, red rosary beads hang from a small golden cross placed on a wooden table.
A single red candle is lit beside a portrait of Jesus and the Virgin Mary. There are no Christmas decorations.
The 68-year-old and her three sisters were among dozens of Christians kidnapped and locked up by Daesh in 2015.
“Since that day, happiness has disappeared completely from our home,” she said, huddling by a heater.
Without relatives or neighbors to celebrate with, Khoury said “happiness tastes different and the holidays don’t look” the way they used to.
“Nothing is the same,” she said.
Feeding a small stove with fire wood, Phillipe Azar said his Christmas is once again blighted by the sadness of loss.
“My family has left and my friends are dead,” said the 49-year-old, who lives alone in a 10-room house once bustling with relatives.
Azar — who hasn’t put up any Christmas decorations since the start of Syria’s war in 2011 — said he will spend the holiday near his heater.
He may invite an 80-year-old friend over for a glass of wine but that is only if he is in good enough health to come visit.
“The Christmas tree has been packed in a box since 2011,” Azar said.
“Who should I put it up for? Why would I celebrate alone, without my siblings, neighbors and friends?“


Much of Iran’s near-bomb-grade uranium likely to be in Isfahan, IAEA’s Grossi says

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Much of Iran’s near-bomb-grade uranium likely to be in Isfahan, IAEA’s Grossi says

  • Isfahan tunnels appear to have survived military strikes
  • Some highly ‌enriched uranium was known to be stored there
PARIS: Almost half of Iran’s uranium enriched to up to 60 percent purity, a short step from weapons-grade, was stored in a tunnel complex at Isfahan and is probably still there, UN nuclear watchdog chief Rafael Grossi said on Monday.
The tunnel complex is the only target that appears not to have been badly damaged in attacks last June by Israel and the US on Iran’s nuclear ‌facilities.
Diplomats have long ‌said Isfahan has been used to store ‌60 percent uranium, ⁠which the International ⁠Atomic Energy Agency confirmed in a report to member states last month, without saying how much was there.
Iran still has highly enriched uranium stocks
The IAEA estimates that when Israel launched its first attacks in June, Iran had 440.9 kg of 60 percent uranium. If enriched further, that would provide the explosive needed for 10 nuclear weapons, according to an IAEA yardstick.
“What we believe ⁠is that Isfahan had until our last inspection a bit ‌more than 200 kg, maybe a ‌little bit more than that, of 60 percent uranium,” IAEA chief Rafael Grossi told ‌reporters in Paris.
He said the stock was “mainly” at Isfahan, and some held elsewhere ‌may have been destroyed.
“The widespread assumption is that the material is still there. So we haven’t seen — and not only us, I think in general all those observing the facility through satellite imagery and other means to see what’s going ‌on there — movement indicating that the material could have been transferred,” Grossi said.
Iran has not informed the ⁠IAEA of the ⁠status or whereabouts of its highly enriched uranium since the June attacks, nor has it let IAEA inspectors return to its bombed facilities.
Iran’s nuclear program is one reason Israel and the US have given for their current attacks on Iran, arguing that it was getting too close to being able to produce a bomb, despite Trump saying in June that US strikes had obliterated the program. The IAEA has said it has no credible indication of a coordinated nuclear weapons program.
All three Iranian uranium-enrichment plants known to have been operating — two at Natanz and one at Fordow — were destroyed or badly damaged in June.
“There is an amount (of 60 percent uranium) in Natanz also, which we believe is still there,” Grossi said.