A very personal and deeply felt blog this week, and different from the sort of items I usually write about. But it may prove of interest nonetheless.
Each day the media bring ever worse news of horrific events
in Syria. I find this profoundly sad, for I have visited this beautiful country
twice, including a two-week journey with my daughter around all the major
archaeological and historic sites in 2009. These included remains of cities,
such as Ugarit, which flourished well over 3000 years ago and was where an alphabet
was developed that was the first in human history, and other spectacular
monuments such as vast Graeco-Roman amphitheatre at Bosra that is as perfectly
preserved as if it was completed yesterday. The vast area of the ruins of
Palmyra were still yielding up secrets – a hitherto unknown burial chamber was
discovered while I was there – and ruined cities such as Apamea and Resafe, hitherto
only names to me,came alive. The sight of ancient cities on the Euphrates, such as
Mari and Doura Europas , where archaeological investigations were still in
progress, made it possible to imagine daily life in the distant past. Visiting
the gigantic Crusader castle of Krak des Chevaliers was realisation of a dream
I had since boyhood.
Ugarit - source of the first alphabet |
Apamea - a forgotten Graeco-Roman city, great in its time |
But most of all what I now remember – and mourn – is the
normal daily life, active, vibrant, friendly, which I encountered in cities
such as Damascus, Aleppo, Lataki and Deir-es-Zor, which new figure in the news
as scenes of horror. I remember being in a restaurant in Damascus where a young
girl’s birthday was being celebrated and her family insisted our sharing the
birthday cake. And I remember my daughter emerging from the hamam, the Turkish
bath, in Aleppo and laughing about the pummelling she had received from the masseuse
and saying that she had never before been so clean. Later that day, we were drawn
by the voices of a choir to a Maronite Church where beautifully-turned out
young people, male and female, were singing their hearts out in perfect harmony.
That they did seemed to offer no offence to their Muslim neighbours and passers-by.
Afterwards we sat out in a square near that church as darkness fell, and we
marvelled at the expertise of the goldsmiths who were so common in that quarter
of the city. In Homs we marvelled at the size and complexity of ancient water-wheels sill in use. At Palmyra we greeted the sunrise on camelback as we picked our
way through the ruins of this vast city and at Latakia we searched for, and found,
restaurants that would hold their own with any, anywhere. In the huge covered markets at Aleppo, and at Damascus, near the "Street called Straight" where St.Paul lodged, we found endless satisfaction for just being there and we encountered nothing
but gaiety and energy and welcome.
Resafa - a vast Byzantine frontier fortress in the desert |
Palmyra - extensive beyond words |
Bosra - the Amphitheater, its acoustics still superb |
Damascus Souk, full of life |
And at Deir-es-Zor, on the Euphrates, our hearts were chilled
in sorrow and anger when we visited the Museum of the Armenian Genocide, with its
dreadful record of cruelty and suffering, brought to life by so many photographs. Terrible as it was, the fact that this museum had government support made us hopeful that the days
of such intolerance and slaughter would never return to Syria.
How wrong we were.
For me the most poignant aspect of the tragedy now playing
out is that normal life, in all its unspectacular but happy, modest, fulfilling
ways, has been destroyed and that it may not return for decades to come.
The symbol for me of this lost normal life is perhaps a
bizarre one – the restoration of old steam locomotives. For at Damascus the
terminus of the famed Hejaz railway – to the destruction of which T. E. Lawrence
and his Arab allies were so devoted – has been fully restored and much of the
line is still in use, or was in 2009. It may have been jerry-built further south,
but in Syria the civil engineering involved was of a very high standard. The terminus
building houses – or housed – a museum with wonderful historic photographs and
there we learned that Syrian enthusiasts, ably complemented by Turkish ones who
spent their holidays there, were involved in restoration of some of the original
steam locomotives delivered from Germany prior to World War 1. In the photograph
here one is shown – and indeed it might have been very lucky to have survived
one of Lawrence’s attacks.
Hejaz Railway locomotive - one that escaped Lawrence |
Locomotive Manufacturer's Plate - German quality |
I can think of few more innocent, constructive and friendly
activities than restoration of old steam engines, and societies in which volunteers
from differing backgrounds come together to work happily together on such projects
have all the makings of happy ones.
And now? Are there any enthusiasts still restoring the Hejaz
engines or are they struggling instead to survive at the most basic level?
It breaks my heart at times to be human.
Thank you for a truly moving post - it's often the most mundane, simple things that connect us on a human level. What's happening now in Syria is heartbreaking on this level and so many others.
ReplyDeleteAntoine, you, your books, and your web-site are a gift to the world community.
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