JINDIRES, Syria — She has no memory
of the earthquake that broke her back and swallowed her daughters. Khaira Al-Halbouni
only knows what her husband told her afterward. In the middle of the night the
building shook. He grabbed one daughter, Bisan, and their son, Ali. Take Mayas,
their younger daughter, and run, he shouted.
اضافة اعلان
Instinctively, she reached for her headscarf.
Then, nothing.
The first thing Khaira remembers is waking
up in a pile of rubble. She saw a small ray of light, then a pair of boots. She
screamed. She looked for her daughter. Almost 30 hours had elapsed.
The boots belonged to rescue workers and neighbors
looking for survivors. Eventually they pulled her out. Her spine was fractured,
her arm broken, her cheekbone shattered. But she was alive. They took her to
the hospital. The hospital was overwhelmed and undertook a grim triage: She was
most likely suffering from internal bleeding and could not be saved. She was
left to die.
Her daughter was alive too, buried in
rubble.
More than 13 million people, over half of the Syrian population, have fled their homes. Today, some 90 percent of Syrians live in poverty.
Her husband, Muhammad, had endured his own
ordeal. He had lost his lower right leg in shelling in a Damascus suburb called
Harasta, earlier in his country’s civil war. When the building shook, he
realized that it would be faster and safer to try to reach the roof from their
top floor apartment than try to hobble to the ground floor. Just as they
mounted the stairs, the right wall of the stairwell crashed down onto Bisan,
killing her instantly. A piece of steel rebar pierced her skull.
“My sister fell in the hole!” Ali cried,
beseeching his father to go back. “Pick my sister up from the hole!”
Muhammad swept Ali up the stairs. The building
crumpled beneath them. Miraculously, neither was badly hurt.
Calamity on top of crisisThe Halbouni family was among hundreds of thousands
across southern Turkey and northern Syria shattered by the earthquakes this
month. The back-to-back temblors delivered catastrophe on a biblical scale,
flattening cities and turning countless homes into piles of stone, steel, and
dust. At least 48,000 people have died. The first quake struck at an especially
cruel hour, in the early morning as people slept. Whole families perished in
their beds as their homes crumbled around them.
Here in northern Syria, this calamity comes
almost 12 years into one of the most brutal and intractable conflicts of the
21st century. Syria’s war began as a civilian uprising like many others across
the Arab world in the early 2010s, amid demands of political freedom. Then,
things spiraled: The government of Bashar Al-Assad cracked down, the protest
movement became an armed rebellion, and the conflict became a proxy
battleground for regional rivals Saudi Arabia and Iran.
“Syria has for quite a while now been a problem that we prefer to have contained rather than do our very best to try and resolve.”
Later, militants spilled over from
neighboring Iraq and took over vast portions of northern Syria, drawing the US
in deeper. Russia stepped up its support of Assad, prosecuting a merciless
bombing campaign. The war also drew in Syria’s largest neighbor, Turkey, which
is now home to about 3.6 million displaced Syrians. At various points Israel,
France, and Britain have joined the fight. Syria was, for a time, a central
concern of much of the world.
The human toll of the war is staggering.
More than 300,000 civilians have been killed, according to the United Nations.
Multiple investigations have concluded that Assad’s forces dropped barrel bombs
on civilians, doused neighborhoods with chemical weapons, and deliberately
destroyed hospitals. Almost 100,000 have disappeared, mostly at the hands of
Assad’s pitiless intelligence services, according to the Syrian Network for
Human Rights. More than 13 million people, over half of the Syrian population,
have fled their homes. Today, some 90 percent of Syrians live in poverty.
Assad, with the help of Russia, has beat back the armed opposition and forced
the conflict into a deadening stalemate.
‘They don’t know we exist’With the fighting largely abated and the
various parties dug in, governments in the West have become quietly cynical
about Syria, resigned to the status quo, Charles Lister, a senior fellow at the
Middle East Institute, told me in an interview.
“Syria has for quite a while now been a
problem that we prefer to have contained rather than do our very best to try
and resolve,” he said.
With Assad firmly entrenched with Russia’s
backing, regional powers that had once been implacably opposed to his rule are
increasingly willing to mend fences. Even die-hards are coming around: One of
the first planeloads of aid to arrive in government controlled areas after the
earthquake came from Saudi Arabia, Al-Arabiya reported. Just a few years ago
this would have been unthinkable.
Syria presents one of the most complex
diplomatic thickets in the world, and the task of untangling that thicket has
grown vastly more difficult with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Turkey is a key
actor here — a NATO member that nevertheless has growing ties with Russia and
seems increasingly willing to normalize relations with Assad.
And most of the world, with Russia’s attack
on Ukraine and the growing conflict between China and the US, has simply moved
on and mostly stopped paying attention to the war in Syria, if they ever did.
Every tent in this schoolyard contains a tragedy and a miracle. One man told me his wife had died in the earthquake, but he was proud that he had been able to rescue an infant.
“The world hasn’t forgotten us,” one Syrian
refugee in Turkey told me in the aftermath of the earthquake. “They don’t know
we exist.”
The war that shaped the worldThis is a remarkable turn of events given
how the Syrian war shaped the world in which we now live. The war fed the
growth of the most fearsome terrorist group of our time, Daesh, a death cult
that beheaded nonbelievers and drew US troops into Syria. Daesh planned or
inspired terror attacks in Egypt, across Europe, and as far away as the
Philippines, spawning chaos and scrambling domestic politics across the globe.
The conflict sent waves of terrified people
seeking refuge in Europe, accelerating the rise of far-right and anti-immigrant
politicians across the continent, and indeed, the world. One could make the
case that Donald Trump’s presidency would not have been possible without the
war in Syria and the climate of fear that it helped create.
Looking back, Russia’s intervention in the
Syrian conflict now looks like an ominous escalation toward a confrontation
with the US and the West more broadly, building toward its invasion of Ukraine
one year ago.
When the earthquake hitIf we live in a world made by the Syrian
civil war, it is a world that has all but abandoned the Syrian people. Muhammad
Al Halbouni’s family lived it, first fleeing from their ancestral home near
Damascus in 2018, hoping to keep the children safe from the bombs that had
already taken his leg. First they went to Idlib province, where they stayed
with relatives for a while, then moved around until finally settling in
Jindires. Here, Muhammad found an unfinished apartment building and began
building a new home for his family, cinder block by cinder block, with his own
hands.
They settled into a relatively peaceful
life and found work doing odd jobs. Eventually he saved up enough to buy a
truck, which he used to earn money transporting goods. He finished the top-floor
apartment. With this part of Syria under the control of the Turkish military
and Syrian rebels, it was a period of calm.
Then came the earthquake.
“The situation before the earthquakes was absolutely horrific, and across Syria… We kind of forget it because it’s been 12 years, but humanitarian needs in Syria were at the highest they’ve ever been in the past year.”
Muhammad frantically searched for his wife
and daughter, and once he found them, alive under the rubble, had to wait more
than 24 hours for rescuers to help free them. Khaira and Mayas were rushed to
the hospital. Khaira defied the doctor’s grim prognosis and would survive.
In the chaos of the hospital Muhammad had
lost sight of Mayas. His crutches propelled him from ward to ward, frantically
searching for her. No one knew where she was.
The doctors told him to look outside. And
that is where Muhammad found the body of his second daughter. She had been
pulled from the rubble alive, but now she was dead.
As he told me his story, sitting on the
floor of a canvas tent in a schoolyard that has become a shelter for dozens of
families, Muhammad wept. He scrolled through his phone showing me pictures of
the two girls — in matching pink T-shirts, smiling astride a toy motorcycle,
posing in front of a sculpture of a camel.
“When we wake up the first thing that we
think of is where are they? And then we realize that they are dead,” Muhammad
said.
Ali keeps asking after his sisters. Had
they gone to be with their grandmother, he asked his father? He is a watchful,
sweet-faced boy with a nasty gash stitched closed above his right eye. He
sticks nearby his parents.
Every tent in this schoolyard contains a
tragedy and a miracle. One man told me his wife had died in the earthquake, but
he was proud that he had been able to rescue an infant.
Remembering and rebuilding SyriaThe humanitarian needs here are dire. “The
situation before the earthquakes was absolutely horrific, and across Syria,”
said Joe English, a spokesperson for UNICEF. “We kind of forget it because it’s
been 12 years, but humanitarian needs in Syria were at the highest they’ve ever
been in the past year.”
Given the chaos and suffering this conflict
has unleashed, it would be foolish to continue to ignore Syria in the aftermath
of the earthquake. The grim status quo that had prevailed is already breaking
down. Turkey, the most important regional player, is struggling with its own
recovery from the quake, and its people have grown increasingly intolerant of
the presence of millions of displaced Syrians who are trapped there by the war.
The number of Syrians attempting to reach Europe had already spiked in 2022,
and with the earthquake devastating Turkey, more are sure to try to flee across
the treacherous Mediterranean Sea.
Assad is pressing his advantage, most
likely seeing the catastrophe as a way to normalize relations with his
neighbors and reinforce their perception that he has vanquished the rebellion.
The war in Syria has already destabilized and reordered our world in countless
ways. In these dangerous and unpredictable times, the worst of it could be yet
to come.
Today, the city of Jindires is a ruin. But
already, its people, the assemblage of natives and displaced people, bonded in
their suffering, have begun to rebuild. Along the main street, among piles of
rubble, shops have reopened: a cafe with a battered espresso machine, a
restaurant with glistening chickens twirling on a rotisserie, a hardware store.
The brickyards have reopened. Masons were hard at work, slapping mortar to
cinder blocks, new walls for new homes. The Syrian people, somehow, find the
courage to go on.