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SYRIA ARCHIVE: Jan. 24 - Feb. 6, 2006

Choosing Their Words

Aware the regime is usually listening, Syrian students speak passionately, but carefully.

By Robert Padavick, Fri Jan 27, 8:48 PM ET

DAMASCUS,

Syria - In a tea house just outside the Omayad mosque in old Damascus, Kevin Sites sat down with nine young adults for a candid discussion about issues facing Syria.

The students were eager to talk politics, and the discussion touched on the alleged Syrian role in political murders in Lebanon, the war in

Iraq and the Palestinian situation.

The debate, which Kevin also videotaped, was lively. But it was clear to Kevin that the youths were choosing their words carefully at times.

While Syrian culture -- especially the younger population -- is transforming, the regime still maintains tight control through the Mukbarrat, or secret police.

In fact, about a third of the way through the interview, a man seated behind the students can be seen on the video, craning his neck toward their table in painfully obvious attempt to listen to the discussion.

Whether the man was working for the Mukbarrat cannot be proven, but given that foreign journalists visiting Syria must register with the Ministry of Information, it's fairly safe to assume he was.

Watch the video and decide for yourself. A transcript of some of the highlights from the discussion follows (the discussion was in Arabic with the aid of a translator).

-Hot Zone Senior Producer Robert Padavick

MAYSA: We wish that our brothers from Lebanon will express their solidarity with us and not quarrel or argue between us and them. We feel they are our brothers although they are making false accusations against us.

WALAT: We talked about the forces of the government and the administration but we are not talking about people. Even though they have participated and led this war, we still feel like we have to be brothers to them, you know? Because we feel that like any other people in the world.

KEVIN SITES: Why?

ABDUL KADER: We are all humans... we are all living in the same universe.

KEVIN: Let me ask you this question. Knowing that there is sectarian violence right now, lots of suicide bombings and so on in Iraq, do you believe the American troops should stay until the violence has stopped or should they withdraw now?

TRANSLATOR: He wants to just add something about the invasion of Iraq.

MOHAMMED: If you want to do things from a different perspective I would say that the administration is similar to somebody greedy walking the street that is very powerful and dominant. He sees somebody who is really stupid but this stupid person has a lot of money. So this guy, this powerful guy would beat him and take the money. Especially if he knows this other man is powerless and would not be able to defend himself.

KEVIN: In that analogy, are you talking about the powerful man being America and the weak man being Iraq?

MOHAMMED: Yes, true. But you understand. (He nods and laughs.)

ANIS: As for the American war in Iraq, we find it strange that American officials talk about Kurds, Shiites and Sunnis. As ethnicity is concerned we are Kurds and Arabs. And as sects are concerned we are Sunnis and Shia. But either way, the word Arab is absent.

KEVIN: You are saying the word Arab is absent specifically for a reason?

ANIS: Definitely. They are trying ... to erase the identity of this area and destroy it. In this place the concept of

Israel would be more understandable and accepted because there is no identity of the region.

MOHAMMED: I have one comment also to say. They have always accused our people but we are Arabs. We have our own nationality. We have our heritage. We have customs that are shared among us, so why are we not unified? Taking in consideration America is many states, made up of many states and in each state they have a lot of citizens from all countries around the world. But they are gathered with nothing except for the American nationality...

WALAT: If the American forces in Iraq really came to complete the humanitarian tasks they've claimed and get the Iraqi people relieved of the tyrant Saddam we will support them 100 percent. They don't do what they've said and now we are really confused.

ABDUL KADER: It's a scheme to make a new Middle East, to divide these countries... This is the American scheme to control the whole world... It's bad enough that the Americans are not just in the Middle East. They are in Somalia and Sudan, other places...

ANIS: We find it really strange that they use the term terrorist to describe Arab people only. Yet terrorism is prevailing all over the world in Spain and Cambodia. And to deal with terrorism, it should be done on the social, economical, cultural level. Not by invading a country to fight certain groups of that country.

-Transcribed by Hot Zone Associate Producer Erin Green.

Note: Kevin Sites in the Hot Zone believes it is our obligation as journalists to present unheard voices and opinions. Doing so does not imply endorsement or agreement.


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Comments

Join the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.

1
If you wish to really know the reason for any country's foreign or domestic policies just follow the money trail! The entire middle east was set up in the countries we see today by the British, French, and American intelligence communities post-World War 2 /Post-Colonialism in order to install friendly rulers or "Royal Families" that would continue to provide low-cost oil and gas resources to the western world. These rulers have enriched themselves and squandered the capital they have received on themselves and military excesses and now the western world and the unrestrained middle east "population bomb" of the past 60 years is exploding in unsustainable price hikes and still not solving the unemployment, hunger and human needs in the middle east and across the world! We need sustainable growth, alternative energy sources, population control, diversification of industries beyond oil & gas, basic human rights and freedoms, self-suffiency in water and food production,and a creative middle class to solve the problems of the middle east and western world! Without applying these solutions we are headed into more wars, famines, droughts, plagues, and dictatorships both religious or military that we see today! To change the human heart, mind, body & actions is the toughest job we all have to do. No one religion, philosophy, ideology, or political system has all the answers but they all have something to contribute if we look for their truths!
Posted by bipvg71@sbcglobal.net on Fri, Jan 27, 2006 10:18 PM ET
2
Look up the Irgun and Stern gangs for some of the earlier terrorist organizations in the Middle East. And they were 'rewarded with a state'!
Posted by dirtyharriet0 on Fri, Jan 27, 2006 10:23 PM ET
3
"Kevin Sites in the Hot Zone believes it is our obligation as journalists to present unheard voices and opinions. Doing so does not imply endorsement or agreement." Very cool- more people need to be doing this! And to the person behind post #3, you are just straight up WRONG. You sound like a Nazi, man.
Posted by tobe_k99 on Fri, Jan 27, 2006 11:36 PM ET
4
I wish Kevin had asked the Syrians why they were so focused on a united Arab world. Does not the present one have the resources to pressure the US and Israel to reasonable resolutions on issues and provide for the unfortunate displaced Arab Palestinian people?
Posted by tisaroo on Sat, Jan 28, 2006 1:58 AM ET
5
Most people believe what they've been told, or read, or taught - by 'authority figures', and these kids are perfect examples. When you crush dissent and control education and the media you can then instill a view of the world that makes justifies the repression as 'necessary'. Uncensored access to the 'net would make that difficult, if not impossible...I'd bet that Syria doesn't allow it. For sure, China doesn't... Hey, Google! The next time you hear "Death to America", remember that they're including YOU. And you would richly deserve it....
Posted by capital_fool on Sat, Jan 28, 2006 6:24 AM ET
6
Keven, please remember that the voices you are hearing are living in a terror society, where they cannot really speak freely w/o fear of reprisal from state authorities and their agents, as you noted. Perhaps one should read what they say not at surface value but look for the truth they want to tell you..... anti-americanism and anti-isrealism is the orthodoxy so perhaps one will have to mask any truthful insight in such language so the state agents of repression will misunderstand/fail to see the real point one is trying to make.
Posted by batesc.rm on Sat, Jan 28, 2006 6:28 AM ET
7
I'm a Saudi citizen living in Saudi Arabia and I have just got done reading your comments. I have to say you're very ignorant to our ways and our customs and you have us completely misunderstood. Maybe we should call you guys terrorists because of the Oklahoma bombing? Do a few people define a people? You say that the youths views are controlled by the government, youre views are controlled by the media, you know only what you see in the media...
Posted by niggz_3 on Sat, Jan 28, 2006 6:39 AM ET
8
#2 Weak argument. They were not hell bent on genocide of a race. They were not glorifying "martyrs" and did not celebrate the death culture. They did not promote hatred and indoctrination in schools and have their 4 year olds wear bomb belts and guns. Come on week argument....
Posted by mrbindo on Sat, Jan 28, 2006 8:09 AM ET
9
When the quest for Power and Controll is the order of the day, Ignorance will Rule. As you see in the entire world. Ignorance allows us to believe that humans are "collateral damage" and are replacable like toys in a game. Until Human Life is respected all over the World, power and greed will continue to fuel the Ignorance we see in the World resulting in Hatred.
Posted by taylorcarlton@sbcglobal.net on Sat, Jan 28, 2006 8:56 AM ET
10
#9 - #2 is not a weak argument at all. Israel always adopts the moralistic tone that they will not deal with or reward terrorism, but their state was founded on terrorism and has maintained a policy of terror toward all the dispossessed refugees.
Posted by hotairrider on Sat, Jan 28, 2006 9:48 AM ET

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in memoriam

The Kevin Sites in the Hot Zone team dedicates this site to Marla Ruzicka, a fearless voice of compassion, who was killed in Iraq on April 16, 2005, while trying to lessen the suffering of others. For more information, see Civic Worldwide.