The beautiful babies and children, wrapped in their white shrouds, laid in a row in the street in front of a mosque, while a voice on a loudspeaker asks people to come forward and identify the bodies. They seem to be sleeping, but they were choked to death with poison gas. Their lives had barely begun when they were cut short...After seeing those photos in every newspaper today, it's impossible to think about, or write about, anything else.
I keep remembering the day, seven years ago, when I entered the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus, worried by the anti-American slogans I'd seen in the marketplace, and found nothing but welcoming faces, families playing and worshipping and just hanging out together peacefully. And the proud parents who asked me to take photographs of them with their children--even though there was no way I could send them the photos. And in the courtyard outside, the gaggle of young women who insisted on posing for me. The little boy playing with his miniature car, and the little girl in a pink "Barbie" outfit.
I wonder where they are today--in a refugee camp or wrapped in a white shroud, lying in the street?
Remembering the children, I'm re-posting again the photos I took when their country was not enveloped in war.
Scenes from Damascus
The first and only time I saw Damascus --March 3, 2006--I was fascinated with the capital and vowed to go back. The oldest continuously inhabited city in the world, Damascus is a mind-boggling mixture of Roman ruins, living Bible history and Muslim mosques.
I
came as part of a group of about ten on a shore excursion from a small
cruise ship. Our guide took us to the old center of the city to see the
Umayyad Mosque—one of the largest and oldest mosques in the world, and
the fourth-holiest place in Islam.
We walked through the covered bazaar to get there, but most of the shops were closed because it was a Friday. I was getting a little nervous because I was told that the banners hanging overhead were full of anti-American rhetoric.
Here is a photograph that shows the mixture of Roman ruins and one of the three minarets of the Mosque-- all in the same place.
Before
entering, the women in the group had to put on “special clothes”—a very
unappealing heavy gray djellaba (Well, that’s what they call it in
Morocco.) I’m the one on the left in the sun glasses below. You can see that
the man in the red shirt didn’t have to change into more solemn
clothing.
The Umayyad Mosque is unbelievably large and rich in its mosaics and tiles and gilded decorations. Everything that looks gold is gold, we learned. In the time of its full glory, the mosque had the largest golden mosaic in the world.
We
entered the immense outer courtyard and found the families inside just
hanging out-- children playing, old men sleeping, people washing their
hands before prayers.
Everyone regarded us with friendly curiosity, despite the anti-American slogans in the marketplace. This man asked me to take a photo of him and his three children.
Then we
entered the vast covered prayer hall, and again, everything was
casual. A small white chapel with green windows is in the center,
reportedly holding the head of John the Baptist. In the fourth century,
after it housed a Roman temple to Jupiter, this site held a church to
John the Baptist and was an important pilgrimage destination for
Christians in the Byzantine era. Then the building was shared by Muslim
and Christians alike. But when the present mosque was built between 706
and 715, the church was demolished.
But
now, at the little chapel with the green windows, I was surprised to
see Muslims praying and slipping money into it, presumably to honor John
the Baptist. (And one of the minarets in the Umayyad Mosque is called
the Minaret of Jesus because of a Muslim tradition that, on the day of
judgment, this is where Jesus will appear.)
After
we admired the golden mosaics in the interior, we moved on to a smaller
outdoor courtyard with fountains where families were enjoying the fine
weather.
These
young women came over and asked me to photograph them, and of course I
did, although we had no language in common and I had no way of sending
the photos back to them.
This little boy was playing with his miniature car on the cover of a well.
And
I was amused to see that the little girl with these black-clad women
was dressed in a pink outfit covered with the word "Barbie".
Now,
when I read the reports nearly every day of massacres, suicide bombs,
streets lined with the dead in Syria, including in Damascus—thousands
killed so far and so many of them children—I remember the families I saw
in the Mosque, all so hopeful and proud of their children, and I pray
that the current bloodshed can be stopped before it claims any more
innocent lives.
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