Uprooted Palestinians are at the heart of the conflict in the M.E Palestinians uprooted by force of arms. Yet faced immense difficulties have survived, kept alive their history and culture, passed keys of family homes in occupied Palestine from one generation to the next.
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Sunday, 4 November 2012
Salafis in Syria: "'They will demand that we return to the seventh century'"
[Guardian]
" In
early summer, Abu Ismael, a six-year veteran ofal-Qaida, left the
insurgency still blazing in his homeland of Iraq and travelled to what he
believes is the start of the apocalypse.... "It was easy," he said, in
the sitting room of a house in the Syrian city of Aleppo. "The money was no
problem, neither was the weapon, or the motivation. This will be a fight against
the great enemy."....
"When the regime falls, all those who fought against
the Muslims will be my enemy, especially the
Shias," he said, reiterating a view held by some Sunni extremists
that Shia are their biggest foes....
"We want just what they got in Tunis and
Egypt," said Mahmoud Razak, a shop-keeper in the outer suburbs. "Freedom and the
chance to progress in life. But we thought it would take 19 days like it took
[in Egypt]. It's now 19 months. We didn't know it would be this
difficult."
To those now hosting Abu Ismael, the Iraqi jihadi embodies one of
the major problems. Though for the most part conservative and pious, the men of
this part of Aleppo refuse to see the crisis now consuming Syria in existential
terms. To them, this is still a fight for self-determination, not the forum for
an apocalyptic showdown with a preordained foe.
"What is this global jihad
that he talks about?" asked a town elder, Abu Abdullah, after the Iraqi had left
to prepare for his wedding. "We will be used as toys
by them, just as the Sunni communities were in Iraq. When they have had their
way with us they will demand that we return to the seventh century under the
blade of a sword." Bashar al-Assad has insisted from the start
that Syria was facing attack by "armed terrorist gangs", not a popular uprising
– though there is ample evidence of the army firing on mostly unarmed
demonstrators. But it has become clear that extremist Salafi or jihadi groups,
some linked to al-Qaida, are now a significant element of the armed
opposition.
Alongside fighters from al-Qaida in Iraq or Fatah al-Islam from
Lebanon is the mysterious Jabhat al-Nusra, which has claimed responsibility for
suicide bombings in Damascus and Aleppo. It is sympathetic to al-Qaida. Others
hail from Jordan, Libya and Algeria.
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