General

A Mother Mourns the Last Exodus

by Rami Aboud on March 29, 2016

I am the mourning mother, and who comforts her,” a deep rhyme echoes in the sky of Aleppo every year.

It is the heavenly voice of the Levantine singer Fairuz that awakens Christian neighborhoods of the city. Mothers are awake earlier than usual; they open the doors to their balconies and the contest begins on whose Fairuz is loudest. It is Good Friday, one of the most important days in the Aleppian Christian calendar. Shop keepers and hair dressers are packed; working in harmony with the rhymes that mix with the fragrance of the Bakhur incense. In the afternoon, tens of thousands of Christians join a pilgrimage to the nearly forty churches of Aleppo. The old town, however, gets the largest number of pilgrims. Farhat Square in al-Jdaydeh quarter puts on its special attire. The sounds of people, peddlers and boy scout brass bands are a symphony embedded in the memory of Aleppians. The four churches that overlook the square remind Christians of their ancient roots in the city. The medieval limestone holds the memory of surviving the Mongol slaughter when Timur Lank invaded Aleppo six hundred years ago.

read more
Rami AboudA Mother Mourns the Last Exodus

Aleppo’s Good Listeners – The Sammīʿah

by Clara Wenz on March 23, 2016

Lovers of Arab music know Aleppo by the name Em el-Tarab – the “mother of tarab.”  Tarab roughly translates as “ecstasy” and refers to a state of spiritual up-lifting and enchantment that is induced by this type of music.  Although today the term is often loosely applied to any type of traditional Arab music, Tarab actually refers to a particular musical culture that was popular from the 19th until the first half of the 20th century.

read more
Clara WenzAleppo’s Good Listeners – The Sammīʿah

Aleppo Weekly- March 7-16

by The Aleppo Project on March 17, 2016

LIFE IN THE CITY

Source: Aleppo General Management of Services

Photo: Aleppo General Management of Services

With electricity returning to many main electrical plants, residents reported that up to 140 district-level electricity posts were looted by pro-government militias in government-controlled western Aleppo.  Pro-government Zahraa News Network called on residents in western Aleppo not to pay newly announced electricity connection fees because the provincial director of electricity said his directorate would pay these costs.

Municipal water returned to several districts in western Aleppo, including Seif ad-Dauleh and New Aleppo. Water, which had been cut off for several months has still not reached Izaa, Sirian and Ashrafiyeh.

read more
The Aleppo ProjectAleppo Weekly- March 7-16

“I know firsthand what it’s like to lose a home…”

by The Aleppo Project on March 11, 2016
CARE initiative connects Refugees from WWII and the Syrian War through pen-friendship

“I know firsthand what it’s like to lose a home and become a refugee.” Carefully penned in tight script on a piece of ivory stationary, this was the opening of 87-year-old Helga Kissell’s handwritten letter. It was addressed to Sajeda, a 16-year-old Syrian refugee in Jordan who Kissell has never met.

read more
The Aleppo Project“I know firsthand what it’s like to lose a home…”

Aleppo Weekly February 29-March 6

by The Aleppo Project on March 7, 2016
Source: Amnesty International

Amnesty International

“Syrian and Russian forces have been deliberately attacking health facilities in flagrant violation of international humanitarian law. But what is truly egregious is that wiping out hospitals appears to have become part of their military strategy.” Tirana Hassan, Crisis Response Director at Amnesty International.

read more
The Aleppo ProjectAleppo Weekly February 29-March 6

ALEPPO WEEKLY FEBRUARY 22-28

by The Aleppo Project on March 3, 2016

A ceasefire deal in Syria based on the UN Security Council 2254 took effect on Saturday, February 27. Despite a significant decrease in the number of aerial attacks in Aleppo, violence continued.

read more
The Aleppo ProjectALEPPO WEEKLY FEBRUARY 22-28