Politics

Winnipegger who fled Syria says toppling of Assad regime brings feelings ‘beyond happiness’

News of the Assad regime’s fall in Syria brought Winnipeggers to tears and reignited their hopes for the country.

Tens of thousands of Syrians are celebrating the fall of President Bashar al-Assad, after rebels said they entered the city and toppled the longtime ruler. The rebel group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham and allied factions launched a lightning offensive on Nov. 27.

“We want the world to know it’s finally the time to see a free Syria, and to say we are willing to open our hearts, our minds, everything to all neighbours, to the world to build a new country. It’s so exciting,” Maysoun Darweesh said.

“It’s beyond happiness. It’s beyond excitement. Every time I talk about it I feel like I want to cry. It’s so amazing.”

Darweesh, who is the executive director of the Kurdish Initiative for Refugees in Winnipeg, grew up in Latakia, a city on Syria’s west coast that lies along the Mediterranean Sea. She fled her home country in 2008 and spent a few years in China before arriving in Canada in December 2012.

She still has family in Latakia, including a brother, aunts and uncles. Darweesh, 46, says she knows more about the political change in Syria than they do.

“When I contact them it’s a mix of fear, excitement.… They know for sure it’s a new era but they are waiting,” she said.

Maysoun Darweesh, originally from Syria, is the executive director of Kurdish Initiative for refugees. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

After enduring 13 years of civil war, Syrians stormed the presidential palace in Damascus, tearing up portraits of the toppled president on Sunday. Assad has fled to Moscow, according to Russian state media.

Darweesh understands change will not happen overnight, and it might take several years.

She wants to remind people of the importance of her homeland, and hopes the Canadian government — and governments of other nations — will provide support to Syria and invest in rebuilding it for the future.

“The whole world should really invest in Syria. We cannot deny the importance of Syria as a country geographically, politically. Syria is an important geopolitical country,” she said.

She would like to see a government that represents all Syrians, one that will form a new constitution that secures justice and equality for all of its citizens.

“We don’t want to see a dictatorship again. We don’t want to see atrocities again,” Darweesh said.

‘Many times we lost that hope’

Like Darweesh, Shler Ali fled Syria more than a decade ago.

The co-owner of Daanook, a restaurant in the Exchange District that serves Syrian-inspired cuisine, grew up in the northeastern city of Qamishli, which borders neighbouring Turkey, but spent the last 11 years of her time in Syria in Damascus.

Woman sits at a table behind a laptop.
Shler Ali is from the northeast region of Syria. She is thrilled by the news that the Assad regime has been toppled. (Submitted by Shler Ali)

Ali left her home in June 2012 and was out of the country the following month, eventually arriving in Canada in June 2016. She never thought she’d have the chance to return to Syria.

“Sometimes we had hope. Many times also we lost that hope. I never felt that I can go back to Damascus and walk there. I was so worried that this dream won’t happen, but now it will happen, and for sure I will be able to back and walk.

“I know it won’t be perfect and heaven from the first moment. We all know that but we’re all going to work to build our communities to re-integrate people,” Ali said.

Rebel fighters embrace and celebrate in a public square.
Fighters celebrate in Damascus’ Omeyyad mosque on Sunday after Islamist-led rebels declared that they have taken the Syrian capital in a lightning offensive, sending President Bashar al-Assad fleeing. (Ramil al Sayed/AFP/Getty Images)

She has been in contact with several friends throughout Syria, and says some of them also have a difficult time believing that the Assad regime is over.

“I called people after Assad was gone and they couldn’t believe it. They were scared that I was telling them over the phone. I said, ‘wake up, he’s gone, we’re free. You can say it,'” Ali said.

She too knows that change is not imminent and that the rebuilding of Syrian society will require joint contributions over time from inside and outside the country. But Ali wants her Syrian friends to soak in this moment of an Assad-free country.

“There are a lot of reforms that are needed. There should be a lot of things to be done in Syria. We will need lots of help, but also we give ourselves permission to just be happy for a few days,” she said.

“I think we’re all happy. I don’t think there is any Syrian who is not happy with what is going on now.”

A celebratory gathering is being held on the steps of the provincial legislature on Sunday afternoon.

WATCH | Syrian militant group overthrows the Assad regime: 

Syrian rebel forces led by Islamist militant group Hayat Tahir al-Sham

The largest insurgent group in Syria, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS, has its origins in al-Qaeda and it’s considered a terrorist organization by Canada. Its leader Abu Mohammed al-Golani spoke to a crowd at Ummayad Mosque in Damascus, after Syrian rebels announced that they had ousted President Bashar al-Assad.


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