Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Sombre Ecumenical Service For Four Children Killed In Damascus Attac

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Sombre Ecumenical Service For Four Children Killed In Damascus Attac

    SOMBRE ECUMENICAL SERVICE FOR FOUR CHILDREN KILLED IN DAMASCUS ATTACK

    [ Part 2.2: "Attached Text" ]

    AS ARABS AND CHRISTIANS GATHER TO PRAY, THE SERVICE IS PUNCTUATED BY
    SIRENS OF AMBULANCES CARRYING CASUALTIES OF THE DAILY MORTAR ATTACKS

    "A hymn, soft as a breeze, wends its way across the street from St
    Sarkis Armenian church, circles round the Roman columns of the gate,
    and rises over the heads of armed soldiers lolling beside a sandbagged
    position." Photograph: Louai Beshara/AFP/Getty Images

    "A hymn, soft as a breeze, wends its way across the street from St
    Sarkis Armenian church, circles round the Roman columns of the gate,
    and rises over the heads of armed soldiers lolling beside a sandbagged
    position." Photograph: Louai Beshara/AFP/Getty Images

    Michael Jansen

    * Topics: * News * World * Middle East

    Mon, Nov 18, 2013, 01:00

    First published:Mon, Nov 18, 2013, 01:00

    * * * *  

    A flurry of mortars falling in the embattled countryside and the Old
    City shakes Bab al-Sharqi, the Eastern Gate, putting to flight a flock
    of pigeons roosting on rooftops of houses and shops ranged around
    the small green park where youngsters in jeans and sweatshirts are
    taking the sun. A merchant standing in the door of his shop warns:
    "Don't stay in the street. It's very heavy today. Four children and
    a driver of their school bus were killed here a week ago."

    A hymn, soft as a breeze, wends its way across the street from St
    Sarkis Armenian church, circles round the Roman columns of the gate,
    and rises over the heads of armed soldiers lolling beside a sandbagged
    position.

    Mortars, bombs and bullets are commonplace here. This neighbourhood
    is mourning Venicyia Mikho (9) and Hovanis Autokanian, Majd Shehada
    and Munir Sehoun (6), students at the Reosaleh school.

    A Greek orthodox bishop in tall hat, a pectoral cross suspended from
    a heavy chain on his chest, strides into the church. The service is
    ecumenical, connecting the Arab and Armenian Christian communities
    living in this place of peril.

    They are being repeatedly targeted by radical Muslim fundamentalists
    seeking to topple the secular Syrian government. Another five children
    at St John of Damascus school died the same day as the four here.

    Full church The church is filled with men and women, most in black,
    as an Armenian cleric, in pointed black hood and purple robe presides
    over solemn Communion taken by a few, men in suits and women hurriedly
    covering their heads with scarves.

    The Armenian Catholic bishop comes down the aisle, fresh from the
    service at his church at Bab Touma, St Thomas' Gate.

    Mounted photographs of the dead children surrounded by paper roses
    are placed before the splendid dark red velvet curtain, a simple
    cross in gold and white embroidered at its centre, that veils the
    altar but is opened and closed during the service.

    The cleric reads out the names of the children in Armenian and Arabic
    and speaks of their common Syrian "watan", homeland, but when he
    intones the word, "salam," peace, mortars crash, loud, flat and
    metallic into the fields beyond the gate. The choir in the balcony
    strives mightily to sing above the din.

    We file out of the church into the hall to convey condolences to the
    parents of the children. Amira Hannah, a distraught distant relative of
    Venicyia, can hardly speak. "I blame the terrorists, the armed groups."

    Antonis Mikho, Venicyia's uncle who went to the hospital after the
    strike, chokes. "I cannot describe by words . . . I saw children
    completely covered in blood, mangled."

    Venicyia's little sister Vergine holds out her hand, too shy to speak,
    as several Muslim clerics, led by Ahmed Badreddin Hassoun, the grand
    mufti of Damascus in his wide white turban and robe, sweep into the
    crush of mourners. He speaks to each set of parents , sharing their
    grief and shock. His 18- year-old son died violently 13 months ago.

    Assassination threat Beyond the gate in the street, his heavily armed
    escort waits. He has been threatened with assassination. No one is
    safe here in Syria, great or small.

    Today's mortar toll in Damascus is eight: one slain outside Farouk
    school at Bab al-Sharqi, three at Bab Touma, two in Baghdad Street
    in the new city, and six near a bus garage in al-Abbassiyeen. None
    of these places is a military site.

    Ambulances carrying the dead and wounded shriek along the streets
    until stopped and stymied in dense, seemingly immovable traffic jams.

    http://www.irishtimes.com/news/world/middle-east/sombre-ecumenical-service-f
    or-four-children-killed-in-damascus-attack-1.1598023

Working...
X