Home Foreign Young Syrians take to smoking and drinking to revive their lives

Young Syrians take to smoking and drinking to revive their lives

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Damascus  –  Young Syrians sit on a garden wall smoking, drinking beer or soft drinks, and talking about anything, but the raging war.

Close by is a military checkpoint in Damascus’s Old City, just a mile from the battered frontline between government and rebel-held territory.

It is a week night, but the Damascenes are keen to head out to a strip of new bars that have opened in the last few months, some to socialise and others to work in the venues.

The revival of activity in this once-vibrant quarter is part of efforts to project an air of normality in the Syrian capital.

It includes the five-year-old war that has killed more than 250,000 people and created five million refugees.
To the East and Southwest, opposition-held Ghouta remains under blockade and bombardment by government forces.

In Yarmouk Palestinian refugee camp to the South, residents have recently faced starvation as rival jihadist groups Al Qaeda and Islamic State battle for control.

Shells were hitting Damascus’s city centre late last year, including near Bab Sharqi gate.

Now, people smoke water pipes outside Pub Sharqi, a play on words that reads the same in Arabic or watch football at noisier bar “80’s” next door.

“This is something you certainly would not see two years ago, and it has picked up even more recently,’’ said Nicolas Rahal, a 23-year-old graphic designer.

According to Rahal, the number of people going out has grown as venues have opened one after the other and employed more people.

“I can now go to this pub or that nightclub. Places opened and people came.’’

Rahal also wants to stay in spite of his experiences of conflict. “More than once, near my house, I have seen people get blown apart by shells,” he said.

He was arrested for protesting in 2011, near the start of the uprising that shifted into a full-scale civil war, and his political views have cost him friendships.

Face book arguments have turned into physical fights on the streets, Rahal said.

“In the early days of the crisis, I had to hang out with other people. I know two brothers who do not talk to each other anymore.’

One factor might push him to leave, however.

“I have not done military service. It could happen, I could get called up, and you have no idea where they will send you or how long you will be there.

“I have friends and relatives in the army, Aleppo, Palmyra, for example, if they call me up, I will leave the country. I could try and find work in Beirut,’’ Rahal noted.

The war is still felt inside the capital as soldiers carrying assault rifles sweep vehicles for bombs at army roadblocks, causing traffic jams throughout the city, while distant artillery fire can sometimes be heard.

Young people in the city are apprehensive about the future.

They have lost loved ones to violence and displacement, rampant inflation is making life impossibly expensive, and some young men are anxious to avoid army enlistment.

But encouraged by improved security after Russia’s intervention strengthened the government’s position and a partial truce in February brought some calm as these Damascus residents want to enjoy life where possible.

“People are tired of war and just want to live a normal life, so they go out, they socialise,” said bartender Dana Daqqaq, a 21-year-old who works at night.

“In the last few months, it is not just at the weekends, it is every day. Places are crammed. You practically see a cross-section of society coming out. I stayed here.’’

Daqqaq said bar life was more than just a way to forget the war, but all the revelers had traumatic personal stories.

“Family on my dad’s side serving in the army was killed under siege in Homs,” said Dana Ibrahim, 21, sitting at the same bar as Rahal.

“My mum and four sisters live close to the military airport in Mezze.’’

The air base in Western Damascus has come under shellfire and is next to the suburb of Daraya, which is besieged by the government side.

“At times there has been bombing every day. Once a rocket hit right next to the house, I was out of town and didn’t hear any news for two days. I thought my family was hit,” she said.

Ibrahim had thought of leaving, like many friends who have fled for Europe or neighboring countries, but now able to socialise, she would rather stay put.

“When I started to see life I stayed here. I don’t want to be a refugee,” she added.

Across the frontlines, young residents have even less choice.

Maher Abu Jaafar, a 23-year-old Agricultural Engineering student living in Western Ghouta, said escalating violence and a siege by government forces mean he cannot leave the town.

“At the moment, I work at a street stall selling household items. My family is big, we can’t guarantee getting essential supplies.

“And things are getting worse because of the cost of living,” he said.

Inflation has seen the Syrian pound lose 90 per cent of its value since 2011.

In the Old City bar, Rahal tossed notes worth 550 Syrian pounds, or just over one dollar onto the table.

“The situation has improved perhaps a bit for work, but the economic situation is bad. Things are expensive, living standards have fallen,” he said.
At night, generators were outside homes, while blocks are plunged into darkness after perhaps half a day with electricity.

Daqqaq, the bartender, said a packet of cheap cigarettes which cost 250 Syrian pounds a few months ago now costs 450.

Tonight, though, she and her friends and customers are preoccupied not with the war, the economy or thoughts of migration, they want to drink, listen to the Levantine-Western fusion of “Sham step” and enjoy life. (Reuters/NAN)

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