Frederik Pleitgen
Jan 24th, 2014
Damascus, Syria (CNN) —
An 80-foot-tall statue of
Jesus Christ stands atop of a hill overlooking the Syrian Christian town of
Saidnaya, about a 40-minute drive from Damascus. The statue is part of the
ancient Cherubim Monastery in the Qalamoun Mountains, a quiet, spiritual place
that’s very important to Syria’s Christians.
But these days, there is a gruesome sight at the feet
of the statue of Christ the savior. About 30 mutilated and charred bodies lie
in piles near a footpath that leads to the monastery. The dead are rebel
fighters who tried to storm the monastery but were killed as they advanced,
Syria’s government says.
The attack happened on January 19 and allegedly
involved hundreds of rebel fighters. The regime says that in all, 60 militants
were killed in the fighting.
“They came from another mountain a few miles away and
destroyed our front gate,” says a pro-Christian fighter who supports Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad and was involved in the battle for the mountaintop.
The Cherubim Monastery is not a civilian target these
days. Dozens of pro-Assad fighters, mostly Christians, as well as regular
Syrian army forces, are stationed there. The force has a tank, artillery
pieces, mortars and light weapons at its disposal. Many of the Christians in
Saidnaya say they are under threat from radical Islamists among rebel fighters battling
the Assad regime.
“Times are awful,” one man told CNN on a visit to the
monastery. “We always have to watch our backs and be ready for an attack. We
always carry a gun and a grenade because we could be attacked at any moment.”
Christians are a minority in Syria. They make up about
10% of the population. But Christianity has a rich history here. Jesus was
baptized in Syria, some of the earliest relics were found here, and the town of
Ma’aloula, also in the Qalamoun Mountains, is one of the last places where the
ancient Aramaic that Jesus spoke is still the main language.
But Ma’aloula was recently invaded by al Qaeda-linked
militants of the Jabat al Nusra rebels. Nuns were kidnapped and have yet to be
released. All this is stoking fears among Syria’s Christians that their
existence in Syria might be under threat.
“I don’t just think so. I am sure they are targeting
us because we are Christians … and we have had many attacks,” one fighter at
the Cherubim Monastery told CNN.
Many of Syria’s Christians support the Assad regime,
fearing that the end of the current government could lead to instability and an
Islamist power grab. In Saidnaya, Christian fighters work closely with the
Syrian military, and the opposition accuses them of shelling rebel-held towns in
the Qalamoun Mountains from the Cherubim Monastery.
Christian leaders in Syria say they are not taking
sides in the conflict, but just protecting themselves, their towns and
neighborhoods while the opposition has done little to assure them that Christianity
would have a place in Syria if the Assad regime were to fall.
http://www.pravmir.com/pro-government-forces-find-a-haven-at-syrian-towns-christian-monastery/
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