Between Utopia and Dystopia: Sectarianization through Revolution and War in Syrian Refugee Narratives
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“We had the chance to breathe freedom, and that was a wonderful feeling. I felt we were born again!”“Sectarianism is in the blood of Syria. It’s not positive or negative, but it’s a reality.”“[I]t came to a point where everyone knew that, ok, now it is eternal, it will all go to hell!”
2. Methodological Reflections
Narration allows us to examine the diverse discursive spaces and forms within which conflict is mediated, communicated, experienced, imagined and lived, while not losing sight of the fact that the term narration itself implies subjectivity and agency, if not a provisional and partial reconstruction of lives and histories.
3. Sectarianism and Syria—Theoretical Approaches
3.1. From Sectarianism to Sectarianization
While it is true that religious identities are more salient in the politics of the Middle East than before, it is also true that state actors have politicized these identities in pursuit of political gain. The politics of authoritarian regimes is the key context for understanding this problem
top-down (state-generated); bottom-up (socially generated); outside-in (fueled by regional forces); and inside-out (the spread of Syria’s conflict into neighboring states).
3.2. Syria’s Master Narrative Landscape
4. Tracing Sectarianization: Syrian Refugee Narratives on the Revolution and Emerging War
4.1. Calling for Freedom: Narratives of Hope
My feeling, or the feeling of the majority of the ordinary people, was a sense of something called freedom. We had the chance to breathe freedom, and that was a wonderful feeling. I felt we were born again!
4.2. Breaking the Silence: Narratives of Fear
4.3. The Haunting of Hama: Narratives of Victimization
4.4. Encountering the Religious Other: Narratives of Hate and Mistrust
After a while, we couldn’t accept each other (…). The Alawis were sitting together, they would not speak to anyone else, and the Sunnis the same, the Christians the same. We were trying to avoid each other. We actually became afraid of each other. (…) The situation in Syria was such that you couldn’t trust your brother, so it was very difficult, and we were all separated in very small groups. It was much better to stay alone than expressing your feelings to anyone because no one could be trusted.
There were many Sunnis who were fighting with the regime and who were killing us. But I can say that more than 90% were Alawites and Shiites, so I feel until now that I hate them. I can’t forgive them.
Before the war, and especially in the place where I was living, there were strong tribal relationships. But after the war, the youth, in particular, joined different groups, causing a difference in opinions and confrontations. Once they were friends and shared strong relations, before splitting up and going with one group or another.
We didn’t want to be judged as one of them. So we tried to avoid that or be neutral so that we didn’t get in conflict with any of them. That was until the time of ISIL. They wouldn’t even give you a choice to remain neutral.
we did not think that we are Christians and they are Muslims. We were together, celebrating everything together, sharing life, supporting each other. Most of the Muslims were very good to us. It was a nice and peaceful life.
At the beginning of the war, do you know what they called out in the mosques? ‘Christians to Beirut and Alawites to the tomb’! While walking around, strict Muslims would tell you things like ‘Huh, still here? Why are you not in Beirut?’. And to the Alawites: ‘Ah, you’re still alive, why are you not dead?’. So what kind of emotions will you get when you hear things like this? In your own country!
We heard that we are not welcome in this place anymore and that we are few people and need to get out. You’ll feel that this is not hating, but it is something that breaks your soul. And this soul is my place; it’s my country and the place where my parents grew up. (…) They planned this for my country, now I am not important, I have to go, and we did leave in the end. They wanted most of the Christians to go, and we went, but why? Because it is not our war, it is not our game; we would have lost. Because in the end, who will win?
The government protects us in Syria. In many places that are not under the government, they don’t respect Christians. If they know I’m Christian they can kill me. I’m not talking about Sunni terrorists like Daesh [ISIL] or al-Qaida, no, we talk about normal people. If they see my ID, they’d see my name is Christian. Maybe they need money and take my papers, or maybe they kill me.
When we got out from the Mosque one evening, some Alawites came up to us and said ‘We will kill you, we will fuck your sisters and mothers, you Sunni dogs!’ And then they killed him, and I watched him die.
They hated the Sunni-Muslims (…) but we leave all matters to Allah. If I weren’t a believer during the war, I would have gone crazy. But I have a strong belief, and Allah is the one that made me patient.
Our main goal is to preserve this narrative. The fragmentation [of the Syrian people] is a reality now, but we are maintaining the narrative because it can so easily be forgotten, by the general public, even by Syrians themselves, or by the politicians or the historians.
[r]ather than assume sectarianism to be a fixed, stable reality that floats above history, it is far more important to locate and identify—to historicize—each so-called ‘sectarian’ event, moment, structure, identification, and discourse in its particular context
5. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | Citations from conversations with Syrian refugees taking part in this study. |
2 | |
3 | Trying to reflect on the multi-ethnic and religiously diverse mosaic of Syrian refugees, I have selected a broad sample of voices from people with varying degrees of attachment to their religious and/or ethnic identity backgrounds. Different types of qualitative sampling methodologies were employed in this process. All research subjects have been informed of and given consent to the research project and its ethical standards prior to participation. Due to issues of political and ethno-religious sensitivity, I have chosen to anonymize the participants by applying fictitious names. The research’s ethical standards, ensuring anonymity and confidentiality for research participants, have been approved by the Norwegian National Research Ethics Committees prior to the interviews (cf. https://etikkom.no/en/). |
4 | See among others: Berti and Paris 2014; Farouk-Alli 2014; Browne 2015; Ghobadzdeh and Akbarzadeh 2015; Phillips 2015; Atassi 2015; Stolleis 2015; Leenders 2016; Tomass 2016; Hashemi and Postel 2017; Gaiser 2017; Pinto 2017; Wehrey 2017; Wimmen 2017; Dixon 2017; Haddad 2017; Soage 2017; Makdisi 2017; Balanche 2018. |
5 | The Oxford English Dictionaries, for example, offer the following very basic definition of sectarianism: “Excessive attachment to a particular sect or party, especially in religion”. https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/sectarianism. |
6 | Fanar Haddad has identified five principal ways in which the terminology is used academically: (1) An expansive approach which subsumes sectarian expressions under an all-inclusive umbrella without clarifications or boundaries; (2) A “sect-centricity” approach with an array of different meanings of ‘sect’; (3) A political approach that solely focuses on the institutionalization of sectarian identities in political systems; (4) A multi-faceted and typological approach avoiding singular definitions and (5) An approach which makes sectarianism equivalent to racism. (Haddad 2017, pp. 102–3). |
7 | The ethno-religious composition of Syria’s demography is in itself a contested issue and numbers vary in different surveys. One pre-war (2009) estimation places the total Syrian population to approximately 21 million people, out of which 74% were Sunni Muslims, 16% other Muslims (including Alawites, Shiites, Ismailis and Druze) and 10% Christians of various denominations. Cf. http://www.heritageforpeace.org/syria-country-information/geography/. |
8 | The platform is a collaboration between Open Source Center, Monitor 360 and other partners across the US Government and it gives the following definition of master narratives: “Master narratives are the historically grounded stories that reflect a community’s identity and experiences, or explain its hopes, aspirations, and concerns. These narratives help groups understand who they are and where they come from, and how to make sense of unfolding developments around them”. Cf. Country Report on Syria (Master Narrative Platform 2012, p. 6) accessible online: https://info.publicintelligence.net/OSC-SyriaMasterNarratives.pdf. |
9 | There are more recent reports of interest, such as Sectarianism in Syria (The Day After (TDA) 2016), a survey study conducted by the organization The Day After. Another is the compilation Playing the Sectarian Card, edited by Frederike Stolleis (2015), in which space is given to identities and affiliations from different minority perspectives. |
10 | In its Islamic usage, the term ‘fitna’ refers to the trials and uprisings that occurred within the early Muslim community during the seventh century, the result of which were multiple civil wars and the final religious schism between Sunnites and Shi’ites. |
11 | |
12 | |
13 | |
14 | Cf. Global Security report: “A range of techniques are used by the security services to co-opt or intimidate Syrians. These techniques, at the most accommodating end of the spectrum, include offers of remunerative, prestigious positions and other rewards. At the opposite end they routinely involve coercive measures such as travel bans, surveillance and harassment of both individuals and family members, the threat of detention (without charge), interrogation, and imprisonment after lengthy trials. It is often in the middle range, between enticements and threats, that the Syrian security services are at their most effective, curbing dissent, obliging people to report on their friends and colleagues, and convincing them sometimes to present regime arguments justifying policies or decisions.” https://www.globalsecurity.org/intell/world/syria/intro.htm. See also (al-Haj Saleh 2017, pp. 236–37). |
15 | Cf. “About Saydnaya”, Amnesty International: https://saydnaya.amnesty.org/en/saydnaya.html. |
16 | An emerging body of testimonial writings and literary memoirs published by Syrians in exile (Halasa et al. 2014; Yazbek 2016; Malek 2017; al-Haj Saleh 2017; Eid 2018; Abouzeid 2018), themselves a result of breaking with the imposed and self-censored regulations for public speech, attest to this collectively internalized fear of speaking up and voicing anything that could infringe upon the officially sanctioned discourse. |
17 | See also Stolleis (2015, p. 8); Worren (2007); Salamandra (2013); Haddad (2017); Hindy and Ghaddar (2017). According to one activist interviewed by Hindy and Ghaddar (2017), now a refugee in Lebanon, “the dictatorship forbade us from expressing our primary identities”. Throughout the whole of Syria’s modern history, he asserts, “the regime and the Ba’ath party had held a monopoly over discussions of identity”, quelling the very diversity upon which the Syrian society historically rested. |
18 | |
19 | Disputes regarding the weight of religion in the Syrian society goes back to 1973 when Islamists, represented by the Muslim Brotherhood, demanded that the Syrian constitution included a stricter Islamic jurisprudence: “Assad’s attempt to enact a constitution that did not stipulate sharia as the source of law sparked riots. He was forced to reinstate the charter’s sharia roots, including an article mandating that the head of the state has to be Muslim” (Balanche 2018, p. 117). |
20 | Pinto explains that as mosques traditionally have been the only spaces allowed for public gatherings, they were also appropriated by the protesters as natural “spaces they could gather and organize out of sight of the security forces” (Pinto 2017, p. 126). |
21 | This history goes back to the medieval times where the minority Nusayri-sect (named after its founder Ibn Nusayr in the 9th century) was subject to numerous religious fatwas (judgements) and were persecuted on basis of apostasy (Tomass 2016, p. 78). According to Shi’a scholar Heinz Halm (2004), modern criticism of the Assad regime “use anti-Nusayri religious slogans in order to bring the head of the state into disrepute as a non-Muslim and a heretic, while al-Asad tried to counter this by public participation at prayers in the mosque. In order to dispel talk of heresy the Nusayris have from the beginning of the present century called themselves ‘Alawis’ (‘Alawiyyun), i.e., ‘Ali supporters of Shi’ites, and thus have attempted to get themselves recognized (…) within the Islamic community” (Halm 2004, p. 157). |
22 | |
23 | These links to the regime have been subject to grave generalizations and misunderstandings, as shown in the study by Worren: “In the political conflicts of Syria, Alawis feel they are hated by ‘The Other’ because of the mistakes of the regime. It is a myth, they say, that we gain in any way from a shared religious background. Instead, the nepotism so visible is about personal relations with powerful families, both Sunni, Christian and Alawi, and not sect. Some, therefore, present their shared background as a curse rather than a blessing” (Worren 2007, p. 98). |
24 | Activist Kassem Eid in his autobiography My Country. A Syrian Memoir (Eid 2018, p. 128) describes an example of such a transgenerational trauma and links it to the current Syrian civil war: “Perhaps it was out of frustration that we, the youth of Syria, had dared to hope and dream of a better future. Our parents had betrayed us by sleepwalking through their whole lives. They should have known after the Hama massacre of 1982 that the Assad family was too brutal to be allowed to hold power for another generation. They should have screamed their lungs out, fought tooth and nail, and struggled with all of their force after seeing that brutality the Assad regime was capable of. Instead, they kept silent as Hafez al-Assad set in motion a murderous plan to annihilate his future opponent. We, the youth of Syria, turned out to be those future opponents—and because our parents’ generation kept silent, we paid a price in blood.” |
25 | |
26 | See also an example from a video of a young blindfolded boy forced to violate the Muslim testimony of faith (Shahada) by pledging faith to Bashar al-Assad as his God: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SN1O5nhi7-g. |
27 | This story of Said is corroborated by many other sources, the latest of which is a UN report about how Syrian government forces and allied militias have used rape and sexual assaults as a weapon of war. Cf. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-warcrimes-sexual/thousands-of-women-men-children-raped-in-syrias-war-u-n-report-idUSKCN1GR1PZ. |
28 | According to some sources, however, anti-minority slogans such as this was allegedly part of the Syrian state’s propaganda and spread in order to scare the minorities into siding with the regime (Stolleis 2015; Bandak 2015). |
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Løland, I. Between Utopia and Dystopia: Sectarianization through Revolution and War in Syrian Refugee Narratives. Religions 2019, 10, 188. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10030188
Løland I. Between Utopia and Dystopia: Sectarianization through Revolution and War in Syrian Refugee Narratives. Religions. 2019; 10(3):188. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10030188
Chicago/Turabian StyleLøland, Ingrid. 2019. "Between Utopia and Dystopia: Sectarianization through Revolution and War in Syrian Refugee Narratives" Religions 10, no. 3: 188. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10030188
APA StyleLøland, I. (2019). Between Utopia and Dystopia: Sectarianization through Revolution and War in Syrian Refugee Narratives. Religions, 10(3), 188. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10030188