Very alarming as Jihadists who overran Syria’s ancient Christian town
of Maalula last week forced at least one person to convert to Islam at
gunpoint and executed another one, residents said Tuesday.
“They
arrived in our town at dawn on Wednesday and shouted ‘We are from the
Al-Nusra Front and have come to make lives miserable for the Crusaders,”
an Islamist term for Christians, said a still frightened woman who
identified herself as Marie.
She spoke to AFP in Damascus, where
she was attending the burial with hundreds of others of three Christians
from Maalula killed in last week’s fighting, the long line of mourners
led by a brass band playing dirges.
“Maalula is the wound of
Christ,” mourners chanted as they marched through the narrow streets of
the capital’s ancient Christian quarter, their voices nearly drowned out
by the rattle of automatic gunfire in honour of the dead.
Clashes
first erupted on Wednesday, when Al-Nusra Front fighters and other
Islamists attacked an army checkpoint at one entrance to the town.
The
advance raised fears of attacks on churches or Christians in the town,
but on Friday, the opposition Syrian National Coalition said rebels had
withdrawn.
Tuesday night, the Free Syrian
Army said rebels had withdrawn from Maalula to spare its people and
heritage, but only on the condition that the regime kept its forces out
as well.
“I saw people wearing Al-Nusra headbands who started shooting at crosses,” said Nasrallah.
One
of them “put a pistol to the head of my neighbour and forced him to
convert to Islam by obliging him to repeat ‘there is no God but God.’”
“Afterwards they joked, ‘he’s one of ours now.’”
Nasrallah,
who spent 42 years running a restaurant in the US state of Washington
named after his hometown, said he was devastated by what happened in
Maalula.
“I had a great dream. I came back to my country to
promote tourism. I built a guesthouse and spent $2,000 installing a
windmill to provide electricity in the town.
“My dream has gone up in smoke. Forty-two years of work for nothing,” he lamented.
But worse, for him, was what he said was the reaction of his Muslim neighbours when the town was seized by the rebels.
“Women
came out on their balconies shouting with joy, and children… did the
same. I discovered that our friendship was superficial.”
But Nasrallah’s sister, Antoinette, refused to condemn everyone.
“There
are refugees from Harasta and Douma (in the suburbs of Damascus) that
we have taken in, and they are spreading the poison of hatred,
especially among the younger generation,” she said.
The most
tragic story was that of Rasha, who recounted how the jihadists had
seized her fiance Atef, who belonged to the town’s militia, and brutally
murdered him.
“I rang his mobile phone and one of them answered,” she said.
“Good
morning, Rash rush,” the voice said, using her nickname. “We are from
the Free Syrian Army. Do you know your fiance was a member of the
shabiha (pro-regime militia) who was carrying weapons, and we have slit
his throat.”
The man told her Atef had been given the option of converting to Islam, but had refused.
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