Syrian woman survives 700 days of blockade

0

HOMS, Syria (AP) — Over the course of the 700-day
blockade, her world shrunk to her living room and her kitchen. She
survived by eating plants and reading books. She refused to look in the
mirror, because seeing her withered state might break her spirit.
Zeinat
Akhras, a 65-year-old pharmacist, still bears the effects of nearly two
years trapped in her home, surrounded by rebel fighters during the
government’s siege on the ancient quarters of the central Syrian city of
Homs. She’s still a wispy 38 kilograms (83 pounds), even after gaining
four kilograms (eight pounds) since the blockade ended in early May with
the fall of the rebels in the city.
"Every day, we said it will
end tomorrow," Akhras said in a recent interview with The Associated
Press in her home. "If we counted the number of days, we would have
given up."
Homs’ Old City, a series of crowded neighborhoods, was
under siege and bombardment in a campaign by government forces to starve
out rebels. Homs had been one of the first to rise up against the rule
of President Bashar Assad with protests in March 2011, turning the city
into a battleground as government forces cracked down and opponents took
up arms.
Government forces clamped the seal over the
opposition-held districts in early 2012. Most of the tens of thousands
of residents of the areas had already fled. With the siege dragging on,
rebels began deserting as hunger spread, and morale collapsed in late
2013. Finally, the last few dozen fighters were evacuated in May to
areas further north under a cease-fire, and government forces took full
control of the city.
Akhras and her two brothers were among the
few civilians who stayed until the end, in their multi-story family home
in the al-Maljaa quarter, decorated like many of the area’s homes in an
Arab medieval style of black-and-white geometric facades.
They
stayed because they feared rebels would seize the building — the fate of
other abandoned homes — or would loot the family pharmacy or clothing
shop.
In the beginning, the siege was tolerable because Akhras’
family had hoarded provisions for the sometimes long lockdowns during
previous gunbattles. They were well stocked with rice, beans and cracked
wheat and fuel.
As the blockade deepened, Akhras rarely left the building — perhaps six times during the 700 days, she
estimated.
"I used to come back sad from seeing the destruction. This area used to be full of life," she
said.
Life took on a routine.
Her
brothers Anas and Ayman went out to check on their businesses and kept
an eye on the nearby Mar Elia church. She cooked, kept the building
tidy. She rose at dawn and slept at sunset, since there was no
electricity. Over the course of the two years, at least 12 shells
slammed into their home, causing damage upstairs.
"It was bothersome, because we’d hear explosions day and night. You get used to it."
A
priest asked the Akhras siblings, who are Christians, to hide valuable
church property. So gradually, icons and boxes of centuries-old church
records piled up in their home. Then, their pharmacy and clothes shop
were looted in 2013, so the brothers brought home boxes of remaining
medicines and clothes to store as well.
As the siege dragged on,
rebel fighters showed up repeatedly demanding food and fuel, Akhras
said. They usually came in groups, ordering Akhras to sit in the living
room as they raided the kitchen and the upstairs apartments where food
was kept. One young rebel snatched a jam jar that "barely had a spoonful
left in it," she recalled.
Toward the end, the fighters didn’t
even bother to come with guns — they simply knocked on the door and
demanded food. Finally, in mid-2013, armed rebels surrounded the
building and came in, carrying away nearly the entire stock of food and
fuel. The siblings were left with only cracked wheat, which ran out by
January.
Still, she said her family was not harassed by the Sunni
rebels for being Christian — it appeared to be because her house was the
one with food.
Tragedy came in December. One of her brothers,
Anas, who was suffering from cancer, left in a U.N. organized evacuation
of hundreds of civilians from the Old City. He died 19 days later.
For the last months, Akhras kept her mind on daily tasks.
Without
fuel, her surviving brother Ayman collected firewood. With their
supplies down to only tea, oil and spices, Ayman also collected greens —
dandelion, chicory and mallow, plants so unnoticed by a city-dweller
that Akhras referred to them simply as "grass." Even those became so
scarce that Ayman dug for them in a church cemetery.
Akhras’
duties now included chopping wood to fuel the subya, a traditional
heater-oven. She learnt to soak, boil and spice the salvaged greens.
She
lost her appetite on the bitter, monotonous meals. She withered from
about 127 pounds (58 kilos) when the blockade began to 75 pounds (34
kilos), shrinking as her space grew smaller.
Akhras said she
didn’t want to upset herself by looking in the mirror. "I knew I had
lost weight. It was like I was on a diet I never wanted."
Only
after the siege was over did she finally see her transformation — she
saw herself on TV, in footage of the army’s entry. "I was smaller than a
child!" she exclaimed.
In free hours trapped in her home, Akhras
devoured books — the Bible and stories of saints, mostly. Neatly
arranged on her coffee table stood a row of large bullet casings.
Her
darkest days, she said, came after Anas died and when Ayman went to
sleep in another building they own to keep away looters. She was left
alone as rebels raided the building again, this time digging upstairs
for more medicine and clothing.
"I missed my siblings — we are six girls and six boys. I missed my mother who died at the end of
2011," she said.
Akhras
initially didn’t know on May 9 that the blockade had been lifted and
government troops had entered the neighborhood. She has no radio and did
not listen to the news. In a rare outing to the well across her
alleyway, she saw a man who told her, "The army is here."
Surprised,
Akhras found a soldier and asked him for bread — still unaware of how
skeletal she appeared. The soldier bought her two dozen pieces of pita
bread.
"I ate a whole piece of bread myself," she said, her eyes shining. "It tasted like
sweets."
_____
Associated Press writer Albert Aji contributed to this report in Homs, Syria.

No posts to display