It was scheduled to start over a week ago. Then last Wednesday. Now tomorrow . When round three of the…
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It was scheduled to start over a week ago. Then last Wednesday. Now tomorrow . When round three of the…
Continue reading →The chaotic, underfunded battle against the Islamic State For two months in the summer of 1962, Dana Adams Schmidt, a…
Continue reading →Mayor Rahm Emanuel is on the ropes in a city where one party has monopolised power longer than the Communists…
Continue reading →Donald J. Trump Photo credit: Adapted by WhoWhatWhy from Gage Skidmore / Flickr (CC BY-SA 2.0) Relax, America. Donald Trump…
Continue reading →A French news cameraman burst into the bar of Beirut’s Commodore Hotel, where his colleagues gathered most evenings, on November…
Continue reading →Folk memories endure, mothers’ and grandmothers’ sagas trumping documents in neglected archives. What will Syria’s youth, when they are old,…
Continue reading →Photo credit: Anatoly Terentiev / Wikimedia Editor’s Note: Below, longtime Middle East correspondent Charles Glass offers his droll, insightful and…
Continue reading →By the time the Arab-Israeli War of 1948 ended, Israeli forces had expelled about 700,000 Palestinian Arabs from their homes.…
Continue reading →The Obama administration and its faithful media spokesmen are writing Syrian president Bashar al-Assad’s obituary. They point to the Syrian…
Continue reading →Garo Manjikian is a strongly built farmer with a degree in chemistry and a flourishing moustache like those in sepia photographs of Armenian gentlemen from the late Ottoman era. On the evening of 20 March last year, he was having dinner at George’s Restaurant in the woods where Syria’s Mediterranean shore adjoins Turkey’s. At his restaurant table, he told me, were five of his friends and their families. Their discussion turned to the conflict, entering its fourth year, to unseat Syrian president Bashar al-Assad. ‘The mayor of Kessab was with us. We asked him about the situation,’ Manjikian recalled. ‘He was very quiet.’
Kessab is the only Armenian town in Syria, although other Syrian villages and cities have Armenian minorities. Perched on a hillside within sight of the Turkish frontier, its 2,000-plus inhabitants also include about five hundred Alawite Muslims and Arab Christians. In the summer, tens of thousands of tourists used to fill its hotels and guest houses to bursting. The beaches, pine forests and fruit orchards hosted camps for Armenian Boy Scouts, as well as hikers, picnickers and Saudis seeking respite from stifling desert heat. In addition to the three churches for the Armenian Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant congregations, a large, modern mosque occupies a prominent position.
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