The Citizen (Gauteng)

Little touches spell home for this refugee

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Atme – Among the olive trees in northweste­rn Syria, displaced teenager Wissam Diab plucks an oud, an Arabic stringed instrument, outside his new home, a tent surrounded by luscious plants.

Inside, there are more tumbling indoor plants and a collection of tiny cacti, as well as dozens of books lined up on a cloth-covered table from authors such as Fyodor Dostoyevsk­y, Haruki Murakami and Egypt’s celebrated Naguib Mahfouz, the only Arab to win the Nobel Prize for Literature.

Syria’s war forced the Diab family to flee their village of Kafr Zita in central Hama province, but when Wissam, 19, moved into a tent in northweste­rn Syria he decided to recreate his childhood home.

“It’s been four years, and we haven’t been able to find a house or go back home,” said the young man with green eyes and shoulder-length brown hair. “What I’ve done with the tent is me trying to settle down.”

And settle down he did in his own tent in an olive grove in the area of Atme, in Idlib province near the Turkish border, while his parents and two sisters have a separate tent next door.

A patterned stone path leads up to the front door and wooden sticks top the canvas roof.

All around, plants and flowering shrubs thrive in large plastic pots, or in neat rows in the soil of his front garden.

Indoors, he has hung a curtain along the tarpaulin wall and made a small living room with a floor-level sofa.

An ornate red carpet pads out his tent underfoot.

“Our home was like this. We had a garden, we had a library, we had a lot of flowers,” he said. It “was like this, but much, much better”.

Syria’s war has killed more than 380 000 people and displaced millions since starting in 2011.

In Idlib, a major rebel bastion, about half of the three million inhabitant­s live in tents or shelters, many after losing their homes in parts of the country now back under government control.

In October 2016, Diab and his family were forced to flee as regime aircraft bombarded the surroundin­g area in a bloody campaign that killed his only brother.

He is teaching himself to play the oud via tutorials on YouTube.

The young Syrian says he fears it will be some time before anybody can go home.

“I know we will be here for a while,” he said. –

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