Clarissa Ward and Salma Abdelaziz spent six days in rebel-held Syria working with filmmaker Bilal Abdul Kareem.
Rebel-held Syria (CNN)There's
a sickening moment between hearing the planes and waiting for them to
drop their payload. A pit forms in your stomach. You know you could die,
but you also know there's no way to divine where the strike will hit.
On
a hill overlooking Ariha, our guard Abu Youssef seems to have located
the jet in the sky and is following it with his eyes. "Russian planes,"
he says.
Suddenly he ducks. The sound of the explosion rings out with a "thwoomp."
Where
the strike hit, there are other sounds. Sirens. People screaming for
help. Rescue workers shouting for an ambulance. A woman wailing. Metal
scraping against rubble as volunteers furiously try to dig people out of
the debris. Survivors in this battered Syrian town cursing President Bashar al-Assad and his Russian supporters.
At
the nearest hospital, some 10 miles away, still more sounds. Men
arguing as they try to delicately move a gravely injured boy from the
back of a car. Doctors shouting at people to get back. A family member
weeping softly.
To
a visitor, there is something dizzyingly surreal about it. The sounds
stay with you as long as the sights. But these are the sounds of
everyday life in northern Syria.
We had been on the ground for less than 24 hours when the airstrikes hit. Now, five years into this war, the attacks against areas controlled by rebels are relentless, particularly from the air.
It began with crudely made barrel bombs pushed, seemingly haphazardly, out of the back of Syrian Air Force helicopters. Then, last September, Russia joined the fight and the airstrikes -- thousands of them -- became even more powerful and punishing.
Russia says it is only targeting "terrorists" -- fighters with ISIS and the al Qaeda affiliate Jabhat al-Nusra. But the strike we saw hit a fruit market.
Ordinary people out buying fruit. One minute they were arguing about the price of oranges. The next minute they were dead.
Monitoring groups say nearly 2,000 civilians have been killed since the Russian intervention began.
"Every day, I struggle with whether to send my daughter to school," the young woman tells me.
We're
sitting on cushions on the floor of a house in Maarat al-Numan, a town
ravaged by airstrikes in the past few months. Her 6-year-old daughter
stands next to her, shyly eyeing these foreign visitors as she chews her
hair.
"Of course I want her to have
an education, but every time she leaves the house there's always a
chance ..." Her voice trails off. I don't finish the sentence for her.
There's always a chance she won't come back. There's always a chance she
will be killed. There's always a chance she will get maimed in a
strike.
Several Syrians have told me
that you don't hear the planes if you get hit, you only hear them if
you're not the target. It seems to provide some comfort -- at least you
don't know you are going to die in the moments before it happens. I
don't share this thought with the young woman. I nod silently.
In
Syria now, there are lots of silences. Much remains unsaid. Questions
are generally greeted with suspicion. A culture of fear permeates the
place.
Almost no Western journalists have visited this part of the country in over a year. Turkey has all but sealed the border into rebel-held areas -- and inside, the threat of indiscriminate air strikes and kidnapping looms.
We
traveled undercover, wearing the niqab, a black veil that covers the
entire face, except for a small slit at the eyes. It doesn't take long
for people to work out that I'm a foreigner, yet very few ask where I am
from or what I am doing here. They know better than to ask such
questions. Instead they tell their stories. They want the world to know.
David and Goliath
The journey to get into Aleppo
is now extremely difficult and dangerous. Assad's ground troops have
used Russian air cover to encircle the rebels who control the eastern
part of the city, where up to 320,000 people may be trapped.
There
is now only one road that rebels can use to get in and out of the city
-- once Syria's largest, a bustling economic and cultural hub -- and it
is flanked on either side by enemy forces. Snipers are everywhere. They
call it the road of death.
We hurtle
down the road at top speed, hearts in our throats. I look at the berms
of earth built up on either side to conceal cars from enemy view. They
seemed pathetically vulnerable.
I am
reminded of a visit to Syria four years ago when one rebel leader
proudly showed me a weapon they had been working on for months. It was a
homemade catapult. A catapult to fight against artillery shells. "David
and Goliath," I whispered to myself. I didn't know whether to laugh or
cry.
Closing in from all sides
"The
first was my grandson. And after him his cousin, my son, my daughter's
son, my middle son, and one of his children, then my third son, and his
son. All died on the frontlines, and I thank God for that."
In
a dark and cramped apartment in eastern Aleppo, 70-year-old Souad is
listing family members who have been killed fighting in this war. Her
milky eyes gaze blankly into the air as she counts them all on her bony
fingers.
There are nine in total. My
brain struggles to process the scale of the loss. There are no tears.
Sadness and loss long ago hardened into grim acceptance, made possible
by an unwavering faith in God.
"I
thank God for any situation. I hear the news and I say thank God for
anything," Souad says, adjusting her black headscarf. "We come from
Allah and to him we return."
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Her grandson sits next to her as she
speaks, listening attentively as he sips thick black Arabic coffee. He
looks 40 but is probably in his late 20s. His beard is long and he wears
camouflage pants. He is a fighter with Ahrar al Sham,
an Islamist rebel group that is fighting on three fronts. On one is
Assad's army. On another is ISIS. On the third, Kurdish forces lie in
wait.
When I address him, he looks
down shyly to avoid meeting my eyes. To some, it might appear as sexism
or disdain. But I understand it as it is intended, as a gesture of
respect.
I wonder what will happen if
he is killed -- if Souad will continue to stay here in Sukkari, a
neighborhood shattered by Russian and regime bombs.
Yes, she tells me. She will stay here until she dies.
The war on normalcy
Doctor
Firas al Jundi doesn't have long to sit down with us. He is one of a
handful of surgeons in the only hospital still standing in Maarat
al-Numan. Last month, the largest hospital, supported by Doctors Without
Borders, was destroyed by airstrikes.
Twenty-five people were killed. The group said it believed Russian or
regime missiles were responsible. Russia has categorically denied
involvement.
Jundi tells us he now
sees up to a hundred people in a day. His face is gray and dark circles
line his eyes. It's the face of someone who doesn't know what to think
or feel anymore, of someone who is just going through the motions. When
he talks, he presses his hands down on the desk, as if it is somehow the
only thing holding him up.
He tells
us that they don't have enough medicine, that the water is too dirty to
use for surgeries. He says that, despite their denials, the regime and
Russia are targeting hospitals deliberately and cynically. That four
hospitals were hit in one day last month. That they want to destroy all
medical services so that people will be forced to flee.
I ask him why he doesn't leave Syria. With
a medical degree it would be relatively easy for him to go somewhere
safer. He pauses before answering. I can hear him swallow.
"If I did that I would abandon my conscience," Jundi says. His face cracks and he whimpers softly. He is breaking down.
"This
is our country, we can't desert it. If we leave then we have sold our
morals. Who would treat the people?" He stops and sobs. I dig my
fingernails into my palms to stop my own tears.
"I
can very easily leave, but we will remain steadfast," he pushes on,
growing stronger as he continues. "I am prepared to die rather than to
leave. And I will carry on no matter what."
It's
the kind of bravery that leaves you baffled. The day before, we
interviewed a lawyer who survived a strike on a courthouse. It was one
of two we visited that have been leveled. "This is the tax we pay for
living in a liberated area," he said matter-of-factly as we stood in the
rubble.
Assad and his Russian allies
say that theirs is a war against terrorism. But on the ground, people
believe that everyday life is the target. It's a war on normalcy.
Going
to settle a dispute at the courthouse? We'll hit you. Going to the
hospital to get your heart checked out? We'll hit you. Going to buy some
fruit? We'll hit you.
'Imagine that you're drowning'
I
look out the car window through the slit in my niqab. "Democracy is the
religion of the West," a sign reads in black and white. There are lots
of signs like this in these parts now. Billboards urge men to join the
jihad against Assad and encourage women to cover themselves completely.
We drive through checkpoint after checkpoint manned by Jabhat al-Nusra, the al Qaeda affiliate here.
The
radicalism that has taken hold in rebel-held Syria is more pronounced
each time I visit, but the writing has been on the wall for years.
In
2012, I asked then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton if she was
concerned that Islamist and jihadist groups would exploit the vacuum
created by the chaos and violence in Syria if the international
community didn't somehow fill the void. She deftly avoided answering the
question.
Almost everyone you meet
here will tell you that they want to live freely and fairly. But most
will also tell you that they want to live under some type of Islamic
governance.
People will tell you that they hate extremism. Yet Jabhat al-Nusra enjoys a huge amount of support on the ground.
It
is a conflicted and complicated relationship. One young media activist
told me in one breath that he hated Nusra -- and in the next, added that
his cousin was a fighter with them.
Years
ago, a Syrian-American doctor explained it to me like this: Imagine
you're drowning, that you're about to die and you're desperately looking
for anyone to help you, but there's nobody there.
But
then you see someone holding out their hand. And maybe you don't like
the look of that person, but it's your only chance to survive. So you
take their hand.
Hell and paradise
It's
our last day in Syria and we are in a sun-drenched olive grove near the
Turkish border. It is spectacularly beautiful, serene even -- a world
away from the devastation we witnessed hours earlier at the site of an
apparent airstrike in the town of Daraat Izza.
The
contrasts and contradictions of this country leave me feeling
light-headed. Syria is hell. But standing in the warm sun, watching the
silver green olive leaves shiver in the breeze, it is also paradise. A
ceasefire has been in place for a couple of days, though based on what
we saw and heard, it's difficult to have much faith that it will hold.
We
are preparing to leave, saying our goodbyes. We hand over a bag full of
British chocolates to our security guards. Abu Youssef thanks us and
quietly hands each of us a folded piece of white paper with our initials
on it.
"Promise me you won't read these until you get back home to London," he says.
Two flights and 72 hours later, we open the letters.
"I hope you have a good idea of us," they read. "Please tell the world the truth about Syria."
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