Thursday, April 25, 2024 | Shawwal 15, 1445 H
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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Aleppo traders clear debris from war-scarred souq

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Aleppo: In Syria’s Aleppo, men throw rubble into the courtyard of a historic inn as merchants gather below to oversee the resurrection of their war-battered shops.


The shopkeepers have returned for the first time to clear the debris left behind by years of fighting after their century-old trading ground became a front line.


“I was so happy to see my shop still standing amid the trash despite a little damage,” says Antoun Baqqal, 66, one of the traders in the Khayr Beyk Khan.


Once famous for its bustling souqs and old citadel, Aleppo’s Old City has been rendered almost unrecognisable by some of the worst violence in Syria’s nearly six-year conflict.


After years of fighting, many of the city’s famed souqs have been completely destroyed.


But the shops of Khayr Beyk have largely survived, even if some stores inside the two-floor inn, known in the region as a khan, have seen their facades ripped off in the fighting.


“I sent my friends pictures of their shops to encourage them to come back, until they all returned one by one,” Baqqal says.


Rebels overran east Aleppo in the summer of 2012, effectively dividing the city into a regime-held west and opposition-controlled east. “The army was here. They used to sleep upstairs and downstairs in the shops,” Baqqal says. But after regime forces seized east Aleppo in December, retaking the whole city, he was able to return to the cloth workshop he inherited from his father.


When he found his father’s photo lying on the ground, he dusted it off and hung it back up on the wall. “I’m going to tidy up the workshop so my son can take over, so he can put my photo next to my father’s one day and remember me fondly.”


In the courtyard, Zakaria Aziza, 55, scrolls through his phone, comparing old pictures of the more than a dozen shops he owns to their appearance today.


Customers used to flock from across the Arab region to admire the shopping venue’s textiles, he says. “The khan once overflowed with material. You could hardly walk between the shops for all the customers,” Aziza says.


“Today it’s also hard to walk around — but this time it’s because of all the rubble and trash.”


— AFP


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