لم يكن موقف سوريين كثيرين في غضون الثورة، وكذا موقف الأكثرية السنية، جذريّاً من نظام الأسد، تبعاً لمرجعيته، سواء كانت تلك المرجعية انتماءه الطائفي أو اتجاهه الحزبي أو العلماني، فقد كان الموقف سوريّاً أكثر منه سنياً، ووطنياً أكثر من كونه إسلامياً
اقرأ أكثر
https://t.co/ElZzHTM9nV
فرحتهم تفرحك🤍🇸🇾🇸🇦
اللي صار في احتفالات ذكرى التحرير في سوريا تصويت حي للشعب
سوريا في فترة بشار كانت "مجموعة شعوب" في محافظات مختلفة معزولين عن بعض،الثورة خلتهم يتعرفون على بعض مجددا
-"لبت لبت"واحدة من الظواهر المجتمعية التي تدل على أن الشعب يتعرف على بعضه مجددا ويفهم مكوناته
نصيحة كل مسؤول يتم إلباسه عباءة فليرمها في حاوية القمامة، أو فليتبرع بها لفقير يأكل كل يوم منها قطعة ليسد جوعه، وليرم من قدمها في السجن، العباءة رمز غال عندنا، وشيوخ الثمانينات وشيوخ الأسد لوثوها ولوثوا كل تاريخها ورمزيتها.
@AL_SAALEH نصيحة كل مسؤول يتم إلباسه عباءة فليرمها في حاوية القمامة، أو فليتبرع بها لفقير يأكل كل يوم منها قطعة ليسد جوعه، وليرم من قدمها في السجن، العباءة رمز غال عندنا، وشيوخ الثمانينات وشيوخ الأسد لوثوها ولوثوا كل تاريخها ورمزيتها
Lately, I’ve been bombarded with messages and calls from Kurds asking why I’ve distanced myself from the Kurdish cause. So let me say this clearly- again. It’s been over two years since I left Kurdish politics. I used to be the spokesperson for the Iranian Kurdish opposition party, Parti Azadi Kurdistan. But I walked away, and I had good reasons. I no longer waste my time or energy on a cause that’s been hijacked by dangerous and toxic ideologies.
Before 2021, I had doubts, but I was still influenced by the Kurdish media when it came to the PYD, AANES, and SDF in Syria. Then I spent real time on the ground- in Syria, as both a private individual and a journalist. That experience opened my eyes. What I saw made it impossible to keep believing in the myths. It became painfully clear that the SDF and its affiliates aren’t just “inspired” by the PKK- they are the PKK. Not in theory, but in practice.
Since then, I’ve been a consistent and outspoken critic of the PKK’s so-called self-rule in Syria. I’ve called out their war crimes, the kidnapping of children, their targeting of political opponents, and their constant human rights abuses. I’ve done this for nearly five years, and I’m not going to stop now just because it makes some people uncomfortable.
What’s truly shocking is that so many Kurds now think unity with the PKK is the path forward. All that does is give a terrorist group more power- while pushing away those of us who’ve actually fought for Kurdish rights in honest ways. And let’s be clear: I’m not Kurdish. I don’t owe any Kurdish leader my loyalty. And I will never, ever support unity with violent extremists. That road only leads to destruction—and history proves it every time.
And here’s something personal: the PKK is the group that threw my father-in-law- one of the most respected Kurdish songwriters of all time- into a trash bag after his death. He’s been honored across the region, from Damascus, Lebanon to Egypt to Iraqi Kurdistan after his death. But in PKK-controlled areas of Syria? Nothing. Silence. Disrespect. This is also the same PKK that’s issued death threats not just against me, but my whole family- even my children. The same PKK that’s torched the homes and workplaces of my friends in Syria. And still, so many Kurds stay silent. Or worse, they have the nerve to ask me to stop supporting Syria.
If you can’t stand up against a group that threatens children and burns down homes, then what exactly are you fighting for? Don’t expect me to stay silent. I won’t. And I won’t pretend that the PKK isn’t a violent, authoritarian movement that holds the Kurdish people back.
As long as the government in Damascus keeps its word, I will continue to support President Al-Sharaa. In just four months, they’ve done more for rebuilding Syria than PYD and AANES have done in over a decade. If that bothers you—deal with it.