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In the ‘kingdom of silence’, the caged bird raps
Bangkok Post
|July 18, 2025
In Syria, the caged bird raps. On my first night imprisoned, I began to write: 1am certain, after the long night there will be light. The jailer will collapse, and the prison will fall.
That was 2012. Thirteen years later, my certainty arrived.
The al-Assad dynasty ruled Syria for 54 years, from 1970, when Hafez al-Assad orchestrated a coup d’état and cemented his dictatorship over what became known as the “kingdom of silence” and through the reign of his son, Bashar al-Assad, which began in 2000.
The moment Mr Assad's regime fell last December, I was asleep in Barcelona. Though the nights leading up to it had been restless, haunted by my obsessive attempts to follow the opposition’s rapid advancements into Damascus. On Dec 8, I woke up to a deluge of phone calls and messages. I knew instantly: Mr Assad was gone.
I watched the footage of prisoners being freed. I cried. I thought back to my own experience as a political prisoner, and to that song I started writing in that cold cell, how its lyrics and imagined rhythms became a space that liberated me from the terrifying reality of jail —allifeline of escape in a time of hysterical, bloody dictatorship.
On March 14, 2012, at 9am, a friend called to tell me that local teachers had organised a small protest in front of the regional government building. I accompanied him to understand the demands they were raising.
Twas already a member of Ahrar Tartous (“Free People of Tartous”), one of the revolutionary groups in my city. We had organised protests and several other campaigns of nonviolent resistance — we belonged to the angry streets. Once the 2011 uprisings began — part of the larger Arab Spring — I was detained multiple times, but never spent a night in prison.
But that day, by 9.55am, an armed man had seized my ID and those of two other comrades. “Come with me,’ he demanded. Twenty minutes later, I found myself imprisoned.
On the first day, the officer said, ‘It’s only five minutes.’
He remembers that, on that night, out of fear, he couldn't sleep.
Dit verhaal komt uit de July 18, 2025-editie van Bangkok Post.
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