My father always said, “You don’t understand the price of freedom.” But
I know I understand the price of being robbed of my right to grow up around
grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins. I know the price of growing up
nation-less. The price of having no national identity. The cost of not knowing
where I am from.
I am the daughter of a mother wanted for execution in Syria for simply
owning a dream to think freely, and of a father who would not bow to the
country’s criminal silence. They escaped in 1980, reunited in Jordan, moved to
Iraq, United States, Canada, then once again back to the United States. They
stamped each country with the birth of a child, clinging to their dream of
returning to Syria. I was born in Montreal, Canada.
As a child, I was Syrian. But as a teenager, I was lost. In America, I
wasn’t American. On my two visits to Syria, I wasn’t Syrian. I couldn’t own
pride to a country that stripped my mother and father from the right to live or
the right to return. I didn’t understand the fear, the silence, the poverty, or
why my grandfather hung a two foot portrait of the President Hafez Assad right
above his television. When my 13 year old cousin pointed his finger at me and
accused his uncle, my father, for being too much of an arrogant doctor in
America to even pay a small visit to his family in Syria, I opened my mouth to
unleash my rage only to find my grandfather’s strong palm glue itself to my
lips.
At 24, after I completed Graduate school, still without an identity or
nationality to boast, I decided that I would embrace the identity of being an
“American,” and accept my Syrian heritage as something that belonged to my parents,
something of the past. I slowly erased that image from my memory.
After the revolution in Tunisia dominoed its way to Syria, and
peaceful protestors were instantly captured, detained, and had their hearts
foam out of their mouths, I didn’t understand why my mother and father were
depriving themselves of sleep at night. I was offended that when I flew across
the country to visit them over the holidays, they were not emotionally with me
as we sipped our nightly tea. They were glued to their computer screen at home,
signed into Skype, talking, arranging, organizing, doing anything and everything
within their human power to help the people of Syria. They even traveled to
Turkey and lived with 8,000 Syrian refugees in Antakya for one month as an
in-house doctor and emotional supporter sleeping in their tents and using their
overcrowded toilets.
For 11 months, I prayed for the dead, the detained, and the tortured. I
followed the news for ten days then abandoned it for twenty. I wanted to put
this past behind me. I wanted to convince myself that there was nothing more I
could possibly do. But as the symphony of protestors grew louder and stronger,
bouncing off high concrete walls, over a web of narrow ancient alleys every
time a child was sniped, a woman beaten, and a man burned to death only after
breaking his back and slicing off his fingers, my heart began to feel alive. I
began to see a different purpose to this life. Was it simply to get an
education, dine at fancy restaurants, travel, have children, and move into a
large home while the blood of others gushed into rivers, or children die of
starvation? Where were the Syrians finding the courage to persist? Where had
their fear and silence gone? I no longer wanted to continue my perfectly played
out movie, or worry about things that really didn’t matter.
My numbness to the image of tortured body after body after body for
the past 11 months burst. I finally understood my parents’ overworking their
mind, body, and heart. I understood how they went two days without feeding
their stomachs because they had no time to stop. No interest. They had no time to even grow hungry. My
parents outran death, literally, when 40,000 others couldn’t. For 26 years they told me and my siblings
that this life was only a journey, and the purpose of that journey was to make
it to heaven. “Never get too comfortable,” my father said. “Be the last to eat
and the first to serve.” Just as my parents began to grow numb to the idea of
ever returning to Syria, watching the last flicker of fire fade, a few boys in
the village of Daraa relit the match.
I am not the child who was brought to
America to have a better life. I am not the Syrian daughter who came because
her parents wanted to practice medicine and flourish financially. I am the child
of a man who miraculously escaped in the trunk of a Beetle, and helped by a
Lebanese priest flee the country. I am the daughter of a woman who was grabbed
by her neighbor inches before entering into her apartment to warn her that the
Syrian Secret Police were inside waiting for her. She watched her two roommates
be hauled into Mukhabarat vehicles, then thrown into torture
cells for nine years. I am the granddaughter of a man shot by the Mukhabarat,
and later killed. I am the granddaughter of two women
whose dying wishes were to see their daughter and their son in Syria, embrace
their hand, and hold it against their own face while they ejected their last
breath.
That is who I am. Only now am I
learning to adopt and combine the qualities that make America so great, and the
qualities that charge Syria with spirit. Only now do I realize that my lost
identity, split into two countries, symbolize who I am. I know that I am proud
to have grown up American and free, to have been educated, to ask questions,
seek answers, sleep at night comfortably, proud to have a childhood. I am proud
to see the men, women, and even boys and girls fight for freedom, fight for the
silence of their parents and grandparents. I am proud to own Syrian blood. I am
proud to stand up for truth and speak against injustice, something my parents
were able to teach me because we were in America, and something I witnessed my
Syrian brothers and sisters die for. I am proud to be Syrian-American and
American-Syrian. And in the end, this life is really only a journey; and my
journey is to hold my free mind in one hand and courage in the other, and live
for something worth living for.

Very Powerful!
ReplyDeleteSpeechless, subhanAllah. I didn't want to stop reading. May Allah give our brothers and sisters their freedom, and reward them in hereafter for their work for the sake of Islam and their people.
ReplyDelete