Social Issues
Society
Why Don’t Syrians Know Each Other?
The truth is: most of us know nothing about each other, even though we are of one country, speak one dialect, and share the same food—and even the same sorrow. We don’t know how people from other regions grow up, nor which religions and sects represent them.
Years of fear and isolation have planted distance between us and turned us into strangers to one another. In the end, ignorance became a form of protection, and estrangement the natural result of distance. Yet, this might be a new beginning—a chance to understand ourselves and one another.
Despite the pain of conflict, it is not always the end. The sociologist Lewis Coser sees that conflict can be a chance to break down walls and face each other with honesty. When we ask the hard question about identity, belonging, injustice, and oppression, we begin to reopen the book of Syria, page by page.
The new Syria should recognize all of its narratives and components, rather than a duplicated version of the past. True understanding is not a luxury but a necessity to proceed, and diversity is not a burden but the wealth that could build a homeland that embraces everyone.