Syria - سوريا
Community about Syria and it's surrounds. Arabic and English posts are accepted.
Participation guidelines
Commenting is more useful then down voting. Please use words to express disagreement or dislike and please engage in respectful discussion.
Community
Community artwork was set by previous mod. Leaving in place for time being.
Icon: Flag of Syria and the Syrian revolution, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.
Banner: Bernard Gagnon, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons.
Links
All links and categories below in no particular order, updated over time.
News, analysis, zines
Syria Untold
EA Worldview | Syria
Enab Baladi
The New Arab | Post-Assad Syria
New Lines Magazine | Syria
aNtiDoTe Zine | Syria
The Palestine Chronicle | Syria
Middle East Eye | Syria after Assad
ANF English | Rojava-Syria
Medya News | Syria
El Pais | Siria
UnHerd | Syria
Common Dreams | Syria
Syria Direct
The Kyiv Independent | Syria
Al Majalla | Syria
Al Jazeera | Syria
Al-Jumhuriya
Muslim Girl
UN News | Syria
TIMEP | Syria
Raseef22 English | Syria
New Internationalist | Syria
Daraj English
Mada | Syria
Radio
Blogs
Aymenn’s Monstrous Publications (subscription required)
Qunfuz
Syria Freedom Forever - سوريا الحرية للأبد
Art and culture
ISIS Prisons Museum
The Markaz Review
Non government and inter-government organisations and projects
Syrian Network for Human Rights
Justice For Life
Synergy Association For Victims
MENA Rights Group | Syria
GCR2P | Syria
ReliefWeb | Syria
Human Rights organisations
Syria Justice and Accountability Centre (SJAC)
The Syria Campaign
Advocacy
Committee to Protect Journalists | Syria
Education, history, research & investigation
The Syrian Memory Project
MENA Research Center
Bellingcat | Syria
The Syrian Revolution and on YouTube
People
Mai El-Sadany
Leila Al-Shami - Bluesky | Mastodon
Zaina Erhaim
Rami Jarrah (Alexander Page)
Podcasts
Campaigns
Archival
Local Coordination Committees in Syria (via archive.org)
view the rest of the comments
I think any unilateral changes will spark debate among Syrians and not just westerners regardless of the issue. Sometimes when a story is covered by multiple outlets with different perspectives, translations or editorial styles I have to wing it and choose one to share. I did find it odd that Landis was the first person quoted and he wasn't necessarily critical fd the changes, perhaps his post was getting a lot of traction at the time in Syria or among Syrians.
Another.post in the issue:
Syria’s Education Ministry clarifies curriculum amendment decision
There are links at the bottom of that article to.other interesting developments in education