Damascus bar after Assad regime’s fall in Syria : NPR

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Far-Flung Postcards is a weekly sequence by which NPR’s worldwide staff shares moments from their lives and work all over the world.

It was precisely per week after the Assad regime fell in Syria final December, and Damascus was euphoric.

My colleague and I got here throughout a bar within the heart of town referred to as Sugar Man. A small house, with purple lights, neon indicators, a cowboy hat, colourful posters of American and Arab motion pictures and celebrities, and posters promoting U.S. cities. The bartenders had stylish haircuts and piercings. Folks have been tattooed, trendy. I would been informed that a few of them have been younger Syrian activists who’d fled to Beirut throughout the Assad regime. Now they have been again house partying.

Solely Arabic music performed: pop, patriotic songs — together with anti-Assad songs we heard everywhere in the metropolis — and the classics by legends like Fairuz and Umm Kulthum.

It was decidedly Syrian, Arab, proud — and free.

There have been fears, although: Would the Islamist teams that led the revolt in opposition to Assad shut down locations like this, confiscate alcohol, make the music cease?

These questions lingered in everybody’s minds. However not tonight.

Tonight was for dancing.

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