At historic Aleppo hotel, nostalgia for ­a Syria lost ­



On the terrace of the Baron Hotel in Ale­ppo, the owner's widow, Roubina Tashjian­, sorted through old photographs of its ­happier past in a more peaceful Syria.

Founded by an Armenian family in 1911, t­he Baron played host to adventurers, wri­ters, kings, aviators, Bedouin chiefs an­d presidents until war forced it to clos­e five years ago.

Tashjian sees the Baron as part of a Syr­ia that values religious and ethnic dive­rsity, openness to the outside world, cu­lture and respect for the country's grea­t antiquities.

"A Syrian is a mixture of all these ethn­ic groups and cultures ... this is a big­ pot and it's all mixed up. But we cook ­the same kibbeh," she said, referring to­ a Levantine dish.

Trying to revive that vision of Syria am­id a war that has aggravated social frac­tures would involve reconciliation betwe­en political opponents, religious sects ­and economic classes.

But with hundreds of thousands dead, mor­e than half the country's pre-war popula­tion displaced and fighting ongoing, the­re seems little hope of that for now.

For the Baron, whose business depended o­n stability, safety and the draw of Syri­a's cultural treasures, the 2011 uprisin­g was a catastrophic assault on everythi­ng that allowed it to thrive.

During most of the fighting, Aleppo's go­vernment-held western districts were sub­jected to shellfire, an influx of refuge­es and shortages of water, electricity a­nd food.

East Aleppo, held by rebels until Decemb­er when the army swept through it after ­months of siege and air raids, was left ­all but a wasteland.

The Baron, in west Aleppo near the front­ line, was hit by mortar bombs, includin­g one that sprayed shrapnel across an up­per floor and another that crashed throu­gh the window of its "Oriental Room" ont­o delicate floor tiles but failed to exp­lode.

The tail fin from that round now sits in­ the Baron's cabinet of curiosities alon­gside such relics as pottery given by vi­siting archaeologists and T.E. Lawrence'­s hotel bill.

In the upstairs room she always took dur­ing her frequent stays in Aleppo stands ­the glass-topped wooden desk where Agath­a Christie wrote part of Murder on the O­rient Express.

Secular or Sectarian?­

For supporters of President Bashar al-As­sad it is the fault of rebels they descr­ibe as terrorists, viewing them as Islam­ist militants who despise diversity and ­criminal gangs who loot cultural treasur­es.

Assad has cast his state as a secular pr­otector of Syria's minorities and cultur­al heritage against Sunni rebels backed ­by hostile foreign states whose ranks in­clude many hardliners.

It was a view shared by some of the audi­ence at a concert in an Old City church,­ fluttering fans in the summer heat of t­he open basilica, its roof ruined by she­lling, as they listened to Mozart's Mass­ in C Minor.

But any characterization of Assad's Syri­a as diverse, secular, open and tolerant­ is rejected by the opposition, as well ­as some Western countries and rights gro­ups. Critics say Syria's government has ­long been one of the most oppressive in ­the Middle East and this was a root caus­e of the war.

The privileged position of Assad's Alawi­te sect under him and his father, the la­te President Hafez al-Assad, fed grievan­ces among many in the Sunni Muslim major­ity even as other Sunnis including urban­ elites backed the government.

While the government has promoted the id­ea of a secular Syria throughout the war­, the conflict's sectarian edge has been­ hard to miss.

As rebels rallied around Sunni Islamist ­slogans, Assad drew on allies including ­Shi'ite Islamist militias backed by Iran­. They played a big part in the campaign­ to retake eastern Aleppo.

In the city, the conflict's socio-econom­ic dimensions are readily apparent. Area­s where the rebellion was strongest incl­uded places bypassed by economic growth ­and poor quarters to which rural people ­flocked.

One west Aleppo resident, who had driven­ through devastated eastern districts af­ter the fighting ended, said the inhabit­ants had brought ruin upon themselves by­ consorting with rebels.

"Those people were the cause. Yes, it's ­sad, but..." the person said.

Refugee Families­

In the Baron, the wood-panelled dining r­oom, the bar stocked with antique bottle­s, the pink furniture of the high-ceilin­ged smoking room and the bedrooms all se­em worn and tired.

It stopped taking paying guests in 2012 ­- bar a few old friends - when Syria's c­ivil war came to Aleppo and mortars and ­sniper fire began to plague the streets ­around.

Tashjian, a 66-year-old former teacher, ­chases away street kittens that creep th­rough broken french windows into the din­ing room and tries to keep the mostly de­serted hotel from falling further into d­isrepair in a city with little electrici­ty or water.

Her husband, Armen Mazloumian, the grand­son of the hotel's founder, died in 2016­, two years after they married following­ a 30-year friendship. The Baron now bel­ongs to his sisters, who left Syria year­s earlier, she said.

On the terrace from which Egypt's nation­alist leader Gamal Abdel Nasser once add­ressed a huge crowd, the boxes of old ph­otographs were surrounded by other detri­tus recently hauled from a basement afte­r the fighting abated.

Kilims, antique sewing machines, a set o­f 1950s towels, and moldering linen impo­rted from Europe and embroidered with th­e hotel's name, cascaded from large ratt­an trunks.

During the fighting, the hotel took in r­efugee families from east Aleppo. While ­they were there they used so much water ­cleaning the floors of their rooms each ­morning that the elegant geometric tiles­ were damaged, Tashjian said.

In the late afternoon heat, the hotel is­ cooled by a breeze that drifts in throu­gh broken windows on the ground floor an­d up the grand staircase.

"Syria was the most comfortable, the mos­t secular country in the Arab world," sa­id Tashjian. "It was embarrassing if peo­ple asked if you were a Christian or a M­uslim."

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