Crowds flock to Umayyad Mosque for Syria's first Friday prayers after Assad

Last Update: 2024-12-13 18:00:04 - Source: Middle East Eye

Crowds flock to Umayyad Mosque for Syria's first Friday prayers after Assad

'May we have better days', interim Prime Minister Mohammed al-Bashir tells worshippers as thousands join celebrations in Damascus
Omar al-Aswad
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Worshippers praying at the Umayyad Mosque in the Old City of Damascus on Friday (Daniel Hillton/MEE)

Thousands of Syrians flooded the Ummayad Mosque in the Old City on Friday for the first Friday prayers held since the overthrow of Bashar al-Assad six days ago.

Abu Mohammed Golani, the rebel leader who led the lightning offensive that toppled the regime, had told Syrians to stop working on Friday and to celebrate.

Across Souk Hammidiyah, the labyrinthine market place, the shutters of shops were rolled down, still sporting the two-star flags of an old Syria.

But lining the main street were people selling revolutionary flags, which many toted in the crush past Roman ruins on the way to the 1,300-year old mosque at the heart of the Old City.

Abdullah Mohammed, 41, lives in Damascus and rarely attends Friday prayers at the Ummayad Mosque, but said he made an exception this Friday.

“Today is special. Before, we were slaves, but now we are free and we can say whatever we want,” Mohammed told Middle East Eye. “May god give us better days ahead.”

Crowds of Syrians moving past Roman ruins on way to Umayyad Mosque for Friday prayers on 13 December 2024 (Daniel Hilton/MEE)

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Mohammed was among jubilant visitors in the mosque’s courtyard. Rebels with guns, children holding flags, Syrians like him from the capital but others who had travelled from hours away milled around the complex, taking photos and videos. The sun shone brightly on ancient golden mosaics.

Haidar, a 33-year-old rebel fighter from Damascus, said he had been living in Idlib, the rebel-held northwestern province that became a sanctuary for many Syrians fleeing from government-controlled areas, but for the past few years and had always believed he would return to the mosque.

“It is the heart of Syria. It is a symbol,” he said. “I always believed I would see it because I believe in God and God has given us this day.”

Young Syrians pose with a rebel fighter in the courtyard at the Umayyad Mosque on Friday (Daniel Hilton/MEE)