Marta Vidal

QANTARA DW (22/11/2019)

Black Friday Special Offer read a banner held by activists in Kafranbel, a small town in northern Syria. Bring your enemy and come to fight in Syria for free. When the Syrian uprising against the authoritarian regime of Bashar al-Assad began in 2011, Kafranbel protesters displayed eye-catching messages on a weekly basis. “ASSad is the source of terrorism, read another.

Often accompanied by drawings, these witty messages denouncing the brutality of Assad’s regime and its allies made Kafranbel, a previously unheard of town in the Idlib province, famous. “The banners of Kafranbel remain the best witness and expression of the dreams of most Syrians, wrote the Syrian novelist Khalid Khalifa in his foreword to the book ‘Dancing in Damascus’. Thanks to its creativity and wit, the town soon became known as the conscience of the revolution.

Raed Fares was the mastermind behind the banners. A pro-democracy activist and organiser, he founded a radio station, helped develop a new civil society in the Idlib province and led efforts to draw international attention to Syria’s plight.

But his work to build a free press, empower women and establish the foundation for a democratic society angered the extremist groups that started to proliferate as the war escalated. Last year, on 23 November, Fares and fellow activist Hamod Jnaid were assassinated by gunmen in Kafranbel. But for many activists his legacy will live on.

Read more: https://en.qantara.de/content/martyr-for-a-free-syria-ideas-cannot-be-killed-with-weapons-remembering-raed-fares?nopaging=1