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December 7, 2024

Syrian Rebels Announce Fall of Assad Regime Following Rapid Offensive

Syrian rebels declared the end of President Bashar Assad’s 24-year rule on Sunday after a swift offensive brought opposition forces into Damascus. Thousands of residents gathered in the city’s main square, chanting “Freedom” and celebrating what many view as the conclusion of five decades of Assad family dominance. Assad reportedly fled the capital by plane to an undisclosed destination, with unverified reports suggesting Moscow as a possibility.

The rebel coalition issued a statement marking the beginning of a “new era for Syria” after years of oppression and conflict. “To the displaced all over the world, free Syria awaits you,” the statement read, vowing to build a nation where justice and dignity prevail. Lt. Col. Hassan Abdul Ghani, a rebel spokesperson, said hundreds of regime forces surrendered in Deir ez-Zur as opposition fighters consolidated their control.

The developments prompted regional and international reactions. US National Security Council spokesperson Sean Savett said President Joe Biden’s administration is closely monitoring the situation and maintaining contact with allies. Syrian Prime Minister Mohammed Ghazi Jalili offered to facilitate a transition to a new leadership, emphasizing, “This country can be a normal country that builds good relations with its neighbors and the world.”

On Syria’s southern border, unconfirmed reports suggested Israeli forces crossed into the buffer zone near Quneitra. While Israeli authorities have not commented, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) reportedly issued guidelines for Golan Heights residents, maintaining restrictions on gatherings and operations near the border.

The Assad regime’s collapse marks a dramatic shift for Syria after years of civil war that displaced millions and drew in regional and international powers. Opposition leaders urged displaced Syrians to return, calling the moment a fresh start for the country.

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So Let’s Die Together

Some of us find ourselves parting from dear people around us. We watch how slowly they are fading away, and we know that soon they will not be here. They take part of us with them because we love them. Krishna Murthi, the Indian mystic, was once asked to visit a dying friend. “I am afraid to die,” said his friend. “So let’s die together,” he answered, taking his hand. And so, they rose up together, as Krishna Murthi escorted him to a place where there was no fear of dying. And Krishna Murthi went to his home in Ojai. And the man went to his new home in heaven.

There is a mystic in all of us who can help us be with our departing loved ones. And later, how to be with our own unavoidable departure. Death does not mean being isolated in hospitals and nursing homes; it was meant to be an integral part of life. People today are looking for alternative ways to conclude their lives: being more in nature, reflecting, taking time to write, cry and laugh, see the sun slowly falling into the horizon and splashing the blue with warm soft colors.

When my mother was in hospice in Tel Aviv and I came to visit her, she lifted her arms up and dropped them on the blanket; she was impatient, tired of the pain. I rolled her bed outside to the garden. I knew it would help. Later that day, I told her “Ema’le, we are going to have lunch, and will be back soon”. When I returned, my mother was gone. I sat with her alone and felt how she slowly rising up for a long time. When I left the hospice, it was dark, but the sky was pink and peach and orange because of all the bonfires lit for Lag B’ Omer. My mother died on Simon Bar Yochai’s holiday. How awesome and sacred that experience was.

Fear distorts reality. Death is one of the most precious and refined impressions of life. Nobody speaks about it; it is meant to be a secret.

In Hebrew there are seven expressions for dying. We say, “He exhaled his soul” or “He went to his world” or “He rid himself of” (this world). Some fly to heaven in chariots of fire like Elijha, some are ‘gathered to their people” like Aron, some are marched in a parade where pieces of fire fall from the sky and heavenly voices declare the arrival of a rare soul, like Shimon Bar Yochai. So many ways to pass over.

Millions of people in hospitals all over the world have experienced what is called ‘clinical death’. They recall similar experiences: moving towards the light, seeing long-dead relatives and being evaluated now that they are in-between worlds. To leave or return?  They were flatlined in the hospital bed while at the time, in a state of radical amazement on a higher dimension. Their lives after that were never the same. Many children share glimpses from the world to come as well. I heard a story where a little girl said to her mother: “Mommy, can you hear the music? They are coming to take me”.

Many of us are surrounded by sick people, and we pray for them. But with Nina it’s different; she is my soul sister and her cancer has returned for the fourth time, so she was sent home. We knew the body will stop working soon. But we also know the soul decides when it’s time to separate from the body. And start a new life, as a being of light.

In Hebrew the word life/hayim is always plural; there are many lives, even in one lifetime. We are guided to consider our mortality three times a day. To understand who we are and our place in the world. We are given what it takes to bare the unbearable, to approach the unknowable, to know how to “Let go and know that I Am your God”, to remember the bigger mysterious picture. That we ourselves are a mystery as well, visiting together and alone.

And that life has no end.


Gilla Nissan is a teacher and author.

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