by Alexandra Sandels
The selection of Damascus as the Arab cultural capital 2008 by UNESCO is overshadowed by the imprisonment of dozens of members of the political opposition. While President Bashar Al-Assad states "Damascus is the capital of resistance culture by symbolizing Arab culture - the culture of freedom and defending freedom," an increasing number of journalists, writers, poets and artists enter Syrian prisons.
When Damascus was crowned the Arab cultural capital of the year 2008 by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), President al-Assad praised the honour, saying in his speech on the opening of the one-year long celebration on 10 January that the selection is an acknowledgement of the city's 'resistance culture'.
"Damascus is the capital of resistance culture by symbolizing Arab culture - the culture of freedom and defending freedom," said Al-Assad. But as hailed Lebanese singer Fayrouz, an emblem of Arab culture, took the stage in Damascus in late January to give her first performance in Syria in 20 years, accommodation for a number of prominent new guests from Syria's political opposition, including writers, poets, and sculptors, were made in the jails of Damascus.
APN spoke with Ammar Abdulhamid, an exiled Syrian lawyer and Executive Director of the Tharwa Foundation, a web portal for bloggers and activists in the Arab world.
"It's ironic that Damascus is being celebrated as the Arab cultural capital this year. What is there to celebrate when the Syrian culture is censored or put in prison? The writers, the intellectuals, the journalists...they're all gone. Is culture about crackdown and totalitarianism?" he said.
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