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Friday, May 02, 2025

Who are the Druze, the secretive Syrian Muslim sect dragged into conflict amid regime change and Israeli attacks?





Who are the Druze, the secretive Syrian Muslim sect dragged into conflict amid regime change and Israeli attacks?



Druze men lift their flags as they await the arrival of Syrian Druze clerics in a bus through a border barrier guarded by Israeli soldiers, in the village of Majdal Shams in the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights, on April 25, 2025. — AFP pic

Thursday, 01 May 2025 9:00 PM MYT


BEIRUT, May 1 — Syria’s small Druze community largely kept out of the country’s long civil war but since president Bashar al-Assad’s ouster in December it has found itself confronting the new Islamist-led government amid military intervention by Israel.

Here is a profile of the religious minority which has been caught up in deadly clashes with armed groups linked to the government in recent days.

Secretive minority

The Druze community accounted for around three percent of Syria’s pre-war population of 23 million, or around 700,000 people.


They are concentrated in the southern province of Sweida with smaller pockets around Damascus.

Druze are monotheistic and considered Muslim, but the sect is otherwise highly secretive and does not accept converts.

They are viewed with suspicion by Sunni Islamist groups, who count among the ranks of Syria’s new government whose roots are in the Al-Qaeda jihadist network.


In Israel and the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights, there are around 150,000 Druze.

Most of those in Israel hold Israeli citizenship and serve in the military.

By contrast, most of the roughly 23,000 who live in the annexed Golan do not hold Israeli citizenship and still identify as Syrians.

Some 200,000 Druze live in Lebanon.



Members of Syria's Druze community wave flags and chant slogans during the funeral of seven people killed during overnight clashes with Syrian security forces, in Damascus, on April 30, 2025. — AFP pic



Civil war

Syria’s Druze largely stayed on the sidelines of the civil war which erupted in 2011 after Assad brutally repressed anti-government protests.

Druze forces focused on defending their heartland from attacks and largely avoided conscription into the Syrian armed forces.

Sweida province saw more than a year of anti-government protests before Assad’s ouster.

The Druze formed their own armed groups during the war. Some have begun negotiations with Damascus on integration into the new national army, following similar moves by armed factions elsewhere.

Rayan Maarouf, chief editor of local news outlet Suwayda24, said some 400 Druze fighters had joined the defence ministry’s forces and around 500 others had joined the General Security agency.



Druze women await the arrival of visitng Druze dignitaries fom Syria in a bus through a border barrier guarded by Israeli soldiers, near the village of Majdal Shams in the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights, on April 25, 2025. — AFP pic



Post-Assad

Assad hails from Syria’s Alawite community and as president sought to present himself as protector of all minority groups against the Islamist-led rebels.

The new government has repeatedly sought to reassure minorities that they will be protected.

But last month saw sectarian massacres in the Alawite heartland on the Mediterranean coast and this week several dozen people, including Druze fighters, have been killed in sectarian clashes near Damascus.

Since Assad’s ouster, Israel has increased its overtures to the Druze, voicing support for the minority and mistrust of Syria’s new leaders, whose forces it considers jihadists.

The Israeli government has said it has sent thousands of humanitarian aid packages to Syria’s Druze community in recent months.

Two delegations of Druze clerics have made pilgrimages to a holy site in Israel despite the continuing state of war between the two countries half a century after a 1974 armistice.

In March, Israel warned Syria’s new authorities not to harm the Druze, after clashes in a Damascus suburb.

Druze leaders rejected the warning and declared their loyalty to a united Syria.

On Wednesday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the military “carried out a warning action and struck the organisation of an extremist group preparing to attack the Druze population” near Damascus.

“A stern message was conveyed to the Syrian regime -- Israel expects them to act to prevent harm to the Druze community,” the statement from the Israeli premier’s office added.

Armed forces chief Lieutenant General Eyal Zamir ordered the military to prepare to strike Syrian government targets if the Druze community faces more violence. — AFP

6 comments:

  1. The Druze people in Isaac-land, numbering 145,000 enjoy full rights as citizens. Current Knesset of 120 legislators, 11 of them are Ishmaels, and at one point up to 6 from the Druze community.

    Isaacs have no problem trusting the Druze people to serve and even command troops in the IDF. Two Druze senior officers with the rank of colonel killed recently. This is huge, considering Druze forms only a tiny percentage of the population.

    https://www.timesofisrael.com/lt-col-alim-abdallah-40-druze-commander-killed-near-lebanon/

    Lt. Col. Alim Abdallah, 40: Druze commander killed near Lebanon
    Killed responding to an infiltration alert, October 9. ‘He sacrificed himself and his life for the residents of the north,’ says cousin
    By ToI Staff
    22 October 2023, 4:26 pm
    Lt. Col. Alim Abdallah, 40, the deputy commander of the 300th “Baram” Regional Brigade, was killed in a gun battle along the Lebanon border on October 9, while he was responding to an infiltration alert.

    Abdallah, a married father of three, hailed from the northern Druze village of Yanuh-Jat and served in the military for close to 23 years.

    His cousin, Fahed Abdullah, told the Ma’ariv news site that “Alim was a cut above the rest. This is a huge loss for his family, for the [Druze] community and for the IDF.”

    https://www.jpost.com/breaking-news/article-825362

    Hero of Israel': 401st Brigade commander Col. Ehsan Daxa killed in northern Gaza

    Daxa is considered to be the highest-ranking officer to die in ground combat since the start of the war.
    By KESHET NEEV, SAM HALPERN
    OCTOBER 20, 2024 19:13

    The commander of the IDF's 401st "Iron Tracks" Brigade, Col. Ehsan Daxa, was killed in combat in northern Gaza, the military announced on Sunday evening.

    Col. Daxa was 41 years old and came from Daliyat al-Karmel, the largest Druze community in Israel. He leaves behind a wife and three children.

    According to a Walla report, Col. Daxa was killed in combat after his tank hit an explosive device.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Let me explains why suddenly the terms Issac & Ishmael r been profoundly & predominantly used in this mfer's articles of fart.

      Those mfering zionist sources have secretly cultivating a scheme in
      1) enhancing the flimzy historical fact that the Jews were one of the original native people of Palestine via that fairytale Abrahamic legends
      2) the conflicts(??!!) between Issac & Ishmael r internal family struggles. Thus religious differences r of insignificant ingredients

      These r the 2 key matrices carefully & inconspicuously written into most of the recent zionist media outposts. Their wordings create the subconsciously & pschycologically linkage their ‘native' right in the present zionists occupied & expanding Palestine territory.

      Druze serving in IDF falls into the same category of those 台毒 ancestors serving in the invading Jap蝗军 during the WWII. Nothing to be glorified & expounded openly.

      Delete
  2. Israeli Druze has served with distinction in the Israeli Defence Forces, including awards for conspicuous courage and sacrifice during the 1973 Yom Kippur War.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Wakakakaka…

    Druzes of Goland Height involved in the 1973 Yom Kippur War.

    Mfer, don't lie like no tomorrow.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The CCP Wumao moron above is a fucking liar.

      Here's the proof below .

      https://www.algemeiner.com/2015/09/24/a-new-book-details-pays-tribute-to-idfs-druze-soldiers/

      Delete
    2. U do believe in western fart, especially those bleeding hearted modern German!

      Most of the Druze were Syrian living at the surrounding of the Golan Height for century.

      When Golan Height was captured by the zionist state at the Six-Day War of 1967.

      So mfer, how could the Druze then were fighting for the IDF during the 1973 Yom Kippur War when they were under IDF blockages within their settlements in Golan Height?

      There were Druze dispersed all over the ME, with some cooperating Druze absorbed into zionist state due to land acquisitions for kibbutz establishment.

      Oooop… of course lah turncoat & quisling DIDN'T count!

      Mfer next time don't just use a piece of toilet paper to dab ur face lah!

      Delete