COVID-19 and its impact on different Syrian societies

COVID-19 and its impact on different Syrian societies

The Center for Environmental and Social Development took the initiative to organize a series of meetings with Syrian girls, whose ages range from 9 to 22 years. Some experts from organizations working in the Syrian regions participated in these meetings, in addition to some media professionals and civil society activists. The participants were from different regions, according to the following:

Areas of the Syrian regime
Opposition areas “Idlib, the northern countryside of Idlib”
Opposition areas “Southern Idlib countryside”
Opposition areas “Northern Aleppo countryside”.
Asylum camps in Turkey.
Syrian refugees in Europe
Syrian refugees in the United States.

Summary of the meetings of the Syrian American consultative meeting

Summary of the meetings of the Syrian American consultative meeting

“Freedom, justice, and dignity” were and still are targets for the Syrian revolution, despite the many terms it dealt with, such as the term “civil war” which was approved in 2012 by the Red Cross[1], or the term “The holly war” which was promoted after the Shiite conflict was strengthened. Alawi – Sunni in Syria, especially after the public intervention of the Lebanese Hezbollah militia to support the Syrian regime in suppressing the protesters.

2022 IRF Forum

2022 IRF Forum

“Azadi”, or freedom in Persian, was present at the International Religious Freedom Forum, which was held at the Press Club in Washington, DC, on October 27-28, 2022. The meeting brought together intellectual and academic personalities and civil society activists to discuss opportunities for developing the reality of religious freedoms. in the world, and the Middle East region.