How the 18 Graffiti Boys of Dara'a Ignited 
		the Syrian Revolution 
		By Yvonne Ridley
		
		Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, March 
		4, 2013
		
 
“Asha'ab yureed isqat 
		annidham." This phrase is ringing in the ears of tyrants 
		and despots around the Arab world and means quite simply that
		"the people want to bring down the 
		regime." It is the enduring chant of the Arab Spring, so 
		it's hardly surprising that these are probably the first words children 
		learn in their cradles as they are rocked to sleep to the beat of this 
		rousing street anthem.
 
When a group of 11-year-old Syrian boys 
		made their way home from school one day and started larking around, as 
		boys of that age do, it was almost inevitable that among the graffiti 
		they scratched on a partially-collapsed wall would be these iconic 
		words. By revolutionary standards it was an unremarkable act, hardly 
		worthy of mention because the same graffiti can be found on walls in 
		most Arab countries. However, just as hard-up Tunisian fruit seller 
		Mohammed Bou Azizi is credited with igniting the Arab Spring with his 
		self-immolation, this long forgotten, single act of childish vandalism 
		lit the touch paper of the Syrian Revolution.
 
It was a seminal 
		moment in time that the Arab world’s Leftists would rather you forget; 
		in their frenzied bid to rewrite the history of the Arab Spring they 
		want you to believe that crazed Islamists are hijacking the 
		peoples’ revolution. The Left in Syria, you see, isn't as cuddly as the 
		splintered socialist groups in Britain. These are hard-line 
		fundamentalist, religion-hating secularists who have no room, not even a 
		square inch, for religion in their world; not for themselves and not for 
		anyone else.
 
While the people in Tunisia and Egypt fought for 
		freedom from tyranny they also wanted the freedom to re-engage with 
		their faith. Hence, to the shock and horror of the Arab Left, the people 
		voted for trusted groups like the Muslim Brotherhood. It was something 
		that the Left had never considered; they dismissed the Muslim vote as a 
		figment of the imagination; never once did they ever imagine that Muslim 
		groups would form political parties or even want to engage in democracy. 
		And in Libya, although some of the more fundamentalist Islamic groups 
		failed to secure the popular vote, other Islamic flavoured parties were 
		swept in to power.
 
So Syria, you see, is probably the Arab 
		Left’s last chance at having a revolution free from religion. This is 
		most likely the reason for their opposition to the revolution from the 
		very outset because they knew for sure that it would carry a strong 
		religious flavour. Well, sorry to disappoint them. I crossed the length 
		and breadth of Syria shortly before the revolution and saw most 
		communities, Christian and Muslim alike, holding tight to their faith. 
		Whatever shape their revolution will take, the future will be dominated 
		by believers.
 
But let me return to the 18 boys at the beginning 
		of this story because it is vitally important that we all remember 
		exactly how the revolution in Syria began. It did not begin with CIA 
		interference, nor an influx of foreign fighters, Al-Qaida, rebranded 
		weapons from the West, NATO or a global call across the Muslim world for 
		jihad.This was a reluctant revolution, a revolution forced on the people 
		by the acts of an evil, malevolent regime.
 
In fact, though, 
		while the 18 boys may have loaded the revolutionary gun way back in 
		February 2011, the trigger was pulled by a man called Atif Najeeb, a 
		cousin of Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad. Within two hours of the 
		schoolboy prank, Atif instigated raids on every single one of the boys’ 
		homes: armed police, the military and the ubiquitous security officials 
		stormed every home at precisely the same time, demanding that the 
		children be handed over. Amid the drama there was hand-wringing, cries 
		from mothers, pleas from fathers to take the place of their sons and 
		general confusion and chaos.
 
Distraught as news swept Dar’a, in 
		the south-west of Syria less than six miles from the Jordanian border, 
		the parents and their relatives gathered outside his office, but Atif 
		Najeeb along with Faisal Kalthoum the governor of Dar’a, refused to meet 
		any one of them.
 
For four days the families waited but not a 
		single scrap of news came out about the fate of their sons. Eventually, 
		a delegation made up of family members, local imams, the local 
		headteacher and other dignitaries assembled and once again demanded to 
		see Najeeb or the governor. After three hours they were herded into a 
		room to meet the governor who remained seated while deliberately keeping 
		the delegation on their feet. Culturally, this is a huge insult in the 
		Arab world. At this point no one had even an inkling of what the boys 
		had done to deserve their fate. The parents' pleas to have their 
		children returned were ignored and the governor advised them to forget 
		about them.
 
He allegedly said: “My advice to you is that you 
		forget you ever had these children. Go back home and sleep with your 
		wives and bring other children into the world and if you can not do 
		that, then bring your wives to us and we will do the job for you.”
 
		By this time families in towns and villages across the region were 
		shocked and outraged by what had happened and began to demonstrate and 
		rally to show their support for the boys, their families and the town of 
		Dar'a. They included local people from Dayr Al-Zawr, Idlib and 
		Homs. While some did suggest that it was time for a revolution, the 
		families kept to only two demands: the return of their children and the 
		sacking of the governor for his crude and inflammatory remarks.
 
		As the pressure mounted on Kalthoum, a helicopter full of military thugs 
		was flown in to Dar’a to quell the unrest and during clashes with local 
		citizens several of the Dar'a's citizens were killed. They went to their 
		graves not knowing what the children had done to incur the wrath of the 
		governor.
 
Eighteen days later, when it was clear that the 
		parents and families would not be appeased until their children were 
		returned, the boys were released. Their condition was pitiful and 
		shocking; all were traumatised beyond recognition. All had their finger 
		nails extracted. One had lost an eye while several had fractured skulls 
		and all had at least one broken limb. Today, those boys still bear the 
		whip marks and scars on their bodies which bear testimony to the brutal 
		nature of their detention and torture. Several of them still have 
		nightmares recalling the screeches and screams of their fellow inmates.
		 
Far from calming the situation, the physical evidence that the boys 
		had been tortured enraged the people of Dar’a who made their own two 
		demands: the dismissal of the governor and justice delivered to those 
		who had done such wicked things to the boys including Atif Najeeb and 
		his torture squad.
 
The relatively low level demands carried on 
		for the next six months and those making them resisted calls for a 
		full-blown revolution and offers of outside intervention; there were 
		many in the Arab world who wanted to take up arms in support of their 
		brothers and sisters in Dar’a and the dozens of Syrian cities and towns 
		now in full revolutionary mode. Moreover, while insisting that their 
		reasonable demands be met, some of the families pleaded for calm and 
		even argued that Assad could not possibly have known or allowed this 
		atrocity to happen. Surely, a London-graduated doctor and 
		Ophthalmologist could not have consented to this barbarism, they argued.
		 
By August the death toll across Syria had reached 1,000 and then 
		the foreign fighters arrived, not to help the people of Dar’a but to 
		destroy their spirit and morale. The fighters were mercenaries 
		from numerous neighbouring and distant countries including former Soviet 
		satellite states who, in the pay of the Assad regime, embarked on a 
		killing and raping spree.
 
The plan was to subdue the spreading 
		uprising and instill fear in the lives of the Syrian people, those who 
		dared protest and those who were considering joining the growing crowds 
		on the streets. Instead, the gates of Hell were opened and talks of 
		compromise and low level demands gave way to screams of “Ashaab yureed 
		isqat annidham”.
 
As news of the atrocities in Dar'a and other 
		Syrian cities reached Damascus some senior officers in the military 
		could no longer stomach what was being done in their name. They defected 
		from the regime and formed what is now known as the Free Syrian Army. 
		It’s not an army of outsiders; it was founded by Syrian officers and 
		grew in popularity and prominence with the media because of its name.
		 
Speculation is rife about the emergence of Al-Qaida, foreign 
		jihadists, support from Arab countries, subversive tactics by Arab 
		countries, infiltration by the CIA and Mossad, just about everyone, in 
		fact, bar the Free Wales Army. Some of the speculation is true, some is 
		not, but don’t allow anyone to rewrite the history of the start of the 
		Syrian Revolution.
 
One day peace will come to Syria and when it 
		does the Graffiti Boys should be remembered and their names should go up 
		on another wall in Dar’a – a wall where their names can be carved with 
		pride.
 
Some of them may not survive the war but some will 
		finally enjoy the taste of freedom. Today I salute them and remember 
		each one by name and urge you to remember them too, so that when Syria’s 
		history is written in full they will not be forgotten: 
		1) Mu'awiya Faisal Sayasneh 2) 
		Yousuf Adnan Sweidan 
		3) Samer Ali Sayasneh 
		4) Ahmed Jihad Aba Zayd 
		5) Issa Hassan Abul Qayyas 
		6) Ala Mansour Irsheidat Aba Zayd 
		7) Mustafa Anwar Aba Zayd 
		8) Nidhal Anwar Aba Zayd 
		9) Akram Anwar Aba Zayd 
		10) Nayef Muwaffaq Aba Zayd 
		11) Basheer Farooq Aba Zayd 
		12) Ahmed Thani Irshiedat Aba Zayd 
		13) Ahmed Shukri Al-Akram 
		14) Abdul Rahman Nayef Al-Reshedat Aba Zayd 
		15) Muhammed Ayman Munwer Al-Karrad 
		16) Ahmed Nayef Al-Resheidat Aba Zayd 
		17) Nabeel Imad Al-Resheidat Aba Zayd 
		18) Mohammed Ameen Yasin Al-Resheidat Aba Zayd .