
“Last year I used to drive to Nubl every day to collect four teachers and then return them to their homes in the evening,” says Bayanuni. “Now it is impossible. It is too dangerous, and the teachers are too scared.” The cities of Nubl and al-Zahraa are less than three miles from Bayanoun. Both are majority Shia and are bastions of pro-Assad supporters in an area otherwise controlled by the opposition Free Syrian Army, who took control of most of the Aleppo province in July 2012. Government helicopters visit the isolated towns three times a day, bringing in troops and food supplies. Rumors are rife in Bayanoun, a majority Sunni town, that Hezbollah operatives, aligned with the Assad regime, have also been flown in to train local civilian militias called shabiha. Those claims have been flatly denied. But that hasn’t quelled local tension between Sunnis and Shia. Further upsetting the already war-torn landscape, a spate of tit-for-tat kidnappings is driving a wedge between once peaceable communities.Residents of Bayanoun and Hayyan are quick to point out that under the Baath regime, Sunnis were often overlooked in favor of Alawites and Shia for appointments to government and military positions. However, they say that civilian-level sectarian tensions between the villages were absent.The civil war has changed things. Syria is a diverse country. Sunni Muslims are 74 percent of the country’s population, Alawites and Shia are 13 percent, and Christians are ten percent, according to the US State Department. The potential for religious strife, particularly between Sunnis on the one hand and Shia and Alawite communities (to which President Bashar al-Assad belongs) loyal to the regime on the other, threatens the future plurality of the country and muddles the struggle to overthrow Assad’s regime. The people I talked to recalled a time when divisions existed but weren’t an overt hazard of everyday life.
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