From Guernica to Homs… From Spain to Syria: A Mirror of Two Wars
History often repeats itself in
different places and eras, and the tragedies of nations seem to echo one
another. From Guernica
in Spain to Homs
in Syria, the story is painfully similar: a people demanding freedom, a regime
responding with brutality, and a world watching in silence.
A Song, a Poster, and a Dead Child Under Bombs
In 1998, the Welsh rock band Manic
Street Preachers released the song “If You Tolerate This, Your Children Will Be Next”,
inspired by the Spanish Civil War. The title came from a Republican poster
showing a dead
child beneath Franco’s warplanes, with the warning: “If you
tolerate this, your children will be next.”
The warning proved true. After
Franco’s victory, the world plunged into World War II, costing millions of
lives.
From Wales to Spain… From Homs to the World
Another line in the song reads: “If I can
shoot rabbits, then I can shoot fascists.” It was said by a
Welsh teenager who left home to fight Franco’s forces.
In Syria, too, peaceful activists
became fighters, then were labeled “extremists” by global media, driven by the
endless images of children killed under rubble.
Images That Ignite Anger
In the digital age, images spread
instantly. The horrific photos from Syria—children torn apart or burned—were
far more powerful than any 1930s poster. For many, they created a sense of
moral urgency that the world failed to address.
Political Parallels and Foreign Intervention
Just as Franco received support
from Nazi
Germany and Fascist Italy, the Syrian regime received backing
from:
·
Iran
·
Hezbollah
·
Russia
Meanwhile, major powers watched
from afar, repeating the same mistakes made during the Spanish Civil War.
From Guernica to Homs… One Painting, Different Colors
Picasso’s Guernica,
depicting a bombed city, mirrors the images of Homs, Baba Amr,
and Al‑Khaldiyeh.
The destruction is the same, the suffering is the same, and the world’s silence
is the same.
Orwell’s Spain and Syria Today
British writer George Orwell
joined the fight against Franco and later wrote “Homage
to Catalonia.” His experience raises a haunting question today: Why do
democrats and human rights defenders hesitate to stand with Syrians as Orwell
stood with the Spanish?
A Revolution Hijacked
Like Spain, Syria’s revolution was
hijacked by:
Extremist
groups
Regional
powers
Global
interests
Regime
propaganda
Yet the core truth remains: Syrians rose
for freedom, dignity, and justice.
A Future That Cannot Mirror the Past
One key difference stands out: The Assad
regime will never regain legitimacy. Its crimes are too vast,
its brutality too exposed.
A Final Reflection
As the writer looks at ten years
of Syrian tragedy, he whispers the symbolic line: “If I can
shoot rabbits, then I can shoot Assad.” A metaphor for the anger,
the helplessness, and the unanswered question: What stops the free world from
standing with Syrians?
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