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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Radwan Ziadeh

Interviewed May 20, 2024

In all the revolutions, Arab revolutions, Arab revolts, starts from the question of dignity. In Egypt [Mr. Ziadeh misspoke, the following event occurred in Tunisia], Mohamed Bouazizi [a Tunisian fruit vendor who was extorted and beaten by the government], he was slapped by a police officer. He refused to go with her to the police station. And thus he decided to set himself in fire as a response of the way the security forces dealt with him.

Exactly the same question of dignity in Syria, where some schoolchildren brought some graffiti on their walls in the southern city of Daraa about the downfall of the regime and under the influence of what’s going on in Egypt and in Yemen and in Tunisia, Libya. And the [Syrian President Bashar] Assad regime responded by arresting those schoolchildren, torturing them. They removed their nails and put them in security forces and refused.

Then the question of dignity: Why the Assad security forces allowed – why we should allow for the Assad security forces to do that to our children? To behave like this, this is our right, to feel that we are respectable citizens in our own country. And this is how all the stories begin. This is why the Syrians called their revolution a revolution of dignity and freedom.