Josephine Davies
We've made some changes
to The Sunday Times

From the Sunday Times Travel Magazine
It’s our very first day in Damascus, and the boom of nearby explosions jolts me from a jet-lagged afternoon doze. Already picturing the dramatic BBC headlines,
I head into the hotel’s courtyard, followed seconds later by my mother. The watchman – astonished by the sight of two blondes in pyjamas – explains that it’s just the Ramadan cannons signalling the end of the day’s fast. I murmur an embarrassed apology, but fortunately Mohammed is already too busy devouring his sesame flatbread to notice.
You might think visiting Syria during Ramadan is about as sensible as booking a Caribbean beach jaunt in hurricane season. This is, after all, the month when Muslims abstain from food (and drink and, indeed, sex) from dawn until dusk every day – and it’s considered polite for visitors to do the same.
But, bizarrely, it’s during Ramadan that Syria’s culinary prowess really comes to the boil. Each day’s fast ends with a feast: mezze platters, and plates piled high with charcoal-grilled kebabs, walnut-stuffed aubergines and honey-drenched baklava.
Even if you can’t make it here during Ramadan, Syria’s astonishing history makes it fascinating at any time of the year. There’s no ‘busy peak season’ to avoid (9/11 saw to that), and what was once a steady stream of tourists has dwindled to a trickle. On the positive side, that means ruins to rival Greece’s finest can be yours – practically tourist-free.
To those arriving by air at night, Damascus looks something like a flight deck – the winking green lights of mosques picked out amid the orange glow of shops and homes, with a cluster of neon blue marking the Christian quarter (Syrian Christians have a fondness for giant illuminated crucifixes).
Dawn, however, reveals the world’s oldest continually inhabited city in all its chaotic glory – a tangle of ancient streets encircled these days by dusty concrete office blocks. On every corner, hollering street-sellers with wheelbarrows full of football-sized pomegranates compete with the belligerent honks of battered Mercs and canary-yellow taxis. At the heart of Damascus, the old city’s slender alleys and hairpin bends deter all but the most determined drivers and life rolls on much as it has for the past few centuries.
We thread our way though the cat’s cradle of streets to the Umayyad mosque – one of Islam’s holiest shrines. Waves of civilisations have stamped their mark on this sacred spot. Temples and churches have been built, sacked, rebuilt, destroyed and built again, one on top of the other.
In fact, everything in Syria seems to have been constructed on the crumbling remnants of a previous civilisation – layers and layers of history are piled up like the multi-tiered baklava pastries stacked in the windows of the sweet shops.
On the site where the Umayyad mosque now stands, the Arameans founded a temple to their god of sun and thunder, Hadad, more than 3,000 years ago. The Romans followed, outdoing them with a gigantic temple to Jupiter, which has long since crumbled to dust, save for some magnificent pillared remains that still stand at the entrance to the souk.
Then came the Christians and, most recently (a relative term in Syrian history), the Muslims, who spent a decade creating a mosque of epic proportions in around AD636. Invading Mongols, earthquakes and fire have tarnished some of its sheen, but its grand scale and soaring minarets still leave you speechless.
I visited Syria for 8 days in April and it was truly amazing; at the start of our tour our guide told us that at the end of the trip he would ask us what we'd liked best about Syria. He told us that he was confident our response would be "the people", because that's what clients usually said. He was right and witin half a day I had learned to greet people in Arabic as it would have been churlish not to have responded to all the greetings I received. Other memorable highlights...the food (Sissi House was execellent as was Ellisars in Damascus)and the shopping, especially the souks of Aleppo. The sights were pretty good too, especially Crac de Chevalliers. It saddens me when I tell people that I spent a holiday in Syria and am asked whether it's safe and just goes to show what a distorted image of a wonderful country is presented in our media. I had such a great time, I've just booked another week there next year, which I'm sure will be welcome news to the shop keepers of Aleppo!
sue stevens, london,
We visited Syria in April for 10 days.
Damascus was an outstanding adventure.
Hamas is really working to create an attractive city.
Damascus museum had 4 visitors the day we were there.
Eating in or staying at the merchants houses in the cities is a real treat.
Even getting the visas was a pleasant and very 'personal' experience
Given the political view of the british presence in the region the hospitality and respect we received was unforgetable. john banks
john banks, cheltenham, U.K
Note to the author,
Aleppo is actually the oldest inhabited city in the world. Damascus at best can be regarded as the oldest inhabited capital. Jerusalem does not even come close. We in Aleppo take things like that very personally.
Very enjoyable article, sincere thanks for the effort in changing the biased image held against us.
Regards
Mazen , Aleppo, Syria
I agree with Karen Canad, with my husband I have been to Syria 4 times. It really is the best kept secret in the Middle East. The people are fantastic, no whining "bakasheesh" to be endured. There is 5000 years of civilizations to be explored too.
Pauline O' Donovan, Leinster, Ireland
What a wonderful story! I'm about to leave for a month in Syria and was really worried that it would be teeming with tourists. I'll be staying with family and really anticicipate having a marvelous time. This is the first time I've left the USA or Canada so this is really special, and you have made it very encouraging. I'm already afraid I'll eat too much! Perhaps if I shop till I drop... And hike around the wonderful archaeological sites...and eat...and walk some more.. and eat some more. Every time I hear from people there thry're always eating.I think I'm going to have fun! Thanks!
Beverly, Bountiful, UT, USA
Syria is the best country in the world, with the nicest people and the greatest cultured and most civilised. its the #1 gem of the world and until you have been there you wont know.
karen, canad, canada
Arggggggh! Why does EVERYONE like to repeat the myth that Laurence's bill was UNPAID in the Baron hotel? Do your research - talk to the owner of the Baron and you will get the truth! Of course he paid it!
Otherwise, nice article, even if it's a slight exaggeration that Syrians go to the hammam once a week. (not anymore).
Malika, Damascus, Syria