In Syria’s devastated twin towns, tears mix with rubble
ZABADANI, Syria — Arriving with her husband and 10-year-old daughter to check on their home for the first time in five years, Adibeh Ghosn had trouble recognizing the neighbourhood.
In disbelief, she walked over the mounds of rubble leading to her home. “Where are the neighbours, where are the people? What has happened here?” she cried, wiping away tears as she gazed at the horizon of collapsed buildings, houses stripped of doors and windows, and finally her own charred home.
Once a popular summer resort famed for its fruit trees and favoured by tourists from rich Gulf Arab countries, the Damascus suburb of Zabadani is now a deserted endless vista of pulverized buildings after thousands of rebels were driven out, along with the town’s original inhabitants.
A short drive away is Madaya, once a besieged rebel stronghold that captured international headlines for haunting photographs of children dying of malnutrition. Like Zabadani, it has now been retaken by Syrian troops.


