Together in tragedy: Syrian refugee draws Paris victims

Lina Mahameed
Lina Mahameed

Lina Mahameed


When Syrian war refugee Lina Mahameed saw TV reports of the recent Paris attacks, she recognized her own story reflected in the brutality.

The 41-year old artist is now drawing portraits of some of the 130 people killed in the Nov. 13 attacks in the French capital, for which the extremist Daesh group claimed responsibility.

Mahameed said they fell victim to the same fanaticism that killed her 16-year-old son Yasser at the beginning of Syria’s civil war.

“When these French people died in Paris, I felt their pain,” she said in her living room in the Jordanian capital of Amman, wearing a speckled headscarf.

“I felt what every mother feels when she loses someone to such a criminal act,” Mahameed said, gesturing with a colored pencil. “Their tragedy is like our tragedy.”

Mahameed found photos of the victims on the Internet, and used print-outs for pencil sketches of their faces: a young blonde girl seated before a meal, a bespectacled man in a green jacket smiling calmly, a dozen people staring straight at the camera.

Mahameed is now filling in the portraits’ colors. She is working in her Amman apartment, where the walls are covered with canvases of beauty and disaster: elks in a golden forest; a frowning clown with a handful of balloons; children behind barbed wire, screaming next to splattered blood; a man clutching a stomach wound; a half-finished painting of Damascus’ Umayyad Mosque, symbolic of home and the cultural heritage she, too, fears is targeted by extremism sweeping the world.

When asked, she brings a portrait of Yasser from the back room

On April 24, 2012, Syrian government tanks shells blew up part of the family home in the southern town of Daraa, cradle of the uprising against Syrian President Bashar Assad that quickly turned into a civil war. When the family fled across the street, a sniper killed Yasser. Government forces kept the body for 15 days before the family could bury him.

Mahameed, left with three children, hopes the portraits will warm the hearts of the victims’ families, though she hasn’t figured out how to deliver the drawings. “We are martyrs, and they are martyrs,” she said. “Innocent people don’t have anything to do with politics or other countries.”

Mahameed hopes to leave Jordan soon because she is unable to work legally.


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