Darayya is a suburb of Damascus in Syria, the centre of Darayya lying south-west of the centre of Damascus. Administratively it belongs toRif Dimashq.
Population and history
The city had a population of 131,501 as of 2004, making it the 19th largest city per geographical entity in Syria. Darayya has an altitude of. After 2011, the number decreased gradually, as a result of the conflict between the Syrian regime forces and the revolutionaries, to seven thousand civilians and combatants until 26 August 2016, after that and as a result of the tight siege imposed on the city by The Syrian regime forced the rest of the population to accept forced displacement to the north of Syria so the city became empty of its residents. Recently, the Syrian regime allowed some families to return to their homes after obtaining the necessary security clearances. Darayya is one of the oldest cities in Syria, reportedly the place where Paul the Apostle had his conversion, "on Damascus road". PatriarchGregory III Laham, the current leader of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church was born here on 15 December 1933 as Lutfy Laham.
Darayya during Syrian Revolution
Darayya has seen heavy fighting during the Syrian Civil War. The city was an early hotspot for anti-government protests. In August 2012, opposition groups denounced that government forces performed a mass killing that was later known as Darayya massacre, and a second time on 4 January 2013. However, as of summer 2013 fighting continued in the city with most of the municipality controlled by the armed opposition forces. By mid-2016, the Syrian Army controlled approximately 65% of Darayya, steadily advancing and tightening the siege. In August 2016, an agreement allowed for the evacuation of rebel fighters as well as civilians. Some 700 rebels were safely transported to the rebel stronghold city of Idlib in the north. This agreement was essentially a rebel surrender. Amid the constant bombings and conflict, a group of young people have founded an underground public library that has amassed a collection of more than 15,000 books. Most of the books were found in the rubble of ruined houses, and the librarians are documenting the name of the homeowner so that the books can be returned after the war.