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'Our Oct. 7': Golan Druze mourn Syrian massacre and praise Israel's intervention

'Our Oct. 7': Golan Druze mourn Syrian massacre and praise Israel's intervention

National Post20-07-2025
As millions of Israelis resumed routines and activities interrupted by the war with Iran, life ground to a halt last week in the Druze communities of the Golan Heights.
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A massacre perpetrated on July 13, in which hundreds of Druze Syrians were reportedly murdered, has shaken Majdal Shams, a picturesque town that's home to most of the Golan's 20,000-odd Druze residents, many of whom have relatives across the border.
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'This is our Oct. 7,' Sari Halabi, whose home in Majdal Shams is situated 50 yards from the border fence, told JNS on July 17. 'Life froze. We keep watching the videos that the terrorists took of themselves butchering our families, feeling angry, anxious and completely destabilized.'
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Alongside the grief and shock that has struck this community, many here feel proud of and grateful for Israel's robust intervention to stop the massacres — on July 16, the Israel Air Force struck key regime targets in Damascus — and optimistic that the Druze of Syria and Israel would unite in the wake of the massacres.
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Following the July 13 massacre in Sweida, a predominantly Druze city in southern Syria, hundreds of Druze living on the Israeli side of the border briefly crossed into Syria without permission out of concern for their families there, as dozens from that country entered Israel to seek safety and see relatives, though most were later returned.
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Elsewhere in Israel, Druze citizens, of which Israel has about 150,000, declared a general strike, blocked roads and demonstrated, demanding Israel act to rescue their kin. The protest subsided after Israel struck Damascus on July 16, prompting the Syrian authorities to announce a ceasefire as security forces were deployed to Sweida to end the violent clashes.
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Still, the unrest underlined the deep impact that events in Syria have on Israel's Druze community — a minority that has distinguished itself with loyalty to the Jewish state, including via active and meaningful military service.
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Despite the illegal border breach on July 15 and the protests, the Druze attachment to Syria 'is an asset to Israel, not a liability,' said Halabi, a 38-year-old father of three.
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'This attachment opens the path to many things, which I think the terrible massacre has brought closer, including a Druze autonomy fighting and flourishing alongside Israel' on the Syrian side of the border, he said.
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This is because 'the massacre will help settle an internal debate within the Druze community in Syria, and it will lead to more support for autonomy and self-reliance,' said Halabi. Autonomy, he explained, means deepening the alliance with Israel, which is the only major power interested in a Druze-run buffer entity along its northeastern border.
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