Syrian Cellist Performs in Damascus Ruins to Express War's Pain and Hope

Syrian Cellist Performs in Damascus Ruins to Express War's Pain and Hope

Syrian cellist Emad Mercy, who has toured internationally, returns to perform in the rubble of Damascus, using music as an international language to express both the pain of Syria's civil war and hope for rebuilding, particularly for orphaned children.

Cellist Plays In Ruins Of City ♪ (Lyrics):

>> It's a long way from Carnegie Hall, but this unlikely venue is exactly where

this cellist needs

to play.

Emad Mercy is a Syrian cellist who's toured the world.

Now, he's returned to

Damascus

performing in the rubble of Syria's capital.

The Arab nation was devastated by a

years-long civil war, which only

ended in 2024 with the abdication of authoritarian

president Bashar al-Assad.

But Syria's woes are not behind her. The country is in ruins,

literally,

as Mercy is trying to show.

Mercy told reporters that music,

an international language, can express both the pain and hope that run through

his country.

And his rendition of the Syrian anthem is

a cry for help.

For the children orphaned by the war, and

for a country that is trying to

rebuild.

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