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How do Syria’s Islamists view culture? Unlike Taliban, they see art as ‘part of humanity’
When new rulers with jihadi roots took power in Damascus, artists, singers and dancers held their breath. They can relax, the regime says
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On a wintry night in Damascus, hundreds of people packed into a courtyard in the Old City, dancing and singing during a joyful evening of music – a concert held with the approval of Syria’s new, Islamist-led authorities.
It was the kind of scene that the singer, Mahmoud al-Haddad, feared might be in jeopardy as Islamist rebels led by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), a group with origins in global jihad, were advancing on the city in December.
“Everyone was afraid,” Haddad said. “Would we be able to have a concert or not?”
The downfall of President Bashar al-Assad ended more than five decades of iron-fisted rule by his family and the secular Baath Party, making way for HTS, which emerged from a group that was affiliated to al-Qaeda until it cut ties in 2016.

Islamists have taken different approaches to artistic expression and cultural heritage in territories they have ruled.
The Taliban in Afghanistan have been among the most hardline, stunning the world in 2001 by obliterating the giant Buddhas of Bamiyan. In 2024, the Taliban’s morality ministry reported destroying 21,328 musical instruments over the previous year.
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