Palmyra back in the NEWS 2025

Apparently, the site of the Palmyra edifices to BAAL have been in ruins for a very long time.  Long before the wars, terrorists and vandals that have affected it in one way or another.  Long before the ISIS explosions and land mines.   They had at one point in history been partially restored using cement instead of the original stone.

I believe all the hype and even the “military” actions of late were just staged in order to gain public support for the United Nations  effort to RESTORE the ancient Temples and the IDOLS that once stood there. They are also working to build public support for the 3D printed replica’s of the Arch of BAAL they had planned to erect in ove4 1,000 cities across the Earth.  They originally planned for them to be full size, not just the few smaller replicas they ended up placing in very prominent, influential and spiritually strategic cities in 2016.  They reduced it’s size from 20 meters (Over 65 feet) to 20 Feet.

I hope that you are beginning to recognize that all the archeology and restoration of historical structures, artifacts and statues is not about US.  It is all about them.  The ruling elite re-establishing the worship of THEIR Ancestors.  It is about the resurgence of all the pagan religions.  It is about returning humanity to their bondage to the fallen Angels and their progeny.  Why do you think they HIDE everything from you?  All the evidence of anything that contradicts their narrative is locked away in places like the Vatican, the Smithsonian, and the Antiquities Departments of every Nation?

Don’t you realize that all those nations that have risen and fallen, all the history you have to dig up was buried for a reason?  The rise and fall of Nations is God’s to command.  When I say GOD or LORD, I am talking about Yahuwah, the CREATOR, the GOD of the BIBLE and/or His Son Yahushuah.

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FORCED RESURRECTION of PALMYRA

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They are working very hard worldwide to endear this satanic city to your hearts.  Here you will find some notes that might help you get an idea of the TRUTH about this place.  You do not want to be any part of the RESURRECTION of this ANCIENT City.  You should not be connected with the … Click Here to Read More

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Should we really RESURRECT PALMYRA?

The United Nations wants to paint Palmyra as nothing but the finest of all the world has to offer.  Like it was some kind of majestic oasis of unity and luxury.  They tell you it is too valuable of a historic culture to be lost.  They tell you by resurrecting Palmyra you are fighting terrorism … Click Here to Read More

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Palmyra: A City Rising Above the Mist

“Palmyra is a strange ruin. It is not haunted by saints or warriors, but by merchants. Its history is one of trade.”
H.V. Morton, Through Lands of the Bible, 1938

Introduction:
Syria never embraced mass tourism like its neighbors Israel, Jordan Turkey, or Egypt. In fact, under the rule of Bashar al Assad’s father, Hafez al Assad, Syria was never vigorously promoted as a tourist destination. It was difficult as well as costly to get a tourist visa. When Bashar came to power, after his father’s death in 2000, the country slowly began to open up. Tour operators were excited about the young Bashar taking the helm and hoped for a Syrian renaissance of sorts. Luxury hotels were built, infrastructure around tourist sites was improved, and independent tour agencies were allowed to operate separately from the National Tourist Agency. Even with all the upgrades, Syria still had a difficult time breaking into the international tourist market, remaining largely off the beaten track.

For the individual who wanted to experience the beauty of a country without the hassle of tour busses, hawkers, and the crowds, no country in the region was more magical than Syria. Before the civil war, I can’t recall how many times I would be wandering through an archeological site and suddenly realize that I was the only person among the ruins.

Palmyra, situated in the middle of the desert between Damascus and the Euphrates River, is the site of the most treasured shrines including the Temple of Baal, the Temple of Baalshmin and the Monumental Arch.

BEL
The name Bel comes from the Akkadian bēlu meaning “lord” or “master”. It is a title, and an epithet applied to many Gods who may be identified as “Lord” including Enlil, Marduk and Malak. The Feminine form is Belit. Bel seems to be cognate with Ba’al.The Greek form of Bel is Belos which has been applied to Zeus and the Latin Belus, which has been applied to Jupiter. Also, the names Bel and Belanos are often used interchangeably among modern Pagans.Bol is identified as the sky God and King of the Gods of ancient Palmyra and Syria with the eagle and lightning bolts as his symbols. His companions were Yarhibol and Aglibol. He was identified with Bel-Marduk and came to be called Bel, which is probably cognate anyway.  Source
Baalshamin: The Fertility and Rain God

Baalshamin, the ancient Middle Eastern deity, played a significant role in Canaanite mythology as the universal god of fertility. They looked to him for favorable weather conditions, timely rain, and fertile soil, all of which were imperative for successful agricultural endeavors. Legends tell of Baalshamin’s battles against Mot, the god of death, where victory ensured seven years of fertility, while defeat resulted in drought and famine. Baalshamin’s prominence extended to Palmyra,

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BAAL – BEL – BELL – HELLS BELLS

Jesus says Beelzebub is Lucifer. (Luke 11:17-22) ‘Baal’ has different pronunciations in different places. So, you will see Baal, Bel in Babylon, and Beel in the land of the Philistines – Canaan. Beelzebub was a Philistine god, that the Jews hated. It means Baal Master, or lord of the flies. A rose by any other … Click Here to Read More

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In the following Photorientalist exhibitions you will see the first looks at Palmyra from the middle of the 19th century up to the 1960s, and features both professional and amateur photographers who visited the site. The second exhibitions looks at the work of Luigi Stironi, an Italian photographer who worked from the beginning of the French mandate following WWI in the 1920s. 

The exhibition consists of glass lanternslides, albumen prints, stereoviews, large silver gelatin prints, postcards, and 35mm slides.

Photorientalist

A website dedicated to exhibiting 19th and 20th century photographs of the Middle East and North Africa



Battle of Palmyra (1941)
Updated on 

Combatants: Vichy France, Emirate of Transjordan
The Battle of Palmyra (1 July 1941) was part of the Allied invasion of Syria during the SyriaLebanon campaign in World War II. British mechanized cavalry and an Arab Legion desert patrol broke up a Vichy French mobile column northeast of the city of Palmyra. They captured four officers and 60 men, which provoked the surrender of the Vichy garrison at Palmyra.   No mention whatsoever of any damage to the historical sites.

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PALMYRA PHOTOS FROM 1980


Syria – Palmyra. Ancient Palmyra. UNESCO World Heritage List, 1980

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Temple of TRIUMPH

TEMPLE OF TRIUMPH   TEMPLE OF TRIUMPH Syria: ISIS Destroys Arch of Triumph in Ancient Palmyra | Time    

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The photos of the oasis always evoke in me the image of tired parents returning from their farms on their donkey carts, carrying with them clusters of dates, some of which were distributed to people passing by.

by Hasan – archaeologist / 07-04-2020


Syria – Palmyra– The oasis / 1999 / D-DAI-IST-FP-03735

THE NATURE OF LIFE IN PALMYRA

Water and the oasis were the focal points of our lives in Palmyra. It is a remote city in the desert and its nearest neighbour-town (as-Sukhna) is 70 km away. The oasis is located to the south and east of the town of Palmyra.

Our work in Palmyra was seasonal depending on what could be done in the desert climate. Most of us worked in agriculture, building houses, construction works and excavation with foreign and Syrian archaeological missions that worked in Palmyra for a long time. When the city started attracting many tourists, people worked in hotels and organized touristic tours on camels’ back at the archaeological site. The spring of Afqaa was a Sulphur spring and was sacred to the ancient and modern Palmyrenes. The spring’s name was Aramaic and it was the reason for the existence of Palmyra.The spring originated from a deep cave from Mount Al-Mantar west of the Palmyra oasis;the inhabitants of the valley led the water in channels to water trees and plantations in the oasis. The people of Palmyra visited the cave for swimming and enjoying the warm environment.

طبيعة الحياة في تدمر
تمحورت حياتنا في تدمر حول المياه و الواحة فتدمر مدينة نائية في الصحراء و أقرب بلدة لها (السخنة) تبعد عنها ٧٠ كم. و تقع الواحة الجنوب و الشرق
من تدمر. أشغالنا في تدمر كانت موسمية تعتمد على ما يمكن فعله في هذا المناخ الصحراوي فمعظمنا عمل بالزراعة و بناء البيوت و أعمال البناء المختلفة
و التنقيب مع البعثات الأثرية الأجنبية و السورية التي عملت في تدمر طويلاً و بعد أن استقطب الموقع الكثير من السياح بدأنا بالعمل في المكاتب
السياحية و الفنادق و تنظيم الرحلات على الجمال في الموقع الأثري الخ.
نبع أفقا كان نبعاً كبريتياً و كان مقدساً عند التدمريين القدماء و الجدد على حد سواء. اسمه آرامي و هو سبب وجود تدمر. ينبع من كهف عميق من
جبل المنطار غربي واحة تدمر و قام الأهالي بجر سواقي منه لسقاية الأشجار و المزروعات في الواحة. كان أهالي تدمر يزورون الكهف للسباحة و الاستمتاع
بالبيئة الكبيريتية الساخنة.

 

Syria – Palmyra– Column / 1999 / D-DAI-IST-FP-03723

SPRING OF WATER

The spring dried out in the 1990s because of excavations and explosions to construct the Meridian Hotel (Palmyra East) adjacent to the cave that led to the cracking of the upstream rock. As a young man, I used to work cleaning the main water source in the cave, extracting the stones and sediments with baskets and ropes to facilitate the flow of the spring. Later we were told that this removal or cleaning should not include removing the calcareous layer plastered on the stone, because this layer was designed to prevent the water from leaking into the rocks.In the course of the spring, there were three baths. Closest to the source was the men’s bath, which consisted mainly of archaeological remains, including steps and ruins along the stream of water, and it was open. It was followed by the women’s bath – two newly built rooms above the waterway. Followed by the wool bath, which was a square pool with each side not exceeding 8 meters, set up to wash wool. We used the perforated baskets made of palm fronds to wash the wool; washing meant to drop the basket in the water and remove it a number of times. We then hit the wool with a piece of wood (Mekhbata) until it was agreed that the wool was clean. Washing wool was a family work involving women, children and men.

نبع المياه
النبع جف في التسعينيات بسبب الحفريات و التفجيرات لإنشاء فندق الميريديان (بالميرا الشرق) المجاور للكهف و التي أدت إلى تكسير صخرة المنبع.
كنا و نحن صغار ننظف المنبع الأساسي داخل الكهف، إذ نستخرج الأحجار و الرواسب بالسلال و الحبال لتسهيل جريان النبع. قيل لنا فيما بعد أن هذا
التعزيل أو التنظيف يجب ألا يطول الطبقة الكلسية التي تكسو أحجار النبع لأن هذه الطبقة وضعت لتمنع تسرب المياه بين الصخور.
على مجرى النبع ثلاثة حمامات الأقرب منها إلى المنبع كان حمام الرجال و هو عبارة عن مساطب أثرية على مجرى النبع و هو مفتوح. يليه حمام النساء
و هو عبارة عن غرفتين بنيتا حديثاً فوق مجرى الماء. يليه حمام الصوف و هو بركة مربعة ضلعها لايتجاوز ٨ أمتار أنشئت لغسل الصوف. كنا نستخدم
السلال المثقبة المصنوعة من سعف النخيل لغسل الصوف و الغسل كان يعني انزال السلة في الماء و اخراجها عدداً من المرات، ثم يضرب الصوف بقطعة
خشبية (مخباطة) حتى يتم الاتفاق على نظافته. غسل الصوف كان عملاً عائلياً تشارك فيه النساء و الأطفال و الرجال.

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Efqa Spring

Efqa Spring (Arabicإفقا) is an ancient artesian spring in the Syrian Desert that was first developed between 4000 BCE and 2000 BCE.[3] Once upon a time the spring fed a natural stream that drained eastward into a brackish wetland.[4] The ancient city of Palmyra developed around the oasis created by the spring water.[5] Efqa comes from the Aramaic word meaning source.[2]

The spring emerges on the west side of modern Tadmur,[6] “opposite the modern building of the Cham Palace hotel, situated on the road to Damascus beyond the ruins of the ancient city.”[7] The spring flows out of the limestone inside al-Mintar Mountain via nine hand-dug wells that feed into a 400-meter-long cave, or underground irrigation channel, known as a qanat.[8][3]  The spring went dry in 1994,[7] due to a combination of drought, over pumping, and neglect,but has been rehabilitated as the result of a joint Syrian–Russian restoration project and is flowing again as of 2019.[3] Water from the spring is channeled into the 420 hectares (1,000 acres) of date palm and oliveorchards surrounding the spring.[8]

According to historian Michał Gawlikowski, the maintenance of the spring was closely tied to the religious cult of ancient Tadmor (Palmyra to the Greeks and Romans and present-day English speakers):[10]

One function of general interest was the supervision of the Efqa spring; the ‘chief of the spring’ was chosen every year by the god Yarhibol, probably through some rite of divination or drawing of sorts, and the same god provided him testimony at the end of his term. In one case at least, there were two chiefs at the same time…Duties of the appointees were no doubt related to the cult, but very likely they also supervised the distribution of water in the oasis, a task of utmost importance that was strictly regulated until very recently.[10]

The channel into the mountain is features “small rock-cut chapels with incense altars (pyrat)” for offerings to Yarhibol.[6] In addition to the main Efqa spring, the water infrastructure of Tadmor used two other qanats, underground channels fed by aquifer layers west and north of the oasis.These were possibly constructed under the emperor Hadrian, possibly with a grant from the emperor himself. One ran nine kilometers west to Riweisat, the other ran north and is called Biyar el‑Amye, which means wells of the blind[11] In an addition to providing water for the settlement, the water was distributed to farms on the outskirts that grew grain and vegetables for wealthy residents; itinerant shepherds were periodically allowed to graze and glean the enclosed fields since the goat and sheep manure that came with the herd was valuable fertilizer for next year’s planting. [12] There is also a second spring in the center of town but as of 1976 it was described as “not very abundant”.[6]

In addition to use as drinking water and for irrigation, the waters of Efqa were used therapeuticallythe ancients carved benches in the stone basins containing the water so that they could bathe in the waters.[12]

  Afqa historical spring in Palmyra starts to flow again after 25 years of dryness

15 January، 2019

Palmyra, SANA- The historical spring of Afqa in Palmyra archeological city returned to life and started to flow again after its dryness, which lasted about 25 years.

Archaeologist Mohamed Khaled Asaad said in a statement to SANA correspondent on Saturday that the spring was historically the cause of prosperity and the continuity of life in Palmyra City more than 6,000 years ago.

Asaad noted that the water of Afqa spring today flows naturally between the rocks of a 400-meter long cave inside  al-Mintar Mountainto irrigate the palm oasis and the olive trees.

He added that the spring created an old green oasis which became a place to rest between Iraq and Syria and a station for convoys.

Asaad said that the presence of spring water inside the historic cave has preserved this archeological monument throughout this long period and its water maintained a  temperature of 33 degrees Celsius.

Mineral water is a means for healing, especially of dermatological, intestinal and articular diseases.

Asaad confirmed that the flow of the spring water is the return of lifeline to the oasis of Palmyra orchardswhich originated on this water, also helps preserve the archeological cave.

He explained that the spring water was sacred to the inhabitants of Palmyra who used to offer vows and offerings to the Sun God “Yarhaboul” who grants permanent blessing to this water, and they prayed for the sustainability of the spring’s water in a desert area which cannot continue life without it.

Asaad explained that the remains of the stairs, the niche, the altar and the table, which comprise the holy temple of the god of the spring / Afqa /, which means in the language of Palmyra the sunrise or the start, still exist at the outlet of the cave.

Asaad called for improving the spring and removing the remains of dust and stones inside the cave and conducting technical studies to seal the outlets of water leakswithin the walls in order to preserve the flow.

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PALMYRA AND THE JINN

Most of us have stories with the jinn, perhaps because we lived close to these archaeological sites, and most of us thought that the souls of those who lived there were still present.I saw a jinni once when I was young. After I had finished my work in the orchard, I went to wash myself with water of Afqaa spring,and I saw a black woman, who was very chubby, sitting on one of the pillars and nursing her baby. Her hair was fluffy. I was very scared and started to run to our house. When I told my grandfather, he told me that he was glad she did not hurt me;she is a well-known jinni,whose name was Umm Oweid. My grandfather was appointed as a guard of Madfan Al-Arous (the bride tomb, Elahbel tomb) by the Directorate of Antiquities.During his work in the tomb, he heard the sounds of celebrations and songs coming from the vault, which did not bother him until ‘they’ started to throw small stones at him. He then wanted to see what was happening inside, and saw a jinni staring at him on the stairs in the shape of a cow.He ran home in panic, leaving the tomb he was guarding unattended, and retired from doing this work altogether.

by Faisal – worker / 25-06-2019

التدمريون والجن
لمعظمنا قصص مع الجن ربما لأننا كنا نعيش قريباً من هذه الأوابد الأثرية التي ظن معظمنا أن أرواحاً لازالت تسكنها. عن نفسي رأيت جنية مرة واحدة
عندما كنت صغيراً. بعد أن أنهيت عملي في البستان اتجهت لأغسل نفسي بمياه سواقي أفقا و اذ بي أرى امرأة سوداء عارية شديدة البدانة تجلس على
إحدى العواميد و ترضع طفلها. كان شعرها منفوشاً فخفت منها كثيراً و بدأت بالركض إلى بيتنا. عندما أخبرت جدي قال لي أنه مسرور بأنها لم تؤذيني
فهي جنية معروفة هناك اسمها أم عويد.
جدي نفسه عين حارساً لمدفن العروس(مدفن إيلا بل) من قبل مديرية الآثار و كان اسمه العماوي. و خلال حراسته للمدفن و عدة التنقيب فيها سمع
أصوات احتفالات و أهازيج قادمة من المدفن الأمر الذي لم يزعجه إلى أن بدؤوا بقذفه بالحصى الصغيرة فأراد أن يرى ما يحدث بالداخل، حينها رأى جنية
تنتظره على الدرج في شكل بقرة. من ذعره ركض إلى المنزل تاركاً المدفن الذي يحرسه و اعتذر عن هذا العمل كلياً.

مشاركة فيصل  عامل / ٢٥  – ٠٦  – ٢٠١٩

A House of Jinn in Syria

As I do my research into what is known about the realm of the jinn, I’m always on the lookout for archaeolgical links to places that may have a mysterious history;locations whose lore or legends lend themselves to jinn occupation.
 Translated from Arabic, Mazraat Beit Jinn means Farm in the Jinn House. There is a nearby town simply called Beit Jinn, which means House of the Jinn. Why? Why would residents of long ago give such a name to this windswept, sparsely populated desert outpost? Were the jinn here? There’s no answer now. Beit Jinn is a small village among a cluster of small villages southwest of Damascushaving a total population of just over 2,000 souls. At one time, however, it sat along the route of the Silk Road. Once it was vibrant. Once, it might have hosted the jinn.

Not far from Beit Jinn, northeast of Damascus, lies Palmyra.And here, there are more remnants that lore credits to the handiwork of the jinn. Although located in the arid center of a desert,
Palmyra employed a system of elaborate dams and cisterns 2,000 years ago to bring water to more than 100,00 inhabitants. A pretty big feat. Unless you have some jinn working for you.
And here’s some literary evidence to support that theory:

“Rise up and go into the world to release it from error and send word to the Jinn and I will give them leave to build Tadmur
  with hewn stones and columns.” ~God said to
Solomon according to the pre-Islamic Arab poet Nabigha al Dhubyain.

Tadmur is the Arabic name for Palmyra.

A massive avenue in Palmyra, Syria
A massive avenue in Palmyra, Syria
Beit Jinn translates to House of Jinn

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Jinn of Ancient Palmyra




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History — Triumphal Arch of Palmyra

Global web icon
cityhallarch.org
http://www.cityhallarch.org › history
The arch, which stands some 20 metres tall, was built in the third century CE by Septimius Severus and links the city’s central colonnaded street to its main temple, the temple of Baal.

20 meters = 65 feet and 7.4015748 inches
Replica of the Palmyra Arch created by Digital Archeology and erected in London, New York,  Dubai, Florence, Bern, and Washington DC how tall was it?
Answer: 20 feet tall
The replica of the Palmyra Arch, which is two-thirds the size of the original, stands 20 feet tall. This replica was created using 3D printing technology and is located in New York City, London, and Washington DC.
Digital Archeology replica of the Palmyra Arch is how tall?
Answer: 25 feet tall

Arch of BAAL/Arch of Triumph/Arch of Hadrian

One of the most recognizable structures in the ancient city of Palmyra (تدمر) is the remarkable monumental arch (قوس النصر). Also known as the triumphal arch or victory arch, it was constructed during the reign of Emperor Septimius Severus, who ruled from 193 to 211. Despite being built more than a half century after Hadrian’s visit to the city, the monument is often erroneously referred to as Hadrian’s arch. It was restored in the 1930s.

The arch is particularly impressive from an architectural standpoint, addressing a problem somewhat unique to Palmyra (تدمر). The layout of this ancient city was unusual for the Roman period, as its main streets did not align with the four cardinal points of the compass. The monumental arch (قوس النصر) was constructed at the point of a thirty-degree turn in the main colonnade between the tetrapylon (التترابيل) and the Temple of Bel (معبد بل‎). To solve this problem, the arch incorporated two façades angled apart from one another. Only one of the original arched façades survive, but the overall design is still easy to appreciate. The arch is richly decorated with stone carvings, one of the most lavishly adorned monuments in the city.  Source

The ancient city of Palmyra in Syria was a merchant city that was established in the Bronze Age and gained a lot of wealth from trade. The city’s wealth enabled it to construct monumental buildings such as the Temple of Bel (Baal) and the Great Colonnade, of which the impressive features are still visible in the landscape today. Unfortunately, some of the remnants of buildings were damaged during the Syrian civil war, but luckily most of it still remains standing. Excavations at Palmyra started in 1902, led by Otto Puchstein. Theodor Wiechand, and associate of Puchstein, resumed excavations in 1917 during the First World War. In 1929 Henri Arnold Seyrig, who was the general director of antiquities for the French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon, started excavating at the site. During the Second World War excavations came to a stop, as the area became part of the conflict. On the first of July in 1941 the Battle of Palmyra took place during an allied invasion. Only after Syria’s independence in 1946, did archaeological excavations start up again slowly. An expedition organised by the Swiss UNESCO excavated the site from 1954 until 1956. Polish excavations, led by Kazimierz Michalowski, started in 1959. This was continued in 1980 by Michal Gawlikowski. The Syrian Directorate-General of Antiquities started excavating the site in 1958 in collaboration with the Polish. In 2011 excavations at the site ceased due to the Syrian Civil War.

In 1980, Palmyra was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Some of the pictures from the Schultz collection show features that were destroyed in the Syrian Civil War, such as the Arch of Septimus Severus, the interior of the Temple of Bel and the Tomb of the Three Brothers. The Schultz pictures of Palmyra have not been dated. The pictures in the collection that were dated were taken in the late sixties to the early seventies, which indicate the Palmyra pictures could possibly have been taken during that time period.

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In Syria’s Desert, Palmyra Fights for Its Life

Years after war and the Islamic State group tore through the ancient site and modern town, the survival of both now rests on whether water, trees and people can return


Mamdoua, a 15-year-old souvenir seller, walks on stones inside the Temple of Bel in Palmyra, Syria, on May 1, 2025. (Philémon Barbier)

Afaint silhouette in the golden haze of the Badiya, Syria’s central desert, Palmyra emerges, her beauty barely visible through the sandstorm that blurs the horizon. It is only when one draws near that the battered remains of the city begin to materialize. First, the lonely Qalat ibn Maan fortress, standing vigil over a ravaged plain, then the crumbling colonnades of the ancient city and the sun-scorched buildings of a modern town, emptied of its people.

Once a vibrant cultural crossroads and global tourist draw, Palmyra now survives only in fragments. Its streets, pocked with bullet holes and shell craters, tell a story of relentless war. Since 2011, it has been a battleground for almost every faction in Syria’s civil war: the Islamic State group, opposition rebels, the Bashar al-Assad regime and its powerful allies Russia, Iran and Lebanon’s Hezbollah. Today, Palmyra is a ghost town, punctuated by the occasional open shop selling faded vegetables under a monochrome horizon.    This is where the USA is headed.  With all the factions of rebels and criminals that have swarmed into our country and the media and the liberals stirring up hatred and racial tensions, and the foreigners demanding their own territories with their own laws and governments, AMERICA is becoming a third world nation. 


The ancient theater at Palmyra, which was partially destroyed by the Islamic State group. (Philémon Barbier)

Even the oasis, with its palm trees producing world-renowned dates, has lost its splendor. Today, only decapitated or dried-up tree trunks remain. For 4,000 years, this swath of green nurtured Tadmor, the “City of Palms,” and connected it to the trading routes of the East. Once home to almost 1,000 acres of date palms, olive groves and orchards, the oasis is now a graveyard of stumps.

 For information on the spiritual meaning and significance of Palms please see the following posts:

PHOENIX PALMS RISE FROM THE GRAVE

– It is my great desire to instill in you the understanding that we are in a spiritual WAR 24/7.  The weapons of this war are not physical.  Not fists, or swords, or guns or rockets, or lasers.  This is a SPIRITUAL WAR, the weapons that the enemy uses against us are designed to destroy … Click Here to Read More

Magic Sword of the Elite

More and more information, more and more revelation, more and more understanding is being poured out on God’s people everyday.  Things are happening very fast and we need this information.  We are walking in the GREAT DECEPTION.  Only those who harken to the voice of God will avoid falling under the spell of the Fallen.   … Click Here to Read More

EPSTEIN – THE DARKNESS RUNS DEEP ON HIS VIRGIN ISLAND

RESTORED 3/18/22: RESTORED 1/9/24 all links addressed. Style Insider/August 15, 2019 ·  “On my own island or on my own ranch, I can think the thoughts I want to think. I can do the work I want to do and I’m free to explore as I see fit“ Jeffrey Epstein/2003 We as human beings cannot afford … Click Here to Read More

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Amer Shalil walks barefoot across the brittle soil of his family’s land. He is a farmer by birth and by defiance, and both the desert and sun have carved deep lines into his skin. “They burned my trees,” he says flatly, recalling the moment he returned to his field in 2017 after regime forces reclaimed the city from the Islamic State. “They wouldn’t even let me enter. I could only stand there and watch.” His voice doesn’t rise. After more than a decade of war, and so much suffering, emotion feels like a luxury.

During the civil war, the Assad regime and its allies razed the living city. They chopped down trees for firewood and sold it for a handful of Syrian pounds. Some of the trees were over 200 years old.

“After that, the land needed maintenance but the regime only allowed us to go there for three hours a day,” the farmer says. “At least [the Islamic State] only destroyed the ruins,” he adds. “The regime destroyed everything else.”
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The destroyed oasis of Palmyra. (Philémon Barbier)

The ancient city was first mentioned in the second millennium BCE. Thanks to its strategic position in the heart of the desert, it became the capital of an Arab client state of the Roman Empire. In the third century CE, under Queen Zenobia’s leadership, it briefly rebelled and declared its own kingdom. It is a millennia-old legacy that the Islamic State deemed heretical — and sought to obliterate with explosives. In July 2015, funerary busts were smashed in public squares. The following month, the monumental temples of Bel and Baalshamin were leveled with explosives.

By October 2015, the triumphal Arch of Septimius Severus and around 10 funerary towers had been destroyed. The city’s archaeological museum was also ravaged by jihadists, who beheaded its chief curator. Within weeks, the Islamic State had also imposed a lifestyle rooted in its interpretation of fundamentalist values, punishing anyone who refused to comply.

The large arch destroyed by the Islamic State at the entrance to a settlement in the ancient site of Palmyra. (Philémon Barbier) When Assad regime forces retook control of Palmyra in 2017, they moved quickly to prevent residents from reclaiming the area. Due to its location, Palmyra became a strategic asset for the regime and its Russian and Iranian allies. The city lies on the only road connecting Damascus to Deir ez-Zor and, beyond that, Iraq and Iran. Situated at the edge of the desert, it allows control over a vast area in central Syria. For these reasons, the regime and its allies established military bases in the city. At the same time, they launched efforts to discourage residents from returning.


An abandoned tank on the side of the road between Homs and Palmyra. (Philémon Barbier)

Since 2017, Shalil has managed to replant some trees on his land. The lack of water, however, is a pressing problem. The city enjoys a unique geographical location, at the meeting point of two sources of fresh water. But most of the irrigation infrastructure was stolen by the former regime or left to rot. The city now relies solely on the Afqa spring and its translucent waters. Even this lifeline is rationed on a schedule among the remaining farmers. Exploiting the groundwater is also made impossible by the lack of electricity, which flows only for a few hours each day. Solar panels, too expensive for most, are beyond reach.


The Afqa spring that feeds the oasis at the entrance to Palmyra. (Philémon Barbier)

The engraved sign reading “Palmyra Green Oasis” at the entrance to the oasis is now a cruel joke. These water problems are exacerbating a more general lack of water caused by global warming, which is particularly affecting Palmyra, with 2025 being Syria’s driest year in half a century. There has been no meaningful rain for three months, Shalil says. Beneath the arid winds, the cracked earth offers no hope. Yet some, like the agricultural engineer Ahmad Taha, still speak of revival.

If God wills, and we get water, the oasis can live again,” he says, sweeping away dead fronds from a path with almost ritualistic precision. “If we start now, the palms will bear fruit in seven years, God willing.” Taha is not on any official payroll. He was the oasis’s chief agronomist before the war but has neither been reinstated nor replaced. “I volunteer,” he says ironically. He does it out of loyalty, out of hope or perhaps just out of habit.


Ahmad Taha, an agricultural engineer responsible for managing the oasis, shows where trees used to grow. (Philémon Barbier)

The Palmyrene has in mind the economic stakes that these trees represent. Palmyra’s oasis once generated $800,000 annually, a lifeline for a city where half the population depended on agriculture. Today, that figure hovers near $10,000. “The economy of Palmyra depends entirely on two things: the oasis and tourism,” he explains. “And you can’t have one without the other.”

The revival of tourism — and, with it, reconstruction — hinges on whether the oasis can be brought back to life. For this to happen, it is necessary for the inhabitants to return. Some 40,000 residents fled because of the war, mostly following the arrival of the Islamic State. So far, just 800 families have returned.

In an article published in May 2024 in the Bulletin of the American Society of Overseas Research, archaeologists emphasized the importance of the Palmyrenes’ return. “Their contribution will be necessary to rebuild infrastructure and services, and they will play a fundamental role in revitalizing the Palmyra oasis, particularly by maintaining the water system and the palm and olive trees that have always given life to the settlement,” they wrote. But most need proof that they can feed their children before they risk coming home.


A street with buildings destroyed by war in modern Palmyra. (Philémon Barbier)

Ahmad Mahmoud Hassan is one of them. Five months ago, he came back to find his 3.7-acre plot burned to the ground. “We’re trying to start over,” he says, standing outside his house, which has no electricity. He greets one of his neighbors who passes by with a toothless smile. “But without money or water, how?”

He adjusts his red keffiyeh and does the math. It would take $10,000 to replant his orchard. Before the war, he earned $8,000 a year from his trees. Now, his 22-year-old son Mohammad is in the army. “I didn’t want to join,” Mohammad says, bouncing his toddler brother on his knee. “I wanted to study medicine, but I don’t have any choice, I have to provide an income for my family and that’s the only way to make money here.”

For life to return to Palmyra, residents are demanding support from the new authorities. For now, most aid is theoretical. A representative from the Homs governorate visited recently, but the government has not yet promised or provided any aid to the residents or municipality of Palmyra for reconstruction. “There’s no money,” Taha says. “But maybe. Little by little”.

In the meantime, life creeps back in, slowly. A few foreign tourists have visited. Two campgrounds have reopened and are ready for the summer season. At the entrance to the ancient site, a jewelry seller waits patiently, eyeing every footstep with anticipation. One German traveler ambles alone through the ruins, transfixed by the silence. He seems absorbed by the immortal beauty of the ancient city.

“You see,” the vendor whispers with a grin, laying out necklaces made from camel bone. “The war is over, they are back.”

But in Palmyra, war doesn’t end with the last shot fired. It lingers — in the dry earth, in the charred trees, in the stories told in hushed voices under a sun that offers no mercy.

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Reconstruction of Palmyra Monuments to Take Up to Seven Years

The reconstruction of monuments in Palmyra may take up to seven years, Russia’s permanent delegate to UNESCO said.

PALMYRA (Sputnik) – It will take from five to seven years to reconstruct monuments of the ancient Palmyra in Syria destroyed by Daesh terrorists, Russia’s Permanent Delegate to UNESCO Eleonora Mitrofanova told journalists Thursday.

As for the time [needed for reconstruction of Palmyra], experts say it may take five-seven years,” Mitrofanova said.

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What has been done in the last seven years to rebuild Palmyra?
syriansforheritage.org
A Report on the Initial Observations of the Current State of Palmyra’s …
In its bid to restore Palmyra, the regime announced ambitious rehabilitation plans, raising concerns in academic circles about its ability to execute them, given the ongoing conflict…
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What has Syria done to rebuild Palmyra?
Syria has been working on restoring Palmyra, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, following the destruction caused by ISIS during the civil war.

Just WHAT HAS BEEN RESTORED in Palmyra

Palmyra has undergone significant restoration efforts since the conflict with ISIS. Key projects include:

They say that one of the big things that is holding back progress is safety issues – mines and explosive devices.  However, I pulled the following articles which say that this issue is under control:

Palmyra: Mines cleared from ancient Syrian city by Russians
Global Webcom
BBC
https://www.bbc.co.uk › news › av

Apr 6, 2016 · Russian mine disposal teams have begun clearing mines from the Syrian city of Palmyra following its recapture from the so-called Islamic State group (IS). IS seized the Unesco World Heritage site…

Overall, while progress is being made, the recovery of Palmyra remains a complex and ongoing endeavor.Alalam News Network

Syrian Officer: Over One Thousand Mines Cleared from Palmyra 
https://en.alalam.ir › news › syrian-officer…

Apr 10, 2025 · Russia has deployed several groups of specialists and de-mining robots to assist Syrian experts in clearing bombs and land mines left by Daesh militants in their retreat from the …

According to two military officials in the city, between the fall of the Assad regime on December 8 and mid-January, the teams cleared at least 17 tonnes of mines from areas under their control, including 700 individual anti-personnel and anti-armour mines laid around the city’s majestic Unesco world heritage site. While they believe they have largely cleared Palmyra city and its archaeological area, many more tonnes of mines remain in the desert.

A significant problem in Syria’s desert is ensuring that livestock rearers are able to safely roam the expanses with their animals – a way of life that necessitates extra precautions. “For the Bedouin people, the shepherd, we have put in place [guards] around some zones so people cannot enter until the engineering team comes and dismantles the mines, and then the desert people can enter,” said Mr Jumaa.

Mr Jumaa said his team, which is part of the new Ministry of Defence, was well-equipped and trained to deal with the colossal scale of de-mining necessary, and was not receiving help from any foreign organisation. “Honestly, we have a team that is carrying out its duty.” he said. He answered with a tut, indicating “no”, when asked if his men needed extra support.

Mr Ismail learnt de-mining tactics, including how to use mine detectors, from specialists in Idlib, in a pocket of territory that rebels retained control of before the Assad regime fell. “We got good expertise from them and we moved to work so that our role would be to protect civilians first, which means securing residential areas and humanitarian corridors, of course that’s first,” he told The National.   Source

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Search: show me what has been completed in the restoration of Palmyra since 2016

excerpts from: 

A Report on the Initial Observations of the Current State of Palmyra’s Antiquities After Liberation

Palmyra’s Antiquities Under Regime and Allied Control (2017–2024)   So, from 2016 to 2025… this is what has been accomplished on Palmyra Renovations

Russia took control over the restoration efforts, signing agreements with institutions like the Hermitage Museum, the Russian Academy of Sciences, and a Russian stone manufacturing company. These projects included a three-phase restoration of the Arch of Triumph in cooperation with the Syrian Secretariat for Development and the Syrian Ministry of Culture. The first two phases, namely sorting and documenting the stones and preparing plans, are completed. The final phase of the reconstruction of the arch has been delayed. Additionally, the restoration of the historical Afca spring was completed by the General Directorate and the Russian Society for the Preservation of Historical and Cultural Heritage, an essential project for the city’s economy and surrounding palm groves.

Other international actors also participated in restoration efforts.The Hermitage Museum signed an agreement with the Amman National Museum to restore 200 Syrian artefacts, including Palmyrene sculptures.The restoration of the statue of Asad al-Lat, was transferred to the Damascus Museum in 2017 by UNESCO and funded by the European Union.The restoration was supervised by conservators from Poland and was displayed in the garden of the Damascus Museum.

Over seven years of regime and Russian control, little progress has been made in restoring Palmyra’s antiquities, despite various attempts to politicize Palmyra’s heritage and mobilize support and funding for restoration projects. The restoration efforts during this period were largely limited to documentation work except for the Arc de Triomphe.

Palmyra requires extensive international support in terms of expertise, funds, studies and scientific documentation in a professional manner. It also requires political stability in Syria before restoration work can begin.

  • The Current State of Palmyra’s Antiquities After Liberation

A field visit by SIMAT and colleagues from the Idlib Antiquities Center provided preliminary observations of Palmyra’s current archaeological condition, independent of the regime’s and Russia’s narratives. Despite the significant destruction, Palmyra’s antiquities still exude visual splendor and historical grandeur. The findings are as follows:

  1. Palmyra Museum

The museum remains under the protection of antiquities guards but lacks military oversight despite its necessity. Administrative staff are absent, and no restoration work has been conducted since the conflict.Some artifacts remain in the museum, though many were relocated to Damascusearlier. No restoration or rehabilitation work has been carried out in the museum, the hole caused by the aerial bombardment in the museum’s roof is still there and has been sealed with metal plates. (Photo 2).

The museum’s collections, especially the funerary sculptures that were transferred to the Damascus Museum before ISIS took control of the city, have not yet been recovered. In other words, the museum is currently not functioning.

  1. Fakhr al-Din Castle

The castle’s entrance tower has not yet been restored due to the difficulty of accessing the interior of the citadel.

  1. The Walled City

There is currently no military presence within the archaeological site. Russian forces have vacated a nearby base, though large-scale excavation and fortifications occurred during their occupation. In addition, there is an absence of any archaeological or administrative personnel from the Directorate of Antiquities at the site, including the guards of the archaeological site.

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The visitor center (Museum of Folklore) is currently closed. 

Iconic monuments remain largely untouched, except for the Arch of Triumph, where rubble sorting and stone numbering have occurred.

There were also documentation works in the northern part of the city where measurement marks are affixed to the stones of buildings.

The rest of the monuments remain intact, such as the theatre facade, the tetrapylon, the temple structure of Bel and Baal, as well as the tower tombs.

  • Recommendations

With the triumph of the Syrian revelation and the fall of the Assad regime, Syria is expected to experience some political stability after 13 years of war. This provides the ideal opportunity to readdress the restoration fill of Palmyra, prioritizing the following points:

  1. Reassessing the restoration plans and agreements, particularly those involving Russian parties, as they are expected to withdraw from these agreements. 
  2. Securing the archaeological sites (a little late for that) with adequate protection, including military personnel and specialized antiquities guards.
  3. Documentation and evaluation of the sites before initiating large-scale restoration projects.
  4. Launching an international appeal for support and expertise.   This is the one you need to take note of. They want the rest of the world to pay to totally rebuild and restore their pagan city, with original materials, including all the idols and ritual paraphernalia  

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I know that when you see these structures on the internet, or on Television, or a Postcard you don’t really get the full effect.  The material used for the Arch has a spiritual life to it.  I puts out an eaerie glow, that seems to almost audible.

In the following video from the London, Trafalgar Square launching of the 3D Palmyra Arch
At minute 11:30 – 13:00   you can hear the narrator express how the Arch of BAAL puts out a glow of color that is as he puts it “QUITE LOUD”.
A Strange Arch in Trafalgar Square

what material was used to 3D replicate the Palmyra Arch?

Egyptian marble blocks

Egyptian marble what makes it glow?

Translucent calcite composition

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What kind of stone was use to construct the Original Triumphal Arch at Palmyra Syria
Ornamental stone
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The Monumental Arch, also called the Arch of Triumph (قوس النصر), or the Arch of Septimius Severus was it made of Marble or Limestone?
Limestone

Most casual students of ancient history know that the outer casing stones of the Giza pyramids were constructed of highly polished Tura limestone blocks that caused them to gleam like a trio of colossal jewels in the Egyptian sun. It is a lesser-known fact, however, that a portion of the casing stones were not light in color but dark, and that the Giza complex in its entirety once exhibited far more color than modern film and art depictions would indicate.

In 1898, George St. Clair wrote:

“We need not be surprised…that the Egyptians made some use of the symbolism of colors; and we need not despair of discovering what they meant.”

The British anthropologist applied his study of color symbolism to the Egyptian religious imagery, but a similar study can be extended to monumental stone, and to the casing stones of the Giza pyramids, in particular. Such an examination reveals a symbolic interplay of light and darkness in stone, its religious implications, and its physical projection onto the Plateau through astronomical phenomena.

The casing stones, in other words, were not simple adornments but acted as primary markers of the astronomy and religious symbolism of the site. While most of the Giza casing stones are now lost – one, in fact, has become the subject of recent controversy as it undergoes display in the Museum of Scotland – a review of ancient accounts gives present-day readers a glimpse of what the Giza pyramids might have looked like four thousand years ago. The resulting image adds more color—and more questions—to the story.

Jerusalem stone is the name for various types of limestone found in and around Jerusalem, ranging in color from white to yellow, pink and orange-brown, that have been used in buildings since biblical times. The most famous structure built with Jerusalem stone that stands until this very day is the Western Wall ( Kotel ).

Limestone:

Properties: Limestone is an assisting stone used to enhance healing properties, encourages purification, reminds us of our innocence, grounds and centers us and entices positive thoughts. Due to its grounding make-up of clay, sand, organic remains, iron oxide and other materials, many limestones exhibit different colors, especially on weathered surfaces.  Limestone is the root of many crystals including, agate, calcite, dolomite, lapis and Septarian, just to name a few. Therefore, it takes on the metaphysical properties of its additional minerals. This is why limestone is such a mult-dimensional stone.

Folk Remedies: Limestone is a healing stone beneficial to overall health and well being. It gives relief for muscle spasms, nurtures, grounds and works primarily well on the Root Chakra.

History: Limestone is a sedimentary rock. Like most other sedimentary rocks, limestone forms in shallow, calm, warm marine waters and is composed of grains. Most grains in limestone are skeletal fragments of marine organisms such as coral or foraminifera. Other carbonate grains comprising limestones are ooids, peloids, intraclasts, and extraclasts. These organisms secrete shells made of aragonite or calcite, and leave these shells behind after the organisms die. Limestone often contains variable amounts of silica in the form of chert (chalcedony, flint, jasper, etc.) or varying amounts of clay, silt and sand carried in by rivers. Because of impurities, such as clay, sand, organic remains, iron oxide and other materials, many limestones exhibit different colors, especially on weathered surfaces. Their biological origin is often revealed in the rock by the presence of fossils. Limestone is partially soluble, especially in acid, and therefore forms many erosional landforms. These include limestone pavements, pot holes, cenotes, caves and gorges. Such erosion landscapes are known as karsts. During regional metamorphism that occurs during the mountain building process, limestone recrystallizes into marble.

Limestone is composed mostly of the minerals calcite and aragonite, which are different crystal forms of calcium carbonate (CaCO 3). Dolomite, CaMg(CO 3) 2, is an uncommon mineral in limestone, and siderite or other carbonate minerals are rare. However, the calcite in limestone often contains a few percent of magnesiumCalcite in limestone is divided into low-magnesium and high-magnesium …
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Aragonite is a carbonate mineralone of the three most common naturally occurring crystal forms of calcium carbonate, Ca CO 3 (the other forms being the minerals calcite and vaterite). It is formed by biological and physical processes, including precipitation from marine and freshwater environments.
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Aragonite Meaning. Over 20 years ago, when Heather Askinosie began to study healing crystals, she gravitated towards the Aragonite properties, which hold a reputation of being a powerhouse mineral; one that gets to the root of a situation. If you have an issue that you’re sweeping under the rug, the properties of the Aragonite crystal meaning are going to bring it up so fast that the rug just …
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Aragonite Meanings, Zodiacs, Planets, Elements, Colors, Chakras, and more. Science & Origin of Aragonite Aragonite, also known as Golfball or Sputnik Aragoniteis one of the three calcium carbonate minerals that naturally occurs within mother nature (the other two being Calcite and Vaterite). It’s commonly found crystallized in the form of small prismatic crystals, masses, stalactites, and …
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Aragonite is the main component of many organic substances, such as pearl and coral. The iridescent surface of Pearl and mother-of-pearl is actually a layer of Aragonite secreted by mollusks and related invertebrates. Some forms of Aragonite, especially the Flos Ferri variety, are brittle and very fragile, and may easily break when touched …
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What is the frequency of Limestone
The frequency of limestone can vary based on its state and context:
what causes Limestone to glow?
Calcite

Belgorod – What gives?

Belgorod city (Russia) | Фотографии Who are the good guys and who are the bad guys?  Is there any truth in our media?  Is it really possible that governments are perpetrating false flag disasters on their own people to promote their agenda?  Are the Russians really standing for GOD and truth?  Are the Russians really … Click Here to Read More

Syria hopes tourists will return to Palmyra, a World Heritage Site ravaged by war

PALMYRA, Syria — This ancient city, once one of the most important stops on the Silk Road, bears the scars of ISIS attacks and more than a decade of Syria’s civil war. It also carries Syrian hopes of reviving the country’s rich archaeological legacy.

China is spending nearly $1 trillion to rebuild the Silk Road

Mar 2, 2016 · Known as One Belt, One Road, China’s plan to build veins of trade over land and sea into Europe and Asia — announced in 2013 — may be the most significant global economic …

The New Silk Road: How China Is Redefining the Global Trade Map

Nov 25, 2024 · This infrastructure domination strategy began in 2013, when President Xi Jinping, launched the Belt and Road Initiatives (“BRI”) or “New Silk Road.” What started as a plan to link …

ISN’T THAT INTERESTING?  2016 IS WHEN THEY FIRST CREATED THIS CRISIS AND STARTED PUSHING THE BAAL ARCHES ON US.  THEY START PRINTING NEWS STORIES ABOUT PALMYRA ABOUT THE SAME TIME CHINA’S SILK ROAD IS COMING INTO FRUITION. PALMYRA WILL LIKELY BE A BIG FACTOR IN THAT EFFORT DUE TO ITS STRATEGIC  LOCATION. 

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Palmyra is a UNESCO World Heritage Site — inhabited for thousands of years before it became a thriving Roman city on the crossroads between East and West in the 1st century CE.

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The spiritual significance of crossroads is profound across various cultures and belief systems.

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The ancient site is largely deserted now
, as is the nearby modern city, also named Palmyra.

Residents are hoping for a return of tourists now that the country has reopened to international visitors after the fall of the regime of Bashar al-Assad to rebel fighters last December. But the sound of gunfire in the distance from Syrian government fighters and U.S.-backed Syrian militia forces controlling the area is a reminder that not all is stable.

The temple  Baalshamin — was dedicated to a Mesopotamian god of the sky and was one of the main features of the sprawling oasis city where caravans carried silk, spices and other goods between Asia and Europe.

The cult

The temple’s cult is dedicated to Baalshamin or Ba’al Šamem, a northwest Semitic divinity. The name Baalshamin is applied to various divinities at different periods in time, but most often to Hadad, also known simply as Ba’al. Along with Bel, Baalshamin was one of the two main divinities of pre-Islamic Palmyra in Syria and was a sky god. The relief plaque below depicts a votive dedication by a worshipper—Baalshamin and Bel along with Yarhibol and Aglibol.

Limestone bas-relief dedicated by Ba’alay to Bel, Baalshamin, Yarhibol, and Aglibol. Limestone, dated January 121 CE., from Palmyra (Museum of Fine Arts, Lyon; photo: Owen Cook, CC BY-SA 3.0)

Source: Baalshamin

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Before 2015, the ruins of Palmyra were considered among the most intact of the vast Roman EmpireThis makes the city of Palmyra very important the UN, the Ruling Elite and to the agenda of the Return of the Roman Empire.

On one of the colonnaded streets, young volunteers from Palmyra roll stone blocks into place to prevent cars from driving into the ruins and doing further damage. During the civil war, looting of archaeological sites in Syria dramatically increased.

“We have to protect even the small pieces,” says Mohammad Shaker, 24, from the Palmyra Youth Gathering, which has worked to clear debris from the citadel on a hill overlooking the ancient site as well as repair sidewalks.

The volunteers are also trying to help bring back modern Palmyra after the country’s devastating civil war. At least 100,000 civilians were believed killed by the regime and during fighting in the 13-year-long conflict.

We have the energy — everything can be restored and in a few years it will be rebuilt,” he says.

He said the group is waiting for the Syrian government to license (NGOs) non-governmental organizations to send in expert archaeologists and equipment to assess the damage to the ancient site.

Syrian regime, Russian and Iran-backed military action

The damage to both the ancient site and the modern city has been devastating.

Faced with civil war and threats from ISIS, former Syrian President Bashar al-Assad turned to Russian forces and Iran-backed Syrian militias to retake Palmyra.

A 2017 report by the American Society of Overseas Research said recent military activity accounted for more damage than deliberate destruction in the ancient city of Palmyra and other sites it surveyed.

The Syrian government moved military forces into the ancient citadel overlooking Palmyra. And in 2016, Russia established a military base on the edge of the ancient city, within the protection zone established by UNESCO.

Russia said a year later the base was temporary. But signs of Russian presence remain years later. Months after the regime and its Russian allies retreated last December, the ground near a girls’ high school taken over by the Russian military is covered with burned and blackened documents, waterlogged books in Cyrillic script, pieces of computer equipment and an artillery shell — all apparently left by troops as they abandoned the site.

Russia offered to help restore damage done by ISIS. But it said that some sites were so badly damaged they could be rebuilt using only modern materials. Part of the ancient theater appears to have been repaired with concrete.

Prospects for rebuilding

The fall of the Assad regime opens the possibility of more stability and funds — and wider tourism to what had been largely a niche destination before the start of the civil war, with just a few thousand visitors a yearWe have been told that Palmyra had a booming tourist industry before the war.  It is not so.

The nearby Palmyra Museum remains closed. The guard there, who declines to give his name as he is not authorized to speak to journalists, says he is under government instructions not to allow visitors because ISIS is still a threat. But he returns with a gift of postcards showing some of the museum’s treasures, including a famous statue of a lion damaged by ISIS.    So, they have opened the city up for tourists, they want tourism to bring in money for their reconstruction, but safety remains a huge question.  Why would tourists come and risk their lives?

Many of the antiquities in the Palmyra museum were sent to Damascus for safekeeping after the start of the civil war.

Syria’s new government blames Russia

In Damascus, the Syrian government’s interim head of antiquities, Anas Haj Zidane, says he blames Russia for damage to Palmyra and the U.N.’s cultural agency, UNESCO, for allowing Russian oversight over the archaeological site.

“When the Russians were present in Palmyra as a military presence, they vandalized and destroyed it,” he told NPR in January. “Their mission was a military delegation composed of officers, not specialists in antiquities.

Krista Pikkat, UNESCO’s Culture and Emergencies Entity director, said the organization had no information on the claim of Russian involvement in damage to Palmyra. Russian authorities have not responded to NPR’s request for comment.

Pikkat said the organization was discussing with Syrian authorities reactivating monitoring missions to inspect endangered World Heritage Sites in the country.
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Syria is reopening to tourists. Is it safe to visit now?

Global web
CNN
https://www.cnn.com › travel › syria-tourism-war…
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The UNESCO-listed medieval fortress Krak des Chevaliers was caught up in the civil conflict but emerged largely unscathed. Aaref Watad/AFP/Getty Images

Feb 19, 2025 · Before the civil war, tourism reportedly accounted for 14% of Syria’s GDP. With a history stretching back to antiquity, tourists were drawn to ancient sites like Palmyra, a Greco-Roman city and desert landscapes dotted with Crusader-era castles like Krak des Chevaliers. Damascus is one of the world’s oldest continuously inhabited cities, while the verdant Mediterranean coastline, once famed for its sun-drenched beach resorts, teems with turquoise waters and sandy bays.

Travelers planning potential trips to Syria will not only be concerned with safety but may question the ethics of visiting a nation consumed, until very recently, by conflict.

The interim government consists of a coalition of rebel groups led by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), which the United Kingdom’s Foreign Secretary described as a “terrorist organization” and an “alias of Al-Qaida.” Former members of the Assad regime are still being hunted down across Syria, and the Red Cross  estimates that 90% of Syrians live in poverty and 76% of Syrians face food shortages thanks to years of war and international sanctions.

Experts return to Syria’s war-torn heritage sites, including Roman ruins at Palmyra

 

PALMYRA, Syria (AP) — Experts are returning to Syria’s war-ravaged heritage sites, hoping to lay the groundwork for restoring them and reviving tourism, which they say could provide a much-needed boost to the country’s decimated economy after nearly 14 years of war.

Once-thriving landmarks like the ancient city of Palmyra and the medieval Crusader castle of Crac des Chevaliers remain scarred by years of conflict (wait we just read that the Krack des Chevaliers remained pretty much intact.)  but local tourists are returning to the sites, and conservationists hope their historical and cultural significance will eventually draw international visitors back.

Palmyra

One of Syria’s six UNESCO World Heritage sites, Palmyra was once a key hub to the ancient Silk Road network linking the Roman and Parthian empires to Asia. Located in the Syrian desert, it is renowned for its 2,000-year-old Roman-era ruins. It is now marked by shattered columns and damaged temples.
Before the Syrian uprising that began in 2011 and soon escalated into a brutal civil war, Palmyra was Syria’s main tourist destination, attracting around 150,000 visitors monthly, Ayman Nabu, a researcher and expert in ruins told The Associated Press. Dubbed the “Bride of the Desert,” he said “Palmyra revitalized the steppe and used to be a global tourist magnet.”

The ancient city was the capital of an Arab client state of the Roman Empire that briefly rebelled and carved out its own kingdom in the third century, led by Queen Zenobia.

In more recent times, the area had darker associations. It was home to Tadmur prison, where thousands of opponents of the Assad family’s rule in Syria were reportedly tortured. The Islamic State group demolished the prison after capturing the town.   Isn’t that convenient?  They destroyed all the evidence of the horrors and the inhumanity that went on there.

IS militants later destroyed Palmyra’s historic temples of Bel and Baalshamin and the Arch of Triumph, viewing them as monuments to idolatry, and beheaded an elderly antiquities scholar who had dedicated his life to overseeing the ruins.

Between 2015 and 2017, control of Palmyra shifted between IS and the Syrian army before Assad’s forces, backed by Russia and Iran-aligned militias, recaptured it. They established military bases in the neighboring town, which was left heavily damaged and largely abandoned. Fakhr al-Din al-Ma’ani Castle, a 16th-century fortress overlooking the city, was repurposed by Russian troops as a military barracks.
Nabu, the researcher, visited Palmyra five days after the fall of the former government.

We saw extensive excavation within the tombs,” he said, noting significant destruction by both IS and Assad government forces. “The (Palmyra) museum was in a deplorable state, with missing documents and artifacts — we have no idea what happened to them.”

At the theater, the Tetrapylon, and other ruins along the main colonnaded street, Nabu said they documented many illegal drillings revealing sculptures, as well as theft and smuggling of funerary or tomb-related sculptures in 2015 when IS had control of the site. While seven of the stolen sculptures were retrieved and put in a museum in Idlib, 22 others were smuggled out, Nabu added. Many pieces likely ended up in underground markets or private collections.

Inside the city’s underground tombs, Islamic verses are scrawled on the walls, while plaster covers wall paintings, some depicting mythological themes that highlight Palmyra’s deep cultural ties to the Greco-Roman world.

“Syria has a treasure of ruins,” Nabu said, emphasizing the need for preservation efforts. He said Syria’s interim administration, led by the Islamist former insurgent group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, has decided to wait until after the transition phase to develop a strategic plan to restore heritage sites.
The U.N.’s scientific, educational and cultural organization UNESCO, said in a statement that the agency had since 2015, “remotely supported the protection of Syrian cultural heritage” through satellite analyses, reports and documentation and recommendations to local experts, but it did not conduct any work on site.

It added that UNESCO has explored possibilities for technical assistance if security conditions improve. In 2019, international experts convened by UNESCO said detailed studies would need to be done before starting major restorations.

Crac des Chevaliers

Beyond Palmyra, other historical sites bear the scars of war.

Perched on a hill near the town of Al-Husn, with sweeping views, Crac des Chevaliers, a medieval castle originally built by the Romans and later expanded by the Crusaders, was heavily bombarded during the Syrian civil war.  Again, we have read that the Castle was pretty much still intact.  You cannot believe a word these people say.  The story changes all the time.

On a recent day, armed fighters in military uniform roamed the castle grounds alongside local tourists, taking selfies among the ruins.

Hazem Hanna, an architect and head of the antiquities department of Crac des Chevaliers, pointed to the collapsed columns and an entrance staircase obliterated by airstrikes. Damage from government airstrikes in 2014 destroyed much of the central courtyard and the arabesque-adorned columns, Hanna said.

“Relying on the cultural background of Syria’s historical sites and their archaeological and historical significance to enthusiasts worldwide, I hope and expect that when the opportunity arises for tourists to visit Syria, we will witness a significant tourism revival,” he said.

Some sections of Crac des Chevaliers were renovated after airstrikes and the deadly 7.8 magnitude earthquake in 2023 that struck a wide area of neighboring Turkey and also Syria, Hanna said. However, much of the castle remains in ruins.

Both Nabu and Hanna believe restoration will take time. “We need trained technical teams to evaluate the current condition of the ruin sites,” Nabu said.

The Dead Cities

In Northwest Syria, more than 700 abandoned Byzantine settlements called Dead Cities, stretch across rocky hills and plains, their weathered limestone ruins featuring remnants of stone houses, basilicas, tombs and colonnaded streets. Despite partial collapse, arched doorways, intricate carvings and towering church facades endure, surrounded by olive trees that root deep into history.

Dating back to the first century, these villages once thrived on trade and agriculture. Today, some sites now shelter displaced Syrians, with stone houses repurposed as homes and barns, their walls blackened by fire and smoke. Crumbling structures suffer from poor maintenance and careless repurposing.

Looters have ravaged the ancient sites, Nabu said, leaving gaping holes in search of artifacts. Local visitors carve names and messages into centuries-old walls. Sheep enclosures dot the ruins, plastic debris blending with ancient stone.

Moustafa Al-Kaddour, a local resident, returned after eight years. Touring the ruins with family members he brought from Quneitra, he reflected on childhood memories.

This is where we went to school,” he said, pointing in the distance. “In the middle of class, we used to leave and come here to see the ruins.

“My feelings are indescribable,” al-Kaddour, who also saw his father for the first time in years, told the AP. “My brain still cannot comprehend that after eight years, by God’s will, we made it back home.”
He said the Assad forces had established a military position in the village, subjecting the ruins to heavy shelling and gunfire. The area was then controlled by rebels, who made the area off-limits to most Syrians and international tourists, unlike Palmyra, which still saw some visitors during the war.

The Dead Cities were added to UNESCO’s World Heritage List in 2011 as an open-air museum, said Nabu. Idlib province alone hosts “over 1,000 heritage sites spanning different time periods — about a third of Syria’s total ruins,” he added.

Beyond the bombings and air raids, looting and unauthorized digging have caused significant damage, Nabu said, adding that new construction near the ruins lacks planning and threatens preservation.

Tens of thousands” of looted artifacts remain undocumented, he said. For those documented, authorities are compiling case files for international circulation in coordination with the Directorate of Antiquities and Museums to locate them and hopefully retrieve them.

Abou AlJoud reported from Beirut. Associated Press writer Khalil Hamra in Palmyra contributed to this report.

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Published January 9, 2023  / Updated November 1, 2023



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Restoration lags for Syria’s famed Roman ruins at Palmyra and other war-battered historic sites

PALMYRA, Syria (AP) — At the height of the Islamic State group’s rampage across Syria, the world watched in horror as the militants blew up an iconic arch and temple in the country’s famed Roman ruins in Palmyra.

Eight years later, IS has lost its hold but restoration work on the site has been held up by security issues, leftover IS land mines and lack of funding.

Other archaeological sites throughout Syria face similar problems, both in areas held by the government and by the opposition. They were damaged by the war or, more recently, by the deadly 7.8-magnitude earthquake that struck a wide area of neighboring Turkey and also Syria in February.

Youssef Kanjou, a former director of Syria’s Aleppo National Museum, said the situation of heritage sites in his country is a “disaster.”

Without a coordinated preservation and restoration effort, said Kanjou, now a researcher at Tübingen University in Germany, “We will lose what was not destroyed by the war or the earthquake.”

Before the war, Palmyraone of Syria’s six UNESCO world heritage sites was the country’s archaeological crown jewel, a tourist attraction that drew tens of thousands of visitors each year. The ancient city was the capital of an Arab client state of the Roman Empire that briefly rebelled and carved out its own kingdom in the third century, led by Queen Zenobia.

In more recent times, the area had darker associations. It was home to the Tadmur prison, where thousands of opponents of the Assad family’s rule in Syria were reportedly tortured. IS demolished the prison after capturing the town.

The militants later destroyed Palmyra’s historic temples of Bel and Baalshamin and the Arch of Triumph, viewing them as monuments to idolatry, and beheaded an elderly antiquities scholar who had dedicated his life to overseeing the ruins.


Today, the road through the desert from Homs to Palmyra is dotted with Syrian army checkpoints
. In the town adjacent to the ancient site, some shops have reopened, but signs of war remain in the form of charred vehicles and burned-out or boarded-up stores and houses.

The Palmyra Museum is closed, and the much-loved lion statue that used to stand in front of it has been moved to Damascus for restoration and safekeeping.

Nevertheless, Syrian and foreign tourists have begun to trickle back.

“We thought it was impossible that foreigners would return to Palmyra,” said Qais Fathallah, who used to run a hotel there but fled to Homs when IS (aka ISIS) took over. Now he is back in Palmyra, operating a restaurant, where he said he serves tourists regularly.

On a recent day, a group of tourists from countries including the United Kingdom, Canada and China, and another, with Syrian university students, were wandering through the ruins.

Some of the Syrian tourists had visited in better days. For communication engineering student Fares Mardini, it was the first time.

“Now I’ve finally come, and I see so much destruction. It’s something really upsetting,” he said. “I hope it can be restored and return to what it was.”

In 2019, international experts convened by UNESCO, the United Nations’ cultural agency, said detailed studies would need to be done before starting major restorations.

Youmna Tabet, program specialist at the Arab states unit of UNESCO’s World Heritage Center, said restoration work often involves difficult choices, particularly if there isn’t enough original material for rebuilding.

Is it worth it to rebuild it with very little authenticity or should we rather focus on having 3D documentation of how it was?” she said.

Missions to the site were held up at first by security issues, including land mines that had to be cleared. IS (aka ISIS) cells still occasionally carry out attacks in the area.

Money is also a problem.

“There is a big lack of funding so far, for all the sites in Syria,” Tabet said, noting that international donors have been wary of breaching sanctions on Syria, which have been imposed by the United States, the European Union and others.

U.S. sanctions exempt activities related to preservation and protection of cultural heritage sites, but sanctions-related obstacles remain, such as a ban on exporting U.S.-made items to Syria.

Russia, an ally of Syrian President Bashar Assad’s government, has begun restoring Palmyra’s triumphal arch, the largest-scale project underway to date at the site.

We have some funding from some friends in some places, but it is not sufficient in relation to the disaster that occurred,” said Mohammad Nazir Awad, director general of Syria’s department of Antiquities and Museums.

It doesn’t have to be this way, said Maamoun Abdulkarim, who headed the antiquities department at the time of the IS (aka ISIS) incursion. Abdulkarim pointed to the international push to recover damaged heritage sites in the city of Mosul in neighboring Iraq, also controlled by the militants for some time, as an example of a successful restoration.

“We need to make some separation between political affairs and cultural heritage affairs,” said Abdulkarim, now a professor at the University of Sharjah. He warned that damaged structures are in danger of deteriorating further or collapsing as the rehabilitation work is delayed.

The deadly Feb. 6 earthquake caused further destruction at some sites already damaged by the war. This includes the old city of Aleppo, which is under the control of the government, and the Byzantine-era church of Saint Simeon in the Aleppo countryside, in an area controlled by Turkish-backed opposition forces.

About one-fifth of the church was damaged in the earthquake, including the basilica arch, said Hassan al-Ismail, a researcher with Syrians for Heritage a non-governmental organization. He said the earthquake compounded earlier damage caused by bombings and vandalism.

The group tried to stabilize the structure with wooden and metal supports and to preserve the stones that fell from it for later use in restoration.

Ayman al-Nabo, head of antiquities in the opposition-held city of Idlib, appealed for international assistance in stabilizing and restoring sites damaged by the earthquake.

Antiquities should be seen as “neutral to the political reality,” he said. “This is global human heritage, which belongs to the whole world, not just the Syrians.”    Sorry, it doesn’t belong to my world.  I am not a pagan.  And we have just as many problems here in our own country.  Who is going to help Americans?  Everybody hates us, when we have done so much already to help so many countries. 

Sewell reported from Beirut. Associated Press reporters Omar Sanadiki in Palmyra, Syria, and Omar Albam in Deir Semaan, Syria, contributed to this report.

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