Berliner Boersenzeitung - Syrian stand-up comedy has war-weary crowds in stitches

EUR -
AED 4.084199
AFN 76.174952
ALL 99.079119
AMD 431.250862
ANG 2.002588
AOA 1032.449338
ARS 1073.331397
AUD 1.624719
AWG 2.004303
AZN 1.892653
BAM 1.955497
BBD 2.243482
BDT 132.781185
BGN 1.955149
BHD 0.41905
BIF 3218.004815
BMD 1.111957
BND 1.434877
BOB 7.695256
BRL 6.15446
BSD 1.111143
BTN 92.821495
BWP 14.630585
BYN 3.635948
BYR 21794.365712
BZD 2.239783
CAD 1.500854
CDF 3191.318194
CHF 0.941722
CLF 0.037188
CLP 1026.181731
CNY 7.840741
CNH 7.848768
COP 4627.688852
CRC 576.239075
CUC 1.111957
CUP 29.466872
CVE 110.361506
CZK 25.134725
DJF 197.617488
DKK 7.459022
DOP 66.995107
DZD 147.421291
EGP 54.106293
ERN 16.679362
ETB 130.663368
FJD 2.440192
FKP 0.846821
GBP 0.833229
GEL 3.035615
GGP 0.846821
GHS 17.458381
GIP 0.846821
GMD 76.724884
GNF 9621.213534
GTQ 8.594782
GYD 232.476466
HKD 8.657406
HNL 27.743449
HRK 7.560211
HTG 146.444517
HUF 394.877992
IDR 16891.634188
ILS 4.208481
IMP 0.846821
INR 92.892253
IQD 1456.664239
IRR 46805.065156
ISK 151.704197
JEP 0.846821
JMD 174.572908
JOD 0.78804
JPY 159.46526
KES 143.443254
KGS 93.682263
KHR 4525.666856
KMF 490.761877
KPW 1000.761061
KRW 1484.10721
KWD 0.339158
KYD 0.925973
KZT 534.288315
LAK 24554.801776
LBP 99631.386136
LKR 338.494211
LRD 215.99783
LSL 19.459018
LTL 3.283321
LVL 0.672612
LYD 5.276193
MAD 10.780429
MDL 19.373342
MGA 5064.965927
MKD 61.50301
MMK 3611.594372
MNT 3778.431312
MOP 8.911157
MRU 44.161394
MUR 50.838656
MVR 17.079894
MWK 1930.358146
MXN 21.596649
MYR 4.673525
MZN 70.998563
NAD 19.460338
NGN 1796.978827
NIO 40.886718
NOK 11.65342
NPR 148.522633
NZD 1.772044
OMR 0.428079
PAB 1.111193
PEN 4.164255
PGK 4.352424
PHP 62.226806
PKR 309.253231
PLN 4.271584
PYG 8648.657807
QAR 4.047803
RON 4.97501
RSD 117.085801
RUB 103.217424
RWF 1492.246877
SAR 4.172027
SBD 9.236961
SCR 14.949655
SDG 668.844263
SEK 11.33456
SGD 1.434931
SHP 0.846821
SLE 25.405228
SLL 23317.1857
SOS 634.927593
SRD 33.842983
STD 23015.273856
SVC 9.722622
SYP 2793.826341
SZL 19.460718
THB 36.605059
TJS 11.811373
TMT 3.891851
TND 3.370022
TOP 2.604314
TRY 37.959887
TTD 7.555269
TWD 35.610991
TZS 3035.643888
UAH 46.007981
UGX 4110.417549
USD 1.111957
UYU 46.243447
UZS 14160.777846
VEF 4028124.221696
VES 40.894302
VND 27376.392032
VUV 132.013821
WST 3.11066
XAF 655.893552
XAG 0.036146
XAU 0.000423
XCD 3.005121
XDR 0.82202
XOF 653.278036
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.350773
ZAR 19.269266
ZMK 10008.950014
ZMW 29.474149
ZWL 358.04984
  • RBGPF

    1.8300

    58.83

    +3.11%

  • RYCEF

    0.1100

    7.06

    +1.56%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    25.07

    -0.32%

  • BCC

    4.1500

    141.65

    +2.93%

  • CMSD

    -0.0150

    25.005

    -0.06%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.3

    -0.15%

  • RIO

    1.0100

    64.58

    +1.56%

  • SCS

    0.0900

    13.01

    +0.69%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    35.1

    +0.17%

  • NGG

    0.9300

    70.48

    +1.32%

  • RELX

    0.8700

    48.86

    +1.78%

  • BTI

    0.4600

    37.9

    +1.21%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    10.11

    +0.99%

  • AZN

    -1.2400

    77.14

    -1.61%

  • BP

    0.2200

    32.86

    +0.67%

  • GSK

    0.0600

    40.86

    +0.15%

Syrian stand-up comedy has war-weary crowds in stitches
Syrian stand-up comedy has war-weary crowds in stitches / Photo: LOUAI BESHARA - AFP

Syrian stand-up comedy has war-weary crowds in stitches

In a dimly lit Damascus cafe, Sharief Homsi kicked off comedy night with a quip about war-battered Syria's modern-day prince charming: an eligible bachelor with attractive supplies of fuel and electricity.

Text size:

"Marry me, I have a bright future: 100 litres of petrol, solar panels to generate electricity and three gas canisters," he said, performing a mock proposal that had the audience howling.

Every week, members of Syria's first stand-up comedy troupe crack jokes about daily struggles like power cuts and fuel shortages, lightening the mood for despondent Damascenes after 12 years of war.

The audience prefers "to laugh and forget the problems they cannot solve", said Homsi, 31.

"There is nothing else to do but laugh."

He and a few of his friends founded "Styria" -- an Arabic mash-up of Syria and hysteria -- four months ago, and put out a call on social media for others to join.

The group has since swelled to 35 members and has become a success, regularly drawing crowds at the capital's Deez cafe.

"The country's situation is hysterical," Homsi told AFP, and "filled with problems and gloom".

"We must face it with hysterical laughter

The war in Syria, which broke out in 2011, has killed more than 500,000 people, displaced millions and battered the country's infrastructure and industry.

In government-held Damascus, religion and politics are off-limits for the comedians, deemed too risky to broach.

Before performances, they meet at a troupe member's home to brainstorm and try out new lines.

"They told me to draw in the crowds with funny stories," said one comedian during a rehearsal, as the power dropped in and out.

"I thought long and hard and found that the funniest thing in my life is... my life."

His colleagues encouraged him to talk about his love life.

"He now has so many exes, his life is an equation," one quipped.

- 'Red lines' -

At the Deez cafe, comedian Malke Mardinali, 28, said the troupe's inspiration came from "our daily lives, which are full of suffering".

"In Europe, even under three metres of snow, the electricity still works," he told the crowd.

"Here, when we hear Fairuz sing 'Winter Is Back' the power cuts out automatically," he said, drawing chuckles with the reference to a famous Lebanese tune.

Mary Obaid, 21 -- the only woman in "Styria" -- joked about Syria's public transport, badly overcrowded as petrol shortages push people to abandon their cars.

"Syrian buses can accommodate 24 million people," she joked, referring to Syria's pre-war population.

"In the end, without misery there is no comedy," she told AFP.

Fellow comedian Amir Dayrawan, 32, said doing stand-up helped him "face the fears locked inside".

Depression set in after he lost his sister and nephew in the conflict, and worsened after a deadly earthquake struck Syria and Turkey on February 6, killing thousands.

Joining "Styria" helped him shake off his despair and cope with his loss, he said, despite having to self-censor.

"We don't mention politics, though we sometimes hint at sexual and religious issues -- but within the red lines," he said.

"One day, I hope we can free ourselves intellectually and discuss any topics without fear."

(G.Gruner--BBZ)