請更新您的瀏覽器

您使用的瀏覽器版本較舊,已不再受支援。建議您更新瀏覽器版本,以獲得最佳使用體驗。

Eng

Feature: Syria's Damask rose wilts under climate stress, farmers cling to heritage

XINHUA

發布於 4小時前 • Hummam Sheikh Ali
A farmer harvests Damascene rose petals in the town of Al-Marah, Syria, June 14, 2025. (Photo by Monsef Memari/Xinhua)

by Hummam Sheikh Ali

AL-MARAH, Syria, June 17 (Xinhua) -- In the hillside town of Al-Marah, nestled in the Qalamoun mountains north of Damascus, the legendary Damascene rose is facing one of its most difficult seasons in recent memory.

A symbol of Syria's cultural and botanical heritage, the Damask rose has bloomed for centuries in this rugged landscape. Once the village's economic backbone and a source of global pride, the delicate flower now struggles to survive amid shifting climate patterns.

"This year has been one of the worst," said Mohammad Jamal Abbas, a local farmer also known as Abu Qusai. "Rainfall was only about 20 millimeters, around 25 percent of the average. We used to get 125 or 150 millimeters. Add to that a wave of heat, then another of severe cold. All of it affected production."

A farmer harvests Damascene rose petals in the town of Al-Marah, Syria, June 14, 2025. (Photo by Monsef Memari/Xinhua)

Speaking to Xinhua, Abbas explained that they began irrigating the bushes solely to preserve their survival, not for any specific production or other purposes. Their primary objective was to ensure that the bushes did not perish.

Syria is currently experiencing a severe drought, potentially the worst in 36 years. The drought has led to a significant drop in wheat production and widespread water scarcity. UN humanitarian office has warned that the drought could push 60 percent of the population closer to hunger.

But Abbas, like many others in Al-Marah, refuses to abandon the rose that has shaped their identity. "This is our labor, our work through all these years. It is impossible to give up. We are here every day."

The practices and craftsmanship associated with the Damask Rose were inscribed in 2019 on the UNESCO List of Intangible Cultural Heritage.

Syrian people take part in the picking process of the famous Damask, or Damascene Rose, in the town of al-Marah, north of the capital Damascus, Syria, on May 19, 2022. (Photo by Ammar Safarjalani/Xinhua)

The annual harvest starts in May. Families venture into the fields at dawn to handpick the roses, then gather in the afternoon to sort the buds for drying into tea and prepare the rest for distillation. Women come together to make rose syrup, jam, and pastries, singing traditional songs as they work.

Diaa al-Khatib, farmer and school principal, recounted to Xinhua how farming was the main business in their town before bad weather forced many farmers to change jobs.

"In the past, this was the main income for most of the village's farmers. Now, due to drought, it's become secondary. Very few still depend solely on the Damask rose. Production is down, profits are down, so people have turned to other work."

The link to the Damascene rose, however, is deeper than economics. "We can't let go of it. It's an inheritance from our ancestors," al-Khatib said. "There's a spiritual connection. When you give something your effort, you grow attached."

Photo taken on May 27, 2020 shows the famous Damask, or Damascene Rose during the harvest season in the town of al-Marah, north of the capital Damascus, Syria. (Photo by Ammar Safarjalani/Xinhua)

Over the past four to five years, Al-Marah has not seen snow, which the rose depends on for nourishment. Farmers now use supplementary irrigation to compensate, though not enough to transform the fields into fully irrigated land.

"We're not trying to switch from rain-fed to irrigated farming," al-Khatib said, explaining that it would change the characteristics of the Damask rose. The farmers say the rose, which is renowned for its special flagrance, and heady-scented oil, is their heritage.

Despite setbacks, the rose continues to attract attention. "We've seen more foreign delegations visit than in previous years," said al-Khatib. "They came, took reports on how the rose is grown and irrigated. But whether this interest will turn into something tangible for us, we still don't know," he said. ■

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...

留言 0

沒有留言。

最新內容

Labubu craze grips Finland

XINHUA

Britain, U.S. sign partial trade deal as key issues remain unresolved

XINHUA

UN chief condemns killings of food-seeking Gazans

XINHUA

Xinhua Headlines: Xi urges China, Central Asian countries to promote high-quality Belt and Road cooperation

XINHUA

Explore Changping: Where Ming Dynasty Heritage Meets Modern Adventure

PR Newswire (美通社)

Chinese traditional opera, music performed in Belgrade

XINHUA

Moments in Motion: Handshakes in Astana

XINHUA

Tajik FM: Time-tested China-Central Asia ties enter new horizon

XINHUA

Xi attends 2nd China-Central Asia Summit

XINHUA

Xi calls on China, Uzbekistan to introduce more measures for trade liberalization, facilitation

XINHUA

APTO Releases High-Accuracy Japanese Reasoning Data for LLM Fine-Tuning, Free of Charge

PR Newswire (美通社)

Xi says China willing to work with Turkmenistan to fully unlock potential for cooperation based on win-win collaboration

XINHUA

Xi calls on China, Tajikistan to expand scale of bilateral trade, investment

XINHUA

Xi says China-Kyrgyzstan cooperation holds great potential

XINHUA

Mainland calls for cross-Strait contributions to Chinese modernization

XINHUA

TGE Successfully Advances Multiple Movie Releases This Year, Including "She's Got No Name" and "My First of May," Coming Out in June and August Respectively

PR Newswire (美通社)

AI-Powered CDSS Enhances Patient Safety with Real-World Data

PR Newswire (美通社)

Mine Vision Systems Expands Global Support Network with New Australian Partnership

PR Newswire (美通社)

Dutch gov't unveils guidelines to limit smartphone, social media use among children

XINHUA

Update: China's new-generation manned spacecraft completes zero-altitude escape flight test

XINHUA

Chinese researchers pioneer PlantGPT, an AI assistant for functional plant genomics

XINHUA

Chinese vice premier urges improved industrial innovation, sound development of platform economy

XINHUA

RemeGen's Telitacicept (RC18) Received Orphan Drug Designation from EMA for Myasthenia Gravis

PR Newswire (美通社)

Hexagon launches AEON, a humanoid built for industry

PR Newswire (美通社)

RuggON Unveils 12-inch SOL 7: The World's First Rugged Tablet Powered by Intel® Arrow Lake Processors

PR Newswire (美通社)

Lemonade in wheatfields brings urban cool to rural China

XINHUA

Documentary | Bringing his music home

XINHUA

Polus holds €425 million initial close for third CLO equity fund

PR Newswire (美通社)

Iran strikes Israeli intelligence sites as Israel attacks Iran's missile launchers

XINHUA

Xinhua News | China steps up efforts to ensure safety of Chinese citizens in Iran, Israel

XINHUA

GLOBALink | Taiwanese youth seeks "sweet" business in Chinese mainland

XINHUA

Hotel & Shop Plus 2025 Solidifies Its Global Influence

PR Newswire (美通社)

Chinese women's volleyball coach Zhao Yong promises exciting matches in Hong Kong

XINHUA

Feature: Goal! China's grassroots football scores economic wonder

XINHUA

Xi meets Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev

XINHUA

China's space program provides larger platform for broader international cooperation

XINHUA

Interview: Growing Chinese market creates opportunities for global investors, says Turkish economist

XINHUA

Meet 17 Next-gen Asian chefs and culinary heirs reinventing legacy restaurants

Tatler Hong Kong

GLOBALink | 60 seconds into Astana's central axis

XINHUA