Jalal Suleiman - Turkish-Syrian border

The Syrian poet Abdul Karim al-Na'asan, who is displaced from Kufr Zita in the countryside of Hama, lives in a thin tent with his children on the border between Turkey and Syria. Anis has nothing but the noise of his children and the sea of ​​hair. He sits every night in the corner of his tent singing some of his poems he makes daily, His children are around him.

The 54-year-old, who spent his life writing poetry, prose and stories, did not think of ending up in a tent on the Syrian-Turkish border without work, waiting for the aid that could come months and months.

In the midst of the Syrian revolution, Na'san moved from his village of Kafr Zeta to the Syrian north, where his family lived in Dana, then fled to Urm, then to Atma, and now in the typical village of Ata, a tent group on the Syrian-Turkish border.

He founded with his fellow writers and poets the Association of Syrian Free Literature writers in the countryside of Western Aleppo, and now includes about fifty writers and poets. In the village of "Ata" founded with some colleagues poets and writers and those interested in culture, literature and thought, "Free Forum for Culture, Literature and Thought," and was its first president.

Al-Na'san says that his writings since the beginning of the Syrian revolution in 2011 focus on portraying the reality of the situation, including the pain and hopes, the pain of displacement and alienation, the war and its aftermath, and hopes to carry on their wings the looseness and the near victory and return to the homes safe.