“Fighting to live in peace in Syria”
After the destruction of their business and livelihood over Easter, Molham and his family must now live in the aftermath of that traumatic day. Despite the fear that threatens to overwhelm them, they fight to trust in the Lord’s plan for their lives.

“I never imagined that everything I built could fall apart in a single afternoon,” Molham says, reflecting on the moment that altered the course of his and his family’s life.
He is an engineer by trade, a husband and a father of a five-year-old girl called Christina, with another daughter on the way. His and his wife’s vision was to build a sanctuary in their town, Al-Suqaylabiah – an especially pertinent need given the nation’s trauma and worsening fragility over the past few years.
Using their savings and Molham’s skills, they set up a café business with a strict ‘families-only’ policy. However, as the world beyond their sanctuary grew more restless, more volatile, that rule became harder to maintain.
“It’s a constant weight on my heart.”
Molham
“Since the government changed, men have been coming in with guns on their belts. It’s a constant weight on my heart,” he explains. “I’ve often thought about closing the café for good, simply because I was terrified for my wife’s safety when she helped me there.”
“An attack on our existence”
On Friday 27 March, a group of outsiders from another village tried to enter one of the cafés in the area. Barred from entering, they stayed outside watching the girls inside. A fight broke out before the men were chased away.
But that wasn’t the end of it. A few hours later, more than a hundred men invaded the town on motorbikes, and chaos erupted. They yelled insults against Christianity and smashed windows, shops and cars, destroying as much as they could.
“It was systematic. It was an attack on our existence.”
Molham
“It wasn’t just a fight between boys,” Molham says. “It was systematic. It was an attack on our existence.”
When he realised that the mob was coming for his café too, he took his pregnant wife and daughter and rushed them home before returning to the café. As fast as he could, he evacuated everyone, turned off the lights and locked the doors. Then, he could only flee.
“It is a terrible feeling to be so helpless.”
Molham
“I wanted to protect everyone,” he remembers heavily. “But they had guns, and we had nothing. It is a terrible feeling to be so helpless.”
His daughter, Christina, was also terrified. “She held my hand so tight and told me, ‘Papa, come hide with me.'”
Scars redeemed
The next day, the café was almost foreign to Molham. The windows were smashed through, the chairs in pieces and bullet holes pierced every wall. Everything that he had worked tirelessly to build was left desolate by the hatred of the mob.
But instead of despairing, Molham did something extraordinary.
As Easter approached, he did not immediately repair or hide the scars caused by that day. Instead, he adorned the bullet holes with Easter decorations. Just as the Lord Jesus kept His scars on His resurrected body, so had the Lord redeemed the scars of persecution through Molham’s act of faith.
A heavy burden
The café was repairable, but the wounds that the attack had incurred on their hearts would take longer to heal. Christina, Molham’s daughter, still carries deep trauma from that day. To her, a missed call doesn’t simply mean a busy father, but suggests that the terror has returned, taking her father with it.
“She constantly begs her mother to call me,” Molham says with tears. “It makes me wonder: how can I ever give her back the sense of safety she lost? I even find myself questioning if it is right to bring another child into a world like this.”
“We will keep fighting to live in peace.”
Molham
Yet, despite the scars on their hearts and the ongoing impact of that day, they hold on to their faith in Jesus – the Light in their darkness of recent months. “We believe in God’s plan for us,” Molham testifies, “And we will keep fighting to live in peace.”
- For continued healing and restoration for Molham, his family and all those affected by the Easter attacks
- That Molham’s second daughter will arrive safely and the whole family know the comforting presence and goodness of the Lord
- For the protection of all Christians in Syria and peace across the land.
- Every £19 could help prepare a believer with persecution survival training, so they can persevere through any opposition.
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