This American Life - 879: A Christian and a Muslim Walk Into a Bar

Episode Date: January 18, 2026

When a joke could get you killed, should you say it anyway? A group of Syrian comedians test the limits of their newfound freedom, a year after the fall of the brutal Assad regime. Visit thisamerican...life.org/lifepartners to sign up for our premium subscription.Prologue: Under the dictatorship of Bashar al-Assad, comedian Sharief Homsi knew which jokes were too dangerous to say on stage. Now that Syria is under the control of a new government, Sharief and the other comedians of “Styria” set out on a national tour to see how far their comedy can go in this new Syria. (6 minutes)Act One: The comedians test out risky material and get big laughs on early tour dates. It’s going smoothly until they find out that their show scheduled in the conservative city of Hama is in danger of being cancelled. (13 minutes)Act Two: The comedians go to battle with local officials. (18 minutes)Act Three: The comedians try everything they can think of to keep their shows from being cancelled. (20 minutes)Transcripts are available at thisamericanlife.orgThis American Life privacy policy.Learn more about sponsor message choices.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 A quick warning, there are curse words that are unbeaped in today's episode of the show. If you prefer a beeped version, you can find that at our website, This AmericanLife.org. Sharif Holmesie is a stand-up comic in a place. It's not really known for its comedy scene. Damascus, Syria. As maybe you've heard, the place was run by a dictator for a long time, Bashar al-Assad. Back then, there were a lot of jokes that Sharif was not able to tell on stage. Definitely nothing about Assad, or Assad's family.
Starting point is 00:00:29 nothing about politics at all. Those kind of jokes could get you killed or disappeared into one of a side's infamous prisons. So during those years, Shereef kept jokes like that in a folder on his computer labeled Lebanon because he pretty much only felt safe telling them when he would take trips abroad.
Starting point is 00:00:48 There is one joke, I want to bring it back. But there is one joke I used to say when I go to Lebanon, like, listen, We have a lot of problem, but you don't have a president. And our problem is that we have one. So maybe if you take him and you can rent him for a bit,
Starting point is 00:01:10 and if you like him, you can keep him. You cannot say anything like this, ma. That joke, if I say it over here, we will get killed. There is no joke with them. Bashar al-Assad's family ruled Syria for 53 years, the last 13 of which were a brutal civil war. over 300,000 Syrian civilians died. Then, a year ago, to everybody surprise,
Starting point is 00:01:34 a bunch of rebel groups overthrew the regime in just 12 days. Assad, his wife, Asma, and their family flew to Russia. The rebels were led by an Islamist group called Hayet Terrier al-Sham, H-T-S, for short. And then, the new people in power surprised everybody again by not immediately becoming another repressive regime. HTS leader Ahmad al-Shara says he's acting as interim president and has promised to hold elections in the next few years. And Syrians have been experiencing a freedom that they have not experienced before. I had dinner a couple weeks ago with somebody who was just there and they were talking about how kind of inspiring it is to be there right now.
Starting point is 00:02:14 She met lots of people who were moving back, ready and excited to rebuild their country. But at the same time, parts of Syria are still violent. It was fighting this month in and around Aleppo, over 150,000. people were displaced. In July, Sharif had to cancel a show in a city called Soweda because of a massacre there. 800 people were killed. And then in October, in the middle of this chaos and hope, Sharif and the other comedians in his comedy group, the group is called Styria, decided to go on tour. They planned 16 cities and 21 days all over Syria in conservative regions and liberal areas like Damascus, areas under Kurdish control, and areas that were once in.
Starting point is 00:02:57 under ISIS control. And they really weren't sure how this was going to go. Nobody had ever done this. And this is the tricky part. Under the dictator, it was clear what they could not say on stage. But now, there seemed to be no rulebook at all. If anything, the new government was saying,
Starting point is 00:03:17 go ahead, you can make jokes about us. We're different from the old regime. But the comedians didn't know if they could trust that. And then beyond that, There are lots of just very conservative, very religious people around Syria. Some of them are figures of authority in towns and provinces. The comedians wondered how they would react to things that they heard on stage. They worried about random hotheads, hearing about them,
Starting point is 00:03:41 and things they said deciding to show up with a gun. Even before they left, they got death threats in their DMs. Stuff like, If you ever talk about the revolution, we're going to come kill you one by one and blah, blah, blah. These messages freaked Sharif out. But he got where they were coming from. The country's been through 13 years of war. Yeah, most of the other comedians are from Damascus,
Starting point is 00:04:04 a city that saw the least of the fighting because it was controlled by the regime. By Syrian standards, they're the soft liberals. I understand, because some people, man, they see what we do as a luxury. My house was destroyed, and my brother was dead, my mother was dead. And you here in Damascus were having fun,
Starting point is 00:04:25 you didn't have anything wrong, and you're going to make people laugh. This is like luxury, you know, so they cannot take the joke. And I understand. They have the right to be sad. Any comedy show in Syria right now, for everybody, the comedians, the audience,
Starting point is 00:04:43 they're all figuring out what's okay to say out loud. Eamon O'Gana, a reporter based in Damascus, heard about all this. And he also was very curious to see what the comedians could get away with. and whether they would even get all the way through the tour. He hung out with them on tour for two weeks,
Starting point is 00:05:01 on long van rides across Syria, backstage of their shows. Lots of stuff ended up happening. Stuff, I think it's safe to say they did not see coming. From WB.EZ Chicago, since American life, I'm out of glass. We hit the road with these comedians today. And with that introduction, here's Aymn with Act 1, an actual calling.
Starting point is 00:05:24 Too soon? I meet up with the comedians in Safita, a city about three hours drive north of Damascus. They're in a shared apartment that doubles us a green room. The venue owner let them all crash for free. There are several mattresses to a room, suitcases under the beds, and the comics are walking in and out of rooms,
Starting point is 00:05:43 getting ready and telling jokes to warm up. Hello, I need to get naked. Maliki. is Maliki Mardinalee, one of the founders of the group along with Sharif. If you asked him anything, where he's dressing. Okay, Maliki, while you're dressing, I'm not asking you the same question I just asked Sharif. Is there a joke you're thinking of saying tonight that you're not sure if you want to say it, that might be a bit dangerous?
Starting point is 00:06:09 Actually, there was a few, but a few minutes ago we were speaking about it. Here, the audience is new to this kind of... arts, you know, so I don't want any joke to be uncomfortable for them, you know, so I'm going safe side this time. I feel if I say something on the government, it would be a little bit dangerous, they will not feel comfortable, you know, something like this. For the sensitivity of this place, not because we don't, we can't say it, you know, but here I don't know how.
Starting point is 00:06:52 they will react to it. And what is the joke you're not sure about telling? Maybe something about how the Ministry of Defense dress, they don't wear shoes, they only wear the flip-flops, you know? That's how they fight. I feel something like this. It's a lot dangerous to see someone feats in a war, you know? This is actually a joke about the current government, that there was such a rag-tag army
Starting point is 00:07:26 that they came to power in flip-flops. Comedy and poetry are probably the hardest things to translate from any language. I swear to God in Arabic, it's very funny. Just anyone is hearing us right now, it is funny in Arabic. You should learn Arabic and come and watch the show. Maliki plays it safe that night in Safita. He skips the flip-flop joke. Styria is a small crew, around 20 comics.
Starting point is 00:07:51 Two of them are women. Some still keep their day jobs. There's a dentist, a university lecturer, an engineer, students. They are mostly in their 20s and 30s. The group's name Styria is a combination of Syria plus hysteria, because that's what it felt like to laugh in Syria when the group got together three years ago. A manic release. Sharif and Maliki do this full time.
Starting point is 00:08:17 Sharif is the group's spiritual leader, the one who used to have a folder labeled Lebanon. He's got a laid-back stoner vibe, covered in tattoos, light beard, 33 years old. Maliki is the one running the tour. He's 29 years old, with dark hair and a cheeky grin. He's the Paul McCartney to Sharif's John Lennon, more tightly wound. He's the fixer, lining up venues, negotiating with government officials, driving the van, keeping track of permits, schedules, and constantly updating the list of things that could go wrong.
Starting point is 00:08:51 He worries out loud, cracks jokes as he does it, a kind of nervous humour that makes it clear he's holding the whole operation together. He actually thinks they're going to be fine on this tour. I don't think something bad will happen to us. Because nobody cares about it. Let's state the obvious. Nobody cares about us. Who the fuck we are?
Starting point is 00:09:15 I'm not like a superstar. I'm not George Clooney on the tour. Well, Malki, he's Sharif, that's Khalid, that's Aziz. Nobody cares about us. Nothing bad will happen to us. A few people telling some jokes. Let him. But there are two stops on the tour he's worried about.
Starting point is 00:09:35 I'm most scared of it's Aleppo and Hamas. Aleppo and Hamas. Those two cities are very dangerous. Very dangerous. Oof, man. So we have to be careful dealing with... I don't know with... Mind and the road.
Starting point is 00:09:53 I don't know what it's the term, it's the term, it's agam, right of the land field. Mindfield, yes, yes, yes. So it's a mind field in Ham. Hammer is a conservative city, Stop 7 on the tour. Aleppo is Stop 9, a city divided by different factions.
Starting point is 00:10:11 Before they could go on the tour, Maliki had to sign what he translates as an obligation with the Ministry of Tourism, a pledge to avoid certain jokes. Unlike during the old Assad regime, they're allowed to make fun of the current leaders. The pledge is a promise not to use hate speech and to avoid jokes that could rile people up and cause civil unrest, like jokes about religion. It's a written commitment tied to the permit.
Starting point is 00:10:37 If they breach it, the Ministry of Tourism can cancel the show or penalize the group. The first four shows go pretty smoothly, playing in mostly liberal towns where they didn't expect problems. One gets oversold because the app they use to sell tickets malfunctioned, which is a huge pain in the ass. But mostly, it's sold out rooms. So far so good. Stop five on the tour, Latakia, a sunny port city with a beachfront and blue Mediterranean waters. Fish restaurants and clubs line the shore. It's been called the Miami of Syria.
Starting point is 00:11:21 And it would be, except for what happened here last March, when sectarian viands. killed around 1,500 people. That's the stage the comedians are walking into tonight. Fun but tense. Okay, it's Wednesday the 15th of October. We're in Latakia. We're just arriving at the venue to see Sharif, Maliki and the guys as they set up. It's a beautiful venue overlooking the sea.
Starting point is 00:11:45 My friend, hello, welcome, welcome. Hi, ma'am. Hi, we're holding. We're preparing for the show. Sharif is unloading equipment and making sure everything is in place working. Maliki's putting up posters and banners at the entrance. I told you we're the logistics, we're the reservation, we are the comedian, we are the management, we are the president of Syria. The same, we are Syria.
Starting point is 00:12:11 So we're preparing the show and we just learn we might have, we cannot do our show in Hamma. Hammer, one of the cities Maliki was worried about. Man, this is insane. This is insane. This is insane. This is crazy. You're pissed off? Yeah, yeah, very, very, man. Very angry about it. They had gotten a call from their fixer in Hammer, the guy setting up their show there. He said he had gone to pay the fees for the show, but was told the local government
Starting point is 00:12:43 in Hammer wasn't going to allow it. Because we got a report that we are, this is a new one. It's fresh. We are supporting the gay rights in... in Syria or in Hamo. Why? We don't know, like, the one who's preparing the venue in Hamas, they sent him to the... They are assuming.
Starting point is 00:13:05 We didn't say anything about this kind of topic, ever. Like, Malki talked to the guy in the government, tell him, bro, like, this is really offensive. Like, if you tell me, I'm threatening the people, the religion, anything. I'm talking against me. politics I understand, but gay rights, why? Like, when? You don't see? So we don't know... How? Who?
Starting point is 00:13:30 Why? Too much to be. The hysteria comedians can talk about whatever they want in their sets. Their only rule is no hate speech. But still, nobody campaigns for any rights of any kind in their shows. Just imagine, like, you cannot think about supporting any rights. Like, you see, gay rights, vegetarian right, any right. So the idea we don't know more.
Starting point is 00:13:56 They care about Hamer because it's symbolic, a full house in a town with a conservative reputation, a real test of what they can or can't say in the new Syria. They weren't even going to play Hammer when they planned the tour. Too conservative? Too many ways it could go wrong. This is the place where in 1982, Hafez al-Assad, Bashar's father,
Starting point is 00:14:19 crushed the Muslim Brotherhood uprising. Thousands were killed. many disappeared. People there still carry that history. It shapes what you can say in a room. But then the fan of the group DM Sharif begging him to come. We like you here.
Starting point is 00:14:35 We want you here. We want to change the conservative stereotype of our city. So Sharif said, OK, fuck it. Let's do Hammer. They figured if they could play Hammer, it could open the doors to other conservative cities too.
Starting point is 00:14:50 And they sold out the Hammer Show, 230 tickets. It's Wednesday, the Hammer show is supposed to happen Monday. So Maliki calls the guy in charge of culture in Hammer, a local bureaucrat he calls the Sheikh, to convince the Sheikh to not cancel the show. I am beyond worry night now. My mind in Hammer.
Starting point is 00:15:12 That night, they still have a show to do. It's a simple format. Six comedians, seven minutes each. The room is full, maybe two, 300 people. Maliki opens the show. He asks the audience not to take videos or photos or post on social media because they just got in trouble with the government for promoting homosexuality.
Starting point is 00:15:44 Maliki tells a version of the flip-flop joke how security forces have been fighting for 14 years but keep their toes out. It gets a big laugh. Then he hands the mic over to Sharif. Sharif tells a joke that definitely would have gotten him into trouble under the Assad regime. It shows you how much things have changed in Syria this last year. It's about Asmaal Assad, the dictator's wife, who had breast cancer.
Starting point is 00:16:15 Technically, it's about her bra. Here's the setup. December 8th, 2024. The Assad's flee for Russia. Syrians go to the abandoned presidential palace to loot it, taking little trophies, souvenirs. So in that joke, I say people went to Bashar al-Assad to steal some watches, some expensive painting.
Starting point is 00:16:42 Me, I go what I get, Asma al-Assad, bra. And I have it one piece. He holds up half of a bra. The other half is missing. because she got one breast taken because she had cancer and people start to love and feel shy and I say, don't say, don't feel sorry about her. She has cancer.
Starting point is 00:17:06 Feel sorry for the cancer, he has a smile, I said. And people say, like, ah, I love the joke. Biggest laugh of the night. Afterwards, I talked to a few members of the audience. How is the show tonight? tremendous, extraordinary. I haven't witnessed anything the same in my life. It was amazing, it was unbelievable.
Starting point is 00:17:33 It's a, no one expected this. They say things that you cannot say, especially in Latakia. They're amazing. One guy said he was depressed before the show. But after five minutes in the show, I felt myself like flying in the night sky. The only criticism I heard was that they were not political enough. I would like to hear more about politics.
Starting point is 00:18:01 Because the more you talk about politics, the more you are free. I don't think that in the coming years they will be able to mention the same jocs. I don't believe that they are going to be free like this. I feel that Syria now is going to be like the Assad period. Some Syrians have told me that they feel as though they're speaking on borrowing, time. They're happy the old regime is gone, but are unsure about the future. Syrians are setting precedence for what can be said, post by post, room by room. But maybe it's a bubble. They can joke for now, but there's real trepidation about what comes next. By the end of the night, the comedians
Starting point is 00:18:46 haven't heard back from the shake. The fate of the Hammer Show is still on the line. The comedians head into Hama province, the Sheikh's province, and the Sheikh brings all the boys to the yard. Figuratively, I mean, stay with us. Just American Life. If you just tuned in, reporter Eamon O'Gana hit the road with a group of Syrian comedians on their first nationwide tour since the Assad regime fell a year ago.
Starting point is 00:19:23 We have arrived at Act 2, the drama in Hama. Here's Haman. The comedians have a two-day break after Latakia, so they go back to Damascus to recuperate. They still don't know what's going to happen with their show in Hammer. I meet up with them at Sharif's place in Damascus, his family's house. It's big, in a nice, leafy neighborhood. Sharif's parents are drinking tea in the living room with his aunt and uncle.
Starting point is 00:19:53 This is my place. This is my room. My mom, my uncle, his wife. We step into Sharif's bedroom, the operating base. for Styria. Maliki, Sharif and Omar, another founder-comedian, have all kicked off their shoes and are drinking coffee and discussing what's to come. They are waiting for the Sheikh to call with an update on Hammer. Maliki's phone stays face up on the table. Psychedelic stoner posters are taped to the wall. A desktop computer obscures the window. A few childish
Starting point is 00:20:27 pictures sit on the mantle. Maliki points to them, a Harry Potter poster and a painting made by a small child. That's from Kareem al-Assad, the son of Bashar. So this is taken from the palace? Yes. And I have a few stuff also from his house. What do we get also, Malki? I get from his house, I took shitty stuff, not something with the...
Starting point is 00:20:52 It value to me more than at value in the real world, you know, because that day was magnificent man, yeah, yeah. I say this in my stand-up. I said, I really hope... We don't have to feel this feeling again of us getting liberated because in order to feel it again, another dictator would have to come. So in that day, I felt totally free. It was total chaos, man.
Starting point is 00:21:20 Like, I spent from 6 o'clock until 6 at the evening, I was outside in the road with my friend celebrating. We went to Al-Assad home. You see, I have his bra, his pain. and stuff. We went to the parliament, to the Ministry of Defense. His wife?
Starting point is 00:21:40 So that's really his wife's bra? You're not kidding. Yeah, I'm not kidding. I brought shitty stuff for me. I have, and the half of the bra, I give it to my girlfriend, my ex-girlfriend, because... I thought you were joking.
Starting point is 00:21:53 No, no, man. It's a real shit. I turn it into a joke. Let me show you. My stand-up comedy. When I was inside, it's here. When Sharif says he was inside, he means prison. Sharif was jailed in Dubai for a little more than three years,
Starting point is 00:22:16 from 2018 to 2021. He hands me a paperback book with a worn cover. So this was me in the inside. See what I write. Be a Great Stand Up is the name of the book. Wow, it's covered in hand-ridden notes. This is your notes? This is my notes.
Starting point is 00:22:36 It's me writing stand-up in the inside. So you're inside your cell, just reading about comedy and writing in this book. Yeah. Yeah, I can show you a book where I write it what I want to do when I was, I'm going to go out. So this is a notepad you had in prison? Yeah. And you can see in English, I say a new laptop, writing and stand-up comedy. And I read here some gym.
Starting point is 00:23:03 Jim, never, never speak the plan. What's the never, never speak the plan? I used to talk a lot, man. This is what got me into shit. The shit is a narcotics charge. Sharif was dealing drugs in Dubai and got caught by the authorities. I got greedy and I got caught by a camine by an ambush and they gave me marked money and it was all a play, all a game.
Starting point is 00:23:30 I was the one who burned. According to court documents, Sharif sold drugs to an undercover cop. A snitch had tipped off the police. He was arrested and given a live sentence, which in the UAE is a common penalty for drug offenses, no matter how small. He says he got out because his father wrote a mercy petition,
Starting point is 00:23:51 a letter to the prosecutor, begging to let him go. My name was 71. It was 70 people who meant to go out, and they added my name after three years and three months. And... Thank God.
Starting point is 00:24:05 And then you came out and you were like, I know what I want to do, I'm going to be a comedian. Actually, the first year, I was an animal. You know, you're basic. I want to eat. I'm going to have sex.
Starting point is 00:24:18 I want to hear some music. It was taken from me. And after nine months, I was going into them, the same cycle that got me into jail. A friend called him out for how he was acting. Sharif said enough
Starting point is 00:24:32 and broke the cycle by focusing on saving money for his comedy dream taking any job he could. And when that happened everything started to happen. Like someone asked me to do stand-up comedy between parties and stuff and how is like
Starting point is 00:24:48 I want to do this. And I thought is it possible in all Syria and all the dark humor and shit we have? I am the only one in Syria or Damascus that want to do stand-up comedy, just let me put the news out and see who are interested. I needed a team so I can start so we can do something.
Starting point is 00:25:11 That's how we met Maliki. They both grew up in Damascus. Sharif is Muslim, Maliki is Christian. They had mutual friends but didn't know each other. Maliki was working in a bank at the time. But they both dreamt of being stand-up comedians. Here's Sharif. Someone sent me his Facebook, and I always said,
Starting point is 00:25:30 He went to research his Facebook. He had some bad content on Q Media. Then I find him start to do stand-up comedy he tried in 2020 alone. How do you start to do stand-up comedy on your own? I don't know. I don't know. You just got up in the bar and were like... Actually, actually, this is a very good one.
Starting point is 00:25:53 I don't know if I told the guys of it. Kamal, my friend, we were having a... drink in Mad Monkey Pop. So we were talking and I don't know, I'm just saying stories and something like this. He started to laugh, laugh very hot.
Starting point is 00:26:12 So he called Bissan, the owner of the place. I told her that I should start doing stand-up comedy at her venues. She refused it, of course, Annie. But then, a week or so later, the owner of the bar
Starting point is 00:26:28 changed her mind. Maliki's friend called and told him. And that was just because you're like a funny guy and people thought you. I don't know shit about stand-up at that time. Like I'm coming from NGOs and bank, bank round, you know? So you worked in a bank but you told jokes to your friends? And your friends were like...
Starting point is 00:26:44 Yes, yes, yes. Most of my jokes come from that. I'm a good roster at the bank. And how did it go at Mad Monkey, your first gig? Shit, shit, shit, man. Pure shit. It's the pure shit you'll ever seen in your life. The people laugh?
Starting point is 00:27:03 The people were sick, not laugh. They told me, sound, come on, turn the music on, man. Maliki had decided to quit the bank, tired of counting other people's money. And out of the blue, Sharif called him to invite him to a stand-up workshop he was hosting. At the same day, man, at the same day, 2 p.m. I signed that paper. 4 p.m., Sharif called me. At the same day.
Starting point is 00:27:29 I remember when I called, he said, I cannot come at this time. This is the sheikh. The sheik is calling Maliki now. Ahla, ha, ha, sir. Maliki answers the phone. Sharif paces the room smoking and listening carefully. The call lasts about 15 minutes. Allah, you'll be it.
Starting point is 00:27:50 Thank you. Thank you. On my head. So what just happened, Maliki? Oh my God, man, this is insane. This is 15 minutes on the phone just to say that you are not allowed to do your stand-up in Hamma.
Starting point is 00:28:14 Okay? After this going, he will reconsider the things. What the Sheikh said in the call was that he didn't know who canceled the show, but he understood why someone would cancel it. He'd actually seen their set in Mohadei a few months back, and he thought some of the content was inappropriate and certainly it would be for Hammer
Starting point is 00:28:34 but not because of anything to do with LGBTQ material. So what were the kind of things he was saying to you? Man, this is insane. He told me that you can't say your material in Hammer because it's offensive to the family values because we are talking about our parents So he felt that, oh, they are breaking the bonds between the families. They are affecting the people that who watch this kind of shows.
Starting point is 00:29:07 We are a threat. That's how we are a threat to the family. You know, we are a threat to the family value. This is much more insane than the LGBTQ support thing. This is really new, man. This is really new. All of us have jokes on our parents, man. Everybody.
Starting point is 00:29:31 This is insane. It's my dad, man. It's my dad. If I can't speak, my dad, what should I speak? For what should I speak? This is my family. This is my culture. This is, we are doing stand-up comedy for the Sheikh, not for the people.
Starting point is 00:29:48 You know, this is how things are now going. The first three months, we had freedom. Yeah. What was that like? It's like coming from dark to the life. the light. Then we are slowly closing the window. Now slowly closing the door, slowly closing the curtains. This is bad. This is bad. It's like if it's better if I never had it. Yes. Wow. You know? Wow. Oh shit, here we go again. You know. Oh shit. Here we go another Assad regime.
Starting point is 00:30:16 On the call, Maliki told the Sheikh they wanted to perform in Hammer to show that Hammer isn't just some strict and conservative city where nothing happens. The Sheikh said he'd look into to it and get back to them with a final answer soon. So he's going to call back in a few hours with his decision. I think he will call the brothers. The brothers is Malik's sardonic way of referring to the Islamist officials now running things. They will call the brotherhood. He will call them and will have their advice.
Starting point is 00:30:47 The next day we hit the road again. Piling into a bright yellow van with stickers lining the sides. saying Styria in the font of Grand Theft Auto. Maliki is driving. Sharif sits behind him. There's so much equipment in the back that Maliki can't see out the rear window. It's about three hours to Salamia.
Starting point is 00:31:09 Stop six on the tour, depending on checkpoints. What's the latest with the sheikh? Sharif sent me a screenshot that he is pushing also in Mharde. To stop you? Yes. Mujardé is the show tomorrow night. the Sheikh is now saying that show might be cancelled as well.
Starting point is 00:31:32 I think a few hours I'm going to make some phone calls to understand what the hell is going on. And what's your strategy with the Sheikh? How are you going to convince him or control him or influence him? He's going to turn to Islam. You're going to convert Islam? I hope I don't have to. Because if the Sheikh didn't kill me, my parents will.
Starting point is 00:31:57 So I'm dead. either here or there. I told them hard, I told him we would not stop. So if they want to stop, let them stop us. If it's going to go to jail, please take me to jail. I miss it. And with all this drama, do you want to perform in Hammer? Yes.
Starting point is 00:32:24 Our show is sold out in Hammer. Man, there is 200 people right now. now the only entertainment they have here is us so far besides killing each other's you know so we are a must not a need a few minutes later still on the road to salamiya maliki gets a text the sheikh just texted me that uh not going to be a show in hammer this is final decision so what are you going to do we're going to do we're going to take the people in Hamas to come to our show in Mhardie. Are you going to tell them why?
Starting point is 00:33:10 Yes, of course. I'm going to tell them why. For them, this isn't over. They could let it go, but Maliki won't. They decide to test the limits another way, make it public, and see who's stronger right now, the government or the people. They want to use public opinion to force them to reinstate the show.
Starting point is 00:33:30 The Styria comedians are all pretty young. They think in TikTok and Instagram. They believe a big enough online following will give them protection from government officials trying to silence them. They have hundreds of thousands of followers on Instagram. Syria's revolutionaries also use social media to rise to power. But now that they run things, they fear it.
Starting point is 00:33:53 Fear posts that inflame sectarian tempers. Fear looking weak. At the same time, they don't want to love look like the old regime, repressive and censoring in public. So they pressure quietly, in private, and the comedians answer loudly, online. Maliki and Sharif go on the offensive. They post that the Hammer Show is cancelled and tell Hammer fans to come to Mahadeh instead. They'll add seats, they'll arrange buses, they're trying to turn the followers into force.
Starting point is 00:34:24 It's a respectful post not calling anyone out, but they figure their fans will understand why it was cancelled. get pissed off and put pressure on the government. But then, one of the other comedians, Abo Aziz, goes rogue on his personal Instagram account. So Aba Azezez, you know him. O'Aziz is much crazy. He's not diplomatic, you know? He's not diplomatic.
Starting point is 00:34:47 He's not very stupid and very... Very Aba Aba Abe Azez, you know? On Instagram, Aboaziz goes off. He rants, and the people with me, are we're having to hudder the Salm al-Ahele. He rants about the Secretariat for Political Affairs in Hammer
Starting point is 00:35:10 says they accuse the troop of LGBT content and of being a threat to family values. He blames them for canceling Hammer. We're back to how we were before, he says. It sounds pretty mild, but he's comparing the new government to the old regime, which
Starting point is 00:35:26 is dangerous. Abu Aziz has nearly 300,000 followers. Him posting online left someone the group nervous, but excited Maliki and Sharif. The comments start right away, angry at the government. Word gets back. Someone from political affairs calls Abu Aziz. Political affairs also contacts the Sheikh. The Sheikh calls Maliki.
Starting point is 00:35:52 Maliki doesn't pick up, so the Sheikh follows with the text. I didn't answer. I will let him. We have cancer. this show. But then when... In an hour, answer him. I think...
Starting point is 00:36:05 I think I will tell... Now, leave him in half an hour. Let things boil up, you know? So I leave him now. I think an hour later, or maybe in the evening, they will tell us do your show in Hamo. Some members of the group are worried by the strategy,
Starting point is 00:36:24 wishing they had been consulted first. But almost as quickly as they stir up the online shitstorm, Sharif gets a text from the Hammer venue owner. No matter what, he won't let them use the venue. It's not worth it to him. He's scared of a visit from the authorities, a fine, a lost license, a knock at the door,
Starting point is 00:36:42 or worse, an attack. Maliki and Sharif have officially lost the battle for Hammer. They're still trying to direct people to come to the Mahadeh show instead, but now that might be cancelled as well. They play Salamiya that night. It goes great, standing ovation. Then after the show, a call from the Ministry of Media.
Starting point is 00:37:14 This guy is furious about Abu Aziz's post and tries to stop the show they've just finished. Are you worried they're going to stop your other shows? No, tomorrow it's going to be Mharda. No, they are not going to come to Mharada. Maybe they will do some phone calls and that's it. It's now our move. On the chess board, it's now our move. We have the media.
Starting point is 00:37:37 We have the people. They have weapons. So Abuiz is very powerful chess. No, he's very... Tash, we call it, that the one who... Like a tank, you know, this is the first who come into the battle. And then people come like snipers and military and... Everything is a war.
Starting point is 00:37:55 In Syria, everything is a war. Even the art is a war, yeah. Maliki isn't worried about the show in Mahada. He tells me. tells me it's a Christian town, so the Sheikh has no power there. Amen O'Gana. Coming up, Mojarder, she wrote. The comedy show moves on to Mojarda.
Starting point is 00:38:20 That's in a minute from Chicago Public Radio, when our program continues. This American Life, Myra Glass. Today's show, a Christian and a Muslim walk into a bar. We pick up with a reporter Eamon O'Gana and the comedians of Sterea on the tour of the country. For Act 3, an act we're calling. Is this thing on? It's morning, we're back in the van, heading from Salamiya to Maharde.
Starting point is 00:38:52 A show they hope will still happen, and where a busload of fans from Hammer will join them. We pass a car with a rocket launcher on the roof. Monuments of Syria's bloody war still dot the roads. We see bombed out buildings and. burnt out cars on the way. We have a system for checkpoints. Maliki flashes a big smile,
Starting point is 00:39:16 and I hide my recording equipment under a coat. Checkpoints? Okay, checkpoint. I need to take my headphones up. Maliki is flying high this morning. We're leaving the more conservative Sunni Muslim areas and heading to a Christian town. Christians are a minority in Syria,
Starting point is 00:39:34 about 10% before the war, and Maliki is Christian. He's relaxed, in shorts, grinning as he drives. This is Mahardin. Yes. This is Mahardah. Welcome to the Christian people!
Starting point is 00:39:44 Fuck you, Cheriephe. I'm with you, Kharah. I'm with you, Saba. Woo! Hallelujah! Hallelujah!
Starting point is 00:39:55 Oh, God. Now we are safe. Now we are safe from HTS and all the government. This is a Christian country. Here, this is a Christian land. No Muslim is a Christian land. No Muslim is a Christian country. I'm allowed to go here.
Starting point is 00:40:11 I'm an, are you Christian? I am. Yes, welcome home. You get into town, go into a cafe. Maliki, have you heard from anyone who's from Hama who's taking the bus tonight? I don't know, but I think there's 40, 50 people, something like this. I feel that when the evening come, it would be 60 or I think, something like this.
Starting point is 00:40:36 I hope it's going to be good. This is where we drink a lot. They are very, very, very generous. Very generous here because they are Christian. Everyone is happy, smiling. They order pizza. I go back to us. I love this song.
Starting point is 00:41:06 But an hour later, the mood changes. Maliki looks distressed. He has changed back into jeans. as conservative Syrians frown upon men wearing shorts. We get back into the car with the venue owner for the show tonight. Okay, Maliki, tell me exactly what's happening. A lot. Happening a lot.
Starting point is 00:41:29 Let me think about it first, then I will talk to you. The venue owner has gotten a call from the local government in Mahadeh, asking him to come in for a meeting. We drive to the local municipal building. I walk with Maliki but get stopped at the stairwell while Maliki and the venue owner go into an office. A few minutes later, Maliki comes back and says I can come in. They take my bag, the recorder, everyone's phones.
Starting point is 00:42:11 men inside the office, beards, shaved mustaches, military outfits. They look straight out of central casting. But they're polite. One asks if we want coffee. Another then brings glass cups of Nescafe 3 and 1, a sugary, instant coffee ubiquitous across the Middle East. My translator waits downstairs, so I don't follow everything, but one of the government guys says he recognizes me. I'd covered the Syrian war, and we had been in the same towns in Idlib province. Maliki later jokes that 10 years ago they may have kidnapped me. It's a different country to report in now. I watch the room.
Starting point is 00:42:49 The older one sits behind a desk, does most of the talking. Eventually, another brings in a piece of paper and beckons the venue owner to come to him. The owner is nervous and doesn't hesitate to sign it. Maliki explained to me what was going on afterwards. They were very angry. So they told us that we can't do a work. We can't do our show in Maharde because there is no permission from Hama political affairs.
Starting point is 00:43:18 So now we are making some phone calls to have that permission. I hope to have it, you know. Maliki had miscalculated. He figured that because Mahade is a Christian town, the Sheikh and the local Hama government wouldn't have reach here. But instead, the local politicians of Mahadi. They are telling them, if they want to do tonight show in Mahadeh, they need to get permission from the Sheikh and the other bureaucrats in Hammer,
Starting point is 00:43:48 the ones they started a battle with yesterday, the ones now threatening a libel case. What was it they made the owner sign? Obligation. Saying he promises that he won't let us do the show without written permission from their office. Has this ever happened before to you? No. No. When you arrived in Maharday, you were like, we're free now. No one can stop us.
Starting point is 00:44:17 So how do you feel now? Shit. Shit. They have more power than I thought here. This is dangerous. Yesterday, they were very upset with us doing the show in Salami. So now they are, they will prevent us from doing the show here. the things would happen the next few hours. Their only path tonight is persistence.
Starting point is 00:44:46 If they can get permission from the Hammer officials Abu Aziz just insulted, they can still go on in Mahadeh. It's 3.15pm. The show is at 7. It's sold out. Buses of fans are supposed to come from Hammer. We get in the car, me, Maliki, and the venue owner, and head towards Hammer to try to talk to the politicians
Starting point is 00:45:06 and see if there's any way to save tonight's show in Mohade. Ten minutes out, the venue owner answers his phone. I can't tell what the call is about, but he goes quiet, then asks us to turn back. We head back to Mohade, to the same cafe. Maliki smokes a cigarette on the street outside, defeated. Why did we turn back from Hammond? Because they started to hurt him now. They start to hit him.
Starting point is 00:45:36 I'm sorry, man, I have to stop this because I'm very tired now. I'm very tired now. Maliki later told me that the venue owner got a call from his dad. The government is also putting pressure on him, real enough pressure that he got scared and didn't want to cause more trouble by heading to Hammer. To make matters worse, on the way back, Maliki also gets a call. First, they've been told they needed permission
Starting point is 00:46:01 from the political affairs office in Hammer to run the Mahadee show. Now the bar moves even farther away from them. Officials are now saying they need free permission. from political affairs and also from the ministries of tourism and culture. And the guy running the local office of the Ministry of Culture is the Sheikh. All because of what? What have you guys said with dunks?
Starting point is 00:46:23 This is because of jokes. This is because of jokes. I can't think of a place shatter than here. I hate this country, I swear to God. I hate it from the bottom of my heart. This is a message that you don't play with us. They think you're troublemakers. Yes, yes, for them.
Starting point is 00:46:46 This is insane. This is insane. What's like Captain? I'm tired now. Mentally and physically tired. I'm using all my connections. And when I do, when I put nine on the table, they put ten. I put a guy, they put a queen.
Starting point is 00:47:06 I put the king, they put an ace. So it's always, fuck. We're going to wait one more hour and then we will know what to do. We need an hour, I think. Man, I don't know what to do. I don't want to be a fight. I want to be an agreement. Well, you want to be a comedian and you can't do that.
Starting point is 00:47:38 This is the last thing I think of right now, Max. I swear to God, this is the last. I think I'll... Maliki hasn't eaten since yesterday. He's running on coffee and cigarettes. He's getting impatient with my questions. He and the other comedians start talking in Arabic around a crowded table. The conversation is heated.
Starting point is 00:48:00 I find Sharif outside the cafe, emotional. Okay, man, I can see you have tears in your eyes. You're upset. Well, I feel sad, you know. I'm sad because the people who got influenced now, they're using Bashar ways to, and Bashar law to stop us from making people have some fun. Yeah, how is freedom of expression working out for you in Syria now?
Starting point is 00:48:39 It's not working, like at all. It's not working and the thing are working as not freedom or who have the bigger balls. How are the other guys taking the news? Some of them are scared. Some of them, Kasem imagine he's scared. He's a doctor in the university. He's scared that might reach him in a way that they will let him go from the university. Other want to make money, other want to make fame, other want to make the...
Starting point is 00:49:11 a project continue. It's their own right to feel and do whatever they want. But for me, I push by myself. Yeah. So, let's see. But soon after this conversation,
Starting point is 00:49:27 they call it. Maliki can't secure the free permissions in time, so they're forced to cancel just three hours before showtime. They post on Sterea's Instagram that the shows off due to unforeseen circumstances and tell people they'll refund tickets.
Starting point is 00:49:43 Now they're worried the government is also going to cancel their show in Aleppo, which is two days away. I find them hours later in Sharif's hotel room. One of the other comedians is giving Sharif a massage. So I see you guys are promoting LGBTQ. That night, instead of doing their show, they get drunk and dance until 3 in the morning.
Starting point is 00:50:05 The next day the politicians in Hammer want Abu Aziz to bend the knee, apologize. Maliki says he won't make Abu Aziz do that alone. We get in a car to Hammer to meet Abu Aziz, who's already driven up from Damascus. Maliki is anxious and frustrated. I didn't sleep well, actually.
Starting point is 00:50:33 So what are you hoping? You're going to see these guys and what? To end this madness, man. To end this madness. I think we've been in this case three days now. Yeah. The fuck is this man, three days. Three days for a fucking comedy show.
Starting point is 00:50:52 They are wrong, okay? They are political affairs. They are wrong. But we didn't play well. When we play, we gave them our neck. We get to the Political Affairs Office and inside a large drab concrete government building. At the door, the security guard says they're expecting us
Starting point is 00:51:17 and Maliki titans. Up at Dimsterwell to a large, him stairwell to a large office, three suited officials sit in a row like judges facing out. One of them is the infamous Sheikh. We're shown to chairs by their side. Abu Aziz is already there. Maliki tells me to put my recorder outside again. Please, we're going to take this outside, then we're going to talk.
Starting point is 00:51:43 The meeting begins. It's all in Arabic, but my translator is there and takes notes. The government officials are stern and condescending. Their age and authority looms over Abu Aziz and Maliki. They have the room. The men from political affairs tell the comedians they were insulted by Abu Aziz's post that it's unacceptable to compare them to the Assad regime.
Starting point is 00:52:09 They ask Abu Aziz how many people saw his post. He says 47,000, and apologizes, says what he did was wrong. The officials say that in addition to the post being inappropriate, it wasn't true. They never cancelled the show. Maliki pushes back. That's what his fixer was told when he had gone to pay the fees for the show. Whatever the truth of that, the three officials do have a lot to say about the content of the shows.
Starting point is 00:52:40 One of them says that he went to one of their shows a few months back, that he sat in the front row of his son. He says, I regretted bringing him, but what was he said, But what calmed me was that he fell asleep during the show. From the start, all your jokes were about religion, sex and sensitive topics that threaten civil peace. They remind the comedians that under Assad they could joke about anything but politics. Now they can joke as much as they want about politics or the government, but they can't
Starting point is 00:53:09 joke about topics that could disturb the civil peace. They point to a little dance, Abraiz does, at the start of his set. They say it's sexual. They say society's morals have deteriorated. Abu Aziz apologises a second time. He tries to break the tension with a joke. He says, There are three things I love,
Starting point is 00:53:31 Ahmed al-Shara, Bashar al-Assad, and sport. But the truth is, I only like two of them. You can choose whichever you like. It's a joke because Abu Aziz is overweight, not a big athlete, and it's impossible to both love Shara and Assad. Silence. No smiles, no laughs, it's awkward.
Starting point is 00:53:52 The message is clear. This is not a joke. The meeting wraps up after an hour. Afterwards, I ask Abu Aziz about it. Do you regret the post now? Yes, I regret my reaction and putting in the story, because if I do that and comparing them to the old regime, if I do that with the old regime,
Starting point is 00:54:18 I will be killed or forcefully disappeared, but the new government have at least sat with me, discussed the issue with me, and they let me leave. It says a lot about where Syria is now, not the old terror, not real freedom either. The state will absolve you if you apologize, rather than make you disappear into the prison system. You can post, you can film,
Starting point is 00:54:47 you can even argue in a room like that, but you have to bow down to authority, which, after 50 years of dictatorship, Syrians know how to do. It seems to me like in Syria today, everyone has tasted freedom for the first time and they're not sure what to do with it. Even the government don't even know what to do with freedom.
Starting point is 00:55:09 Yes, of course. You have said it, you know. Hello. We are learning and they are learning. I spoke to the Sheikh afterwards. He reiterated that he didn't cancel the show. He said his remit is cultural centres only, and the comedians are banned from the cultural centres in Hammer.
Starting point is 00:55:33 But anything in a private venue, he said, is outside his authority. He never told anyone to stop anything. He is lying, man. I told Maliki about the conversation. He said it was a misunderstanding. No, that what they say after when... feel the heat. You know, I'm sorry.
Starting point is 00:55:53 It's a misunderstanding. Fuck you, I'm fucking your misunderstanding. Understand well, because you are in a position, you have to understand well. Any misunderstanding can lead to blood. You have to be aware of what kind of business you do. I also learned the Sheikh is not actually a Sheikh. Did you call all the politician's Sheikh?
Starting point is 00:56:14 Not all, only the Muslim one. We tried to figure out who canceled the show in Hammer. and didn't get anywhere either. Ja'a de'lis, you're ready to hear of you, the next two shows are in Aleppo. And even though Maliki was worried about Aleppo from the start, the shows there are not cancelled.
Starting point is 00:56:40 They sell out both shows, a thousand tickets in total. Maliki does the joke about his dad, and one about being a Christian in a mosque. Sharif tells the bra joke. If I'm a suede. Scyaneh. Oh, Allah, I'm nothury. See, Maliki was right. They kill in Arabic.
Starting point is 00:57:08 Amen O'Gana is a reporter in Damascus. World program is produced today by Dana Chivas and edited by Fia Bennon, Benin, David Kestimbaum, with fact-checking by Hany Halasli. The people who put together today's show include Michael Commode, Suzanne Gabber, Tobin Lowe, Catherine Raymond, Stone Nelson, Ruthie Petito, Nadia Raymond, Ryan Rummary, Francis Swanson, Christopher Sotala, Julie Whitaker, and Diane Wu. Our managing editor, Sarah Abduraman. Our executive editor is Manuel Berry.
Starting point is 00:58:02 Harifalee Kurz, worked with Amen in Syria. Jutaha did translations. Our website, This AmericanLife.org. This American Life is delivered to public radio stations by PRX. the public radio exchange. Thanks as always to our program's co-founder, Mr. Tori Malatia. You know, when people walk up to him on the street before they barely get a word out, he lets them know.
Starting point is 00:58:23 I'm not George Clooney. I'm Ira Glass. Back next week with more stories of this American life.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.