Skip to playerSkip to main contentSkip to footer
  • today
At Basel al-Sati's souvenir shop in a central Damascus market, socks bearing caricatures ridiculing ousted Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad and his once-feared family are selling like hot cakes. "I want to bring joy to people who have been deprived of happiness for so many days and years," he says.
Transcript
00:00.
00:02.
00:10.
00:14.
00:16.
00:20.
00:27.
00:28We were able to move to 2000, and we had 3,000 eggs a day, and we had orders for a couple of days, and we had orders for a couple of days, for example, to put the eggs in front of them.
00:58There was a curse for the people, and a curse for the people, and a curse for the people.
01:07There were a lot of people from them.
01:09What do they want to do with them?
01:11He was walking, and he was a good one.
01:13They don't want to do anything.
01:15They want to do something like that.
01:17They want to do something like that.
01:19That's how they feel.
01:28All the world has no way to join the parties and the parties that happened in the church.
01:36We gave you a couple of stories to tell you,
01:38because you don't want to join me,
01:39one of the stories that you want to do in the world.
01:42We gave you a lot of stories,
01:43and we gave you a lot of stories,
01:44and we gave you a lot of stories,
01:45and we gave you a lot of stories.
01:58No.
01:59If you come back,
02:00but you don't want to.
02:02Okay?

Recommended