At first glance, Jafar Meray’s viral wedding photos are stunning, despite the grey, drab Syrian background. On closer inspection, however, the pictures take on a whole different meaning.
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Syrian photographer Jafar Meray captured the dramatic photographs (above) of a newly married couple amongst the rubble of the war-torn Syrian city of Homs.
Eighteen-year-old university student Nada Merhi and her bridegroom, 27-year-old Hassan Youssef, were married at the start of the month in the old city of Homs, 160 kilometers (99 miles) north of the capital, Damascus.
The pair's affectionate embrace and the bride's white wedding gown and glistening tiara make for a powerful visual statement against the backdrop of destroyed buildings, rubble and bullet-ridden walls of the razed city.
The photographer, Jafar Meray told DW he's an avid supporter of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and that, through showing the devastation of his home city, he "wanted to show we are still able to love and show love."
“We used destroyed building to show hope…Love is fundamental to re-building the country," he said.
Beauty in the eye of the beholder
The 22-year-old photographer has been working professionally for about a year says he's trying to show that "Life goes on."
"It might show destroyed buildings, but if you put something beautiful in the picture, then you can still show the beauty and the thing that is beautiful in these pictures is love," the photographer said.
Meray's photographs have since gone viral.
But are they what they seem?
The man pictured in army fatigues is a member of Bashar al-Assad's government forces, the same army responsible for destroying Homs during the almost six-year civil war between pro-Syria forces and Syrian rebels.
It's the same force that through airstrikes, artillery attacks and mortar and rocket fire targeted, and killed, occupying rebel groups.
This has left some on social media questioning whether the photographs are being used as a means of pro-government propaganda.
Even if the photographs are not propaganda, users on social media have hit back saying the photos are distasteful and disrespectful to the people who have lost their lives in the war.
One DW News Facebook user wrote that, "This soldier serves in an army responsible for killing tens of thousands of innocent civilians…There's nothing romantic, nor beautiful, about an 18-year-old girl marrying a possible war criminal."
When asked whether the project was being backed by the regime, Meray told DW he had "gotten a lot of support from the Syrian state and they appreciated [his] idea." When pressed further, the budding photographer refused to elaborate, other than to say he has had wide public support for his photography series.
"Five percent of Syrian people are against what I am doing," he said. But that does not seem to worry him. "At the end of the day, the soldiers are part of the Syrian people, and I am photographing the Syrian people."
Meray is not the only one taking professional wedding photographs in war-torn Syria.
Last year, other photographs emerged showing a wedding in Homs' semi-destroyed St. George's Church, a Greek Orthodox place of worship that had lost its roof in the fighting.
More than 260,000 people have died since the civil war began in Syria in 2011. Millions have fled their homes with over 2.7 million seeking refuge in neighboring Turkey. Hundreds of thousands have made their way to Europe, creating a massive refugee crisis.
*Additional reporting by Ibtisam Fawsy.
Syrian couple shows the world love can win everything
Despite the serial bombardment of their hometown, one couple from Homs has refused to give up hope. A photographer from the AFP news agency followed them and their wedding photographer to give the images wider exposure.
Image: Getty Images/AFP/J. Eid
'Love Reconstructs Syria'
A month after Jafar Meray decided to use the war-stricken scenery for the couple's wedding photo shoot, the AFP also released a series of pictures taken by one of the agency's photographers who accompanied Meray and the couple. Meray called his series "Love Reconstructs Syria" and posted several pictures on his Facebook account, gaining hundreds of likes and shares.
Image: Getty Images/AFP/J. Eid
Life and love among the ruins
The couple, 18-year-old Nada Merhi and 27-year-old soldier Hassan Youssef, chose a rather unusual background for their wedding pictures: their destroyed hometown of Homs. Meray used the ruins to show that "life is stronger than death."
Image: Getty Images/AFP/J. Eid
A city torn apart
Syria's civil war has left more than 250,000 people dead, the majority of them civilians. Homs, which is Syria's third largest city, has suffered tremendously from attacks by forces loyal to President Bashar Al-Assad. It was also one of the first cities to oppose the government in 2012, albeit in vain. The government has since managed to expel most opposition fighters from the city.
Image: Getty Images/AFP/J. Eid
White dress, gray rubble
In the middle of the once-thriving city, Nada's dress highlights the destruction that surrounds the young couple. Bullet holes, abandoned buildings, burned ruins and deserted roads are a constant reminder of the lives the people of Homs used to have.
Image: Getty Images/AFP/J. Eid
Unceasing attacks
Homs still regularly experiences attacks. On January 26 at least 22 people were killed and more than 100 were injured in a suicide bombing in the neighborhood of al-Zahra. The neighborhood is mostly populated by Alawites, a minority sect of Islam that includes Syrian President Assad and his family. The "Islamic State" claimed responsibility for the attack.
Image: Getty Images/AFP/J. Eid
Homs is not alone
Since September 30, Russian warplanes have conducted air strikes in support of Assad's forces. Homs is not the only Syrian city to suffer: On February 15, airstrikes hit a hospital near Murat al-Numan, about 280 kilometers (170 miles) north of the capital, Damascus, killing at least nine people.
Image: Getty Images/AFP/J. Eid
International criticism
In an interview with the French news agency AFP, Assad said he would continue fighting despite mounting international pressure for a ceasefire. However, Saudi Foreign Minister Adel Al-Jubeir told the German daily Süddeutsche Zeitung that "there will be no Bashar al-Assad in the future. ... He will no longer carry responsibility for Syria."
Image: Getty Images/AFP/J. Eid
The main theme of MSC
The ongoing suffering experienced by people in besieged areas of Syria was one of the main points of the debate about human security at the February 12-14 Munich Security Conference. US Secretary of State John Kerry said, "The vast majority, in our opinion, of Russia's attacks have been against legitimate opposition groups."
Image: Getty Images/AFP/J. Eid
'Love in the Times of War'
Some Facebook users have commented on Meray's photos with emotional statements. "I feel like the groom in the picture," one wrote. Another commented: "May God be with you and with all Syrians. Thanks for all these pictures and for sharing them with the world." A third offered the alternative title "Love in the Times of War."
Image: Getty Images/AFP/J. Eid
'Proof that life goes on'
Meray's photographs have become so successful that people are still commenting on the series on his Facebook page, creating slideshows from it or turning it into YouTube videos. One user has even called Meray's series "proof that life goes on even in Syria's most devastated city of Homs."