Photoblog: The hushed hum of the honeybees of Ghouta

Photoblog: The hushed hum of the honeybees of Ghouta
The Syrian honeybees of Eastern Ghouta are battling daily with death - much like the people of the Damascus suburb itself.
2 min read
23 Oct, 2017
The honeybees of Ghouta are battling daily with death [Qusay Noor]
The endless hum of countless honeybees out collecting pollen was once part of the sounds of everyday life amid the famed greenery of Syria's Eastern Ghouta.

Now, with the sounds of explosion, gunfire and mourning having filled the air for the past six years instead, the beekeepers of this encircled suburb of the Syrian capital, Damascus, warn the region's once-rich honey production faces a terminal decline.

Under siege since 2013 by forces loyal to the Syrian regime, the fertile Damascus suburb has been battered by seven years of fighting and is one of the last bastions of rebels fighting against Bashar al-Assad. 

With Ghouta's citizens largely cut off from the outside world, honey production has remained important for the locals.

In the absence of much needed medication, honey's long-known curative and antiseptic properties have become especially sought after.

Yet beekeepers in Ghouta say production levels are now approximately just half of what they used to be at their peak.

The ravages of war have caused a major degradation in the bees' natural pasturages - and experts here are especially troubled by the lack of migrating bees from the neighbouring provinces of Homs, Idlib and Hawran.

Some communal efforts have however been fostered to reverse the decline.

Beekeepers and local farmers in Ghouta are increasingly working together to plant pollen-rich crops to encourage bees into the area. 

Yet the honeybees of Ghouta still seem to be battling daily with death, much like the people of the suburb themselves.

The endless hum of honeybees collecting pollen was once part of the sounds of Ghouta's everyday life [Qusay Noor]


The ravages of war have caused a major degradation of the bees' natural pasturages


Ghouta’s beekeepers warn that the region's once-rich honey production faces terminal decline [Qusay Noor]

Beekeepers are especially troubled by the lack of migrating bees from neighbouring provinces [Qusay Noor]


With Ghouta’s citizens largely cut off from the outside world, honey production has remained important for the locals [Qusay Noor]


Honey production levels in Ghouta are approximately just half of pre-war levels [Qusay Noor]


Beekeepers and local farmers in Ghouta are working together to plant pollen-rich crops [Qusay Noor]


Local farmers believe new crops will encourage bees into the area [Qusay Noor]


Qusay Noor is a journalist and photographer from Eastern Ghouta in Syria. 
Follow him on Twitter: @QUSAY_NOOR_