In Nayrb, a battered rural town east of Idlib city, Ahmed Al Ahmed’s name has travelled fast, spoken in Syrian homes and in phone calls that cross continents.

The footage from Sydney showing an unarmed man tackling a gunman on a crowded beach landed here not as distant news but as something intensely personal. For a community shaped by war, it felt like a moment of recognition.

β€œWe are proud of Ahmed,” Mohamed Al Ahmed, his cousin, told The National near the family's house. β€œHe left the village and emigrated years ago … but, given all that we have seen [from the former regime] he acted without hesitating”.

Born in 1981 in Nayrb, Mr Al Ahmed grew up in a close-knit agricultural town that would later be heavily bombed by forces loyal to Bashar Al Assad, and emptied by waves of displacement. During the war, it became a front line area and was accused by Damascus of harbouring β€œterrorists”. Much of the area was flattened, homes reduced to rubble, families scattered across Idlib, Turkey and beyond.

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Yet before the war erupted in 2011, Nayrb was defined by ordinary routines. It sits on Idlib’s open plains, surrounded by wheat fields and seasonal crops, its narrow roads linking it to nearby villages and to Idlib city.

β€œAhmed used to live with us,” said another of his cousins, Ahmad Al Ahmed, 33. β€œWe walked home together. We spoke the village dialect. We played together. We lived beautiful days.”

The town of Nayrb, where Ahmed Al Ahmed lived before emigration to Australia almost 20 years ago. Ahmad Fallaha for The National

Mr Al Ahmed emigrated to Australia in search of work in around 2006, long before Idlib became the centre of Syria’s rebellion. Like many young men from rural areas, he carried with him the expectation that he would one day return. The war erased that possibility. His family home was later destroyed by regime bombing, another address lost in a province where destruction became routine. Today, the house where he grew up still lies in tatters – a scene of desolation all too familiar in Nayrb.

β€œPeople scattered,” Mohamed, his cousin, said. β€œEveryone went wherever they could.”

Idlib itself was transformed. Once marginalised and largely agricultural, it became the main bastion of the rebellion against Assad’s rule, absorbing millions of displaced Syrians from across the country.

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