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Apart from producing its own TV dramas and gaining large audiences at home and abroad, Syria had become a major supplier of voices for dubbing video into Arabic, particularly big-hit series from Turkey such as "Ottoman Land" and "Wives of the Sultan." These have generated tens of millions of dollars for the Syrian industry and Syrian artists, according to the official from the Syrian Artists Organizationr. He said Syria's disarray is driving some of its film producers to the United Arab Emirates and Lebanon to maintain production. Marwan al-Hakim, 58, acted in episodes of "Bab el-Hara" ("Gate of the Ghetto"), a drama about resistance to the French who ruled Syria from 1920 to 1946. For several years it has been the most popular series for Ramadan holiday viewing. In January, al-Hakim fled to Jordan with his wife and three children. "I just couldn't stand living in Syria under the current leadership," he said. "The government is a big liar. It blames the brave revolution on a foreign conspiracy led by Israel and the U.S. It describes the rebels as terrorists. It claims they are the ones killing the people, not Bashar's brutal war machine." Now al-Hakim bakes Syrian-style pita bread at an Amman restaurant for $200 a month, augmented by U.N. rations and tips. Diners get to watch him bake pita, dressed in traditional Syrian garb of colorful vest, black pantaloons and a ceremonial dagger strapped to his waist. "It is humiliating to be poor," he said, "but worse is to live in Syria now." Anaheed Fayyad, a Syrian-Palestinian who also acted in "Bab el-Hara," left weeks after the uprising broke out, saying she had been critical of Assad in public and on Facebook and worried that her family would suffer. "Although I've been unemployed and without any income for three years, I feel free to say what I please without fear," said Fayyad, 30. "So I say that I'm with the revolution wholeheartedly and that Assad is an illegitimate president, in the wrong place, and should be removed."
[Associated
Press;
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