Damascus Community School Explained

Damascus Community School
Established:1957
Type:Private
Chairman:Haynes Mahoney
Head Name:Vice Chairman
Head:Nasha'at Sanadiki
Head Name2:Director
Head2:James L. Liebzeit
City: Abu Rummaneh
Country:Syria
Gender:Co-educational
Publication:What’s Happening
Motto:"A Learning Community in Pursuit of Excellence"
Website:Official website

Damascus Community School is an unlicensed American school founded by the former US secretary of state John Foster Dulles in 1957 in Damascus, Syria.[1] The school was built to promote American ideals and culture and to help steer Syria away from becoming a Soviet satellite. Since 2012, due to the situation in Syria, the school has been effectively shut down.

Mission

The Damascus Community School laid its foundation with the help of Syria's former foreign minister Salah al-Bitar, who was one of the co-founders of the Baath party. After much controversy between the school and the Syrian government, Damascus Community School, was finally able to obtain full license from the government. However, throughout the decades the school has seen itself become part of a political tug-of-war between the Syrian and American government whenever the relations of the two countries become sour. Annual tuition reaches to about US$17,000. Current enrollment is about 400 students.

After an American raid into Syrian territory on October 26, 2008, the Syrian government decided to shut down the Damascus Community School in light of the violation of Syrian international borders and the absence of any official American explanation for the helicopter raid that killed eight (8) Syrian civilians. However, DCS Board of Directors voted to reopen Damascus Community School for 2010–2011 school year, grades pre- K through 8. Dr. James Leibzeit returned as a director. Following the 2011 unrest in Syria the school was shut down on January 22, 2012, and until further notice.

External links

33.5172°N 36.2822°W

Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20081207005827/http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/JK04Ak02.html Asia Times