No kiss or hug, Syrians greet with elbow bump over coronavirus fear

Publisher:温越涵Date:2020-03-16

Restaurant workers are seen wearing masks in the Syrian capital Damascus on March 15, 2020. (Xinhua/Ammar Safarjalani)

Syrians greet with elbow bumps instead of kisses and hugs to avoid getting infected with coronavirus. But changing greeting style is not easy.

by Hummam Sheikh Ali

DAMASCUS, March 15 (Xinhua) -- Rushdy Nader, who returned to Syria on Saturday night after a seven-month business trip to Iraq, just waved at and tapped elbows with his family upon his arrival at the airport, without the traditional kisses or hugs.

A Syrian man is seen wearing a mask while walking down a street in the Syrian capital Damascus on March 15, 2020. (Xinhua/Ammar Safarjalani)

Almost all other arrivals of the flight from Iraq did the same with their loved ones who were waiting for them, as the Syrians are now more cautious about their personal hygiene out of fear of the novel coronavirus.

However, changing the greeting style was not easy in the first place as kisses and hugs are a traditional Arab way of saying hello.

Our traditional greetings show affection and love but now people are scared by reports emerging about the outbreak of coronavirus in the world, Nader told Xinhua.

A restaurant worker is seen wearing a mask in the Syrian capital Damascus on March 15, 2020. (Xinhua/Ammar Safarjalani)

Wearing a mask is becoming more common on the streets and it's a positive thing, the 31-year-old man said.

Maher Hanan, who returned from France via Lebanon, agreed that the outbreak of coronavirus is changing the world in terms of how people interact with each other including greeting.

Usually we kiss our friends on the cheek and hug them with affection ... But now the fear of coronavirus is tearing us apart from expressing our feelings, he told Xinhua.

About the elbow bump, Hanan said it is an alternative way of shaking hands and people are doing it with fun.

The Syrian government has undertaken several measures to protect its people from the threats of coronavirus.

A Syrian man is seen wearing a mask while walking down a street in the Syrian capital Damascus on March 15, 2020. (Xinhua/Ammar Safarjalani)

On Friday, the 16 passengers and 17 crew members, who were on board a plane from Iraq to Damascus, were taken to a quarantine center in the remote al-Duwair area in the countryside of the Syrian capital, after a passenger was found having a body temperature a little higher than 37 degrees Celsius.

On Saturday, the Syrian Ministry of Endowments suspended prayer in mosques as part of the preventive measures against the novel coronavirus.

On Friday, the Syrian government suspended schools and universities until early April.

So far, Syria has not reported any case of COVID-19 infection.  

Source: Xinhua| 2020-03-16 02:33:32|Editor: huaxia

http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2020-03/16/c_138880920.htm