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Aleppo soap-maker sells wares in Paris

A Syrian who fled Aleppo four years ago has set up shop in France producing a soap made of olive and laurel oil in a tradition dating back more than 3000 years.

A Syrian soap-maker who fled Aleppo after the factory he worked in was bombed has set up shop in a Paris suburb, reviving a tradition he says dates back millennia.

Hassan Harastani left Syria in 2012, first for Lebanon and then two years later moving to France at the invitation of Samir Constantini, a Franco-Syrian doctor who was already importing the distinctive Aleppo soap.

"In Aleppo, this type of soap was manufactured maybe 3000 years ago," said Harastani, who markets his version under the brand name Alepia. He sells it on the internet and through a shop in Angers in western France.

The soap is made from olive and laurel oil and water, with sodium hydroxide added to harden the mixture. It is cut by hand and left to dry for up to three years before being sold in bars weighing around 200g.

"Aleppo is stricken, people are outside in the streets, they don't have homes.... (This) is a way for us to continue to perpetuate tradition," Constantini said.


1 min read

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Updated

Source: AAP



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