Behind her, several men with their arms slung over one another’s shoulders danced in rhythm. But few others at the election conference paid much attention to the impromptu display.
Huddled in the lobby or in secret meetings, small groups of men representing the spectrum of Syria’s opposition plotted and lobbied on behalf of competing interests.
In doing so, they underscored long-standing tension between generations and between the city of Aleppo — Syria’s largest — and its suburbs. And ultimately, they raised the question of whether those who have sacrificed and contributed the most in the revolution deserve a larger voice in a future government. Sectarian concerns rarely came up because almost no minorities were represented.