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Deir Mama () is a village in northwestern , administratively part of the . It is located west of Hama along the eastern foothills of the Syrian Coastal Mountain Range. The village may have been one of the earliest rural areas in Syria where lived, i.e. before rule in the mid-13th century. It was historically well known in Syria for its local silk industry, though it has dwindled in recent years. Deir Mama had a population of nearly 3,000 in 2004 and the inhabitants are Alawites and Christians.


Geography
Deir Mama stretches along the eastern foothills of the Syrian Coastal Mountain Range, with an average elevation of above sea level. The village overlooks the to its east. It lies on the road between , to its south, and , to its north. To the west of Deir Mama is the village of and to its immediate south is .


Population
According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Deir Mama had a population of 2,985 in the 2004 census. General Census of Population and Housing 2004. Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS). Hama Governorate. The estimated population in 2014 was 8,500. The village has a religiously mixed population of and Christians, with Alawites forming the majority. The principal families in the village are the Isber, Abbas, As'ad, Wannous, Mahmoud, Barakat, Haidar, Makhlouf and Raslan. Beginning in the 1900s, but accelerating between 1920 and 1935, a wave of emigrants from Deir Mama settled in .

Among Deir Mama's notable natives is the novelist and the first female physician in , Raisa Abdullah. Alawites and Christians share a shrine that each group worships. Alawites refer to it as Sheikh Sobeh while call it Saint Mama. Deir Mama is famous for making the traditional Arak liquor and handicraft.


History
According to a survey by historian Stefan Winter of a 20th-century biographical dictionary of Alawite notables in Syria, itself drawn from locally-preserved religious treatises and poetry, Deir Mama and neighboring , ) and were the original areas of Alawite rural concentration in Syria before the religion spread to the mountains around and during the period (1260–1516).

In 1744, an Ottoman alleged that some 3,000 Alawite villagers from Deir Mama, , and elsewhere in the vicinity had raided the coastal fortress of and over two dozen villages, burning several homes, trespassing the mosque at Marqab and seizing livestock. The governor of was ordered to capture the perpetrators and return the stolen goods, but instead his deputy rallied the people of Marqab and rampaged through the Alawite country up to the castle of Qal'at al-Mudiq in the Ghab plain.


Sericulture
Before the ongoing Syrian civil war, which began in 2011–2012, Deir Mama was well known in Syria for its , with most families engaged in different stages of the production process, from raising , spinning their cocoons to weaving silk fabric for sale to the markets of . The mulberry trees on which the silkworms and their cocoons were raised and harvested formerly spread across vast tracts of Deir Mama's lands. Shrinking demand before the war had already caused steep declines in the village's silk industry and much of its mulberry groves had been replaced with olive trees. While in 2010 there were 16 villages and 48 families in Syria still engaged in sericulture, that number had dwindled to three families, with that of Mohammed Saud being the last one in Deir Mama. Saud opened a silk museum in his home in 2020.


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