>> is a portrait of tarek playing his gun as if it were a violin.was studying poetry in beirut before he joined and wrote poetry throughout the war, even as he was becoming essentially an assassin. in that image, it reminded me of someone who is in this world that was immersed and death and he was still holding on to this one bit of beauty. amy: marwan, before we go, the description of raqqa today, the city you have lived in for some many years, the destruction of raqqa, more than 11,000 buildings destroyed, not clear how many people were killed, in this last-minute we have together? yes, so raqqa is devastated. it is in a tragic state. now enjoyeople stability, but still they are struggling for basic services. there is still electricity, no tankers.ept through the connection is weak, but most importantly, there is no serious effort from the anti-isis coalition to rebuild the city. now havehe states piles of rubble. if the coalition, the united states and their allies, do not put in an effort to rebuild the destroyed, we're going to risk a situation