
Progressivism stops human exploitation, respects faith, and promotes universal growth while preserving positive social and religious heritage.

The Movement opened two offices in Syria (Azaz and Afrin) in 2022 and 2023, and plans more expansion in 2024. It also has offices abroad, in France, Germany, Sweden, and the U.S.

As battles between the regime and revolutionaries intensified without external intervention, we built a civil structure to integrate with military efforts, aiming for political solutions.

The Syrian Future Movement has 7 main offices inside and outside Syria, all overseen by the Presidency Office to ensure planning, guidance, and achievement of national goals.

The Movement organizes and distributes talents within its offices, sets programs and plans, provides urgent relief services, and focuses strategically on education inside Syria.

The Syrian Future Movement was established in early 2012 after my visits to northern Syria, and officially registered in the U.S. on 13/11/2012, among the first civil Syrian revolution groups.

A national civil political entity from the revolution, with cultural and intellectual identity, seeking inclusive dialogue to draft a consensus by political forces to rebuild postwar Syria.

We established "Tawad Educational Centers" in northern Syria prioritizing orphans and dropouts, offering free supplies and courses to around 120 students annually.

The Movement has no government or institutional funding and has never received support from any organization. It rejected unconditional financial aid to protect its independence.

We have no official members or membership requests yet, as current war conditions create temporary affiliations. We welcome anyone who shares our vision and values.

We help youth by addressing trauma, providing jobs, creating marriage groups, holding conferences, and running Syrian Future TV and Radio to guide them toward noble values and heritage.

Youth build bridges between religious sects through dialogue and unity. The Movement supports their role in exposing regime divisions and restoring places of worship across Syria.

The Movement protects war-affected children with care, therapy, and reintegration, rejecting their use in violence and seeking justice for those who exploit them.

We empower Syrian women as role models, support their faith and rights, promote equality and civic roles, encourage volunteering, and stress care for family and society.

We aim to restore a free, strong Syria, build a just society that rejects dependency, respects all its people, and achieves reform through the efforts of all national forces.

Our program seeks a democratic civil state rooted in national and religious values, promoting dialogue and free Syrian decision-making through inclusive communication with all parties.

The Movement is rooted in people’s will, sees democracy as a path to reform, upholds equality, family rights, respect for non-Muslims, and the independence of both nation and citizen.

The Movement seeks political reform, economic revival, youth empowerment, quality education, public freedoms, national identity, environmental protection, and linguistic diversity.

The Movement seeks Assad’s ouster, foreign troop withdrawal, national unity, detainee release, refugee return, war criminal justice, and annulment of illegitimate deals.

The Movement promotes moderation, national dialogue, civil peace, strong regional ties, economic revival, reform, military strength, and values the role of Syrian migrants.

The Movement sees national security as rooted in unity, dialogue, balanced population, strong state power, and regional ties to safeguard Syria’s system, people, and values.

The state ensures rights, freedoms, security, stability, and development through strong institutions, and rejects division or loss of sovereignty.

A strong state guarantees rights and freedoms, builds effective institutions, safeguards sovereignty, rejects division, and involves all national forces in shaping the future.

A civil, modern state—not military or religious—based on sovereignty, pluralism, peaceful power transfer, popular choice, and recognition of opposition.

The civil state ensures popular will, constitutional legitimacy, and rule of law—free from military or religious control, and committed to protecting rights for all.

The Movement seeks a state of law with limited presidential terms, independent judiciary, separation of powers, and a government that represents the people.

The Movement seeks a real parliament, independent judiciary, and a higher oversight council within a political system based on transparency, accountability, and the rule of law.

The Movement calls for reforming religious institutions, ensuring diversity and independence from politics, and establishing an advisory council to offer insight without authority.

The Movement advocates for an independent institutional state that ensures equality, sovereignty, and transparency—free from foreign control or one-party dominance.

The Movement outlines its vision of political change in Syria—from regime removal and reform to a peaceful, lasting shift that redistributes power and builds an authentic Syrian model.

The Movement calls for inclusive political participation in Syria, rejecting exclusion and affirming that sovereignty stems from fair, collective public engagement.

The Movement sees the constitution as a social contract born of popular will—guaranteeing rights, unity, and diversity—while rejecting manipulation without national consensus.

The Movement calls for a modern constitution based on human rights and citizenship, protecting all without bias, barring coups, and amendable only by popular will.

This episode explores religious legislation as a legal source in a civil state, urging legal clarity that serves national interest and protects society from violence and extremism.

This episode highlights the need to free national will from subordination, affirming equal cooperation and Syrians’ right to regional/global ties that serve national interest.

We call for international relations based on respect and equality, reject dominance and interference, and support reforming the UN and Security Council to manage conflicts

We call to reform the UN veto, review treaties, protect Syrians' water rights, strengthen regional neighborliness, and develop technology and solar energy for national security.

We affirm Palestine’s existence, support its empowerment, call for Jerusalem as its capital and the right of return, and urge reforming the Arab League’s role in resolving the issue.

We support peoples’ liberation, resist tyranny, protect the environment, eliminate WMDs in the Middle East, urge joining the NPT, and call for rebuilding Syria’s national army.

We reject forced deportation, stress unsafe return, call for refugee protection, open borders, political and humanitarian solutions, and fair global resettlement opportunities.

We propose a clear political system with no vague gaps, strong institutions, power distribution, and an empowered independent Government Adviser—not just a symbolic role.

We call for a unifying constitutional agreement, rejecting one-party rule, embracing pluralism, and ensuring all who seek consensus are true national partners.

Syria is an integral part of the Arab sphere—its geography, people, and tribes. Arab security is tied to Syria’s, with mutual responsibilities and a shared identity.

We promote personal and public freedoms: protection from torture, respect for privacy, freedom of belief and movement, peaceful protest, and safeguarding minority rights.

Citizenship reflects a healthy state–citizen bond, balancing rights and duties. It thrives under democracy and equality; its absence is key to Syria’s ongoing crisis.

All Syrians are equal in rights and duties. Citizens have the right to speak, act politically, and live in freedom and dignity. The state must safeguard these rights without bias.

Competence—not lineage or loyalty—is the key to public office. It's based on expertise and experience, crucial for wise decisions, development, and stability, and must be protected.

We reject politicizing the army, security, and intelligence. Their role must be limited to border defense. Civil deployment must require specific, temporary parliamentary approval.

Military funding must be transparently parliament-supervised. We support external security cooperation, while limiting intelligence to information gathering under judicial oversight only.

Intelligence acts under defined, accountable mandates. We reject political overreach. Civilian police alone must manage internal affairs—under judicial and parliamentary oversight.

We support enlisting religious leaders for spiritual support in the military, ensuring civilian oversight, and ending compulsory service in favor of voluntary enlistment.

We support limiting military courts to soldiers, raising military salaries, strengthening ties with the public, and ensuring promotions are merit-based without any discrimination.

We explore “unity” as a national and human value rooted in freedom and pluralism, and its role in shielding Syrian society from fragmentation while fostering strength and progress.

We explore freedom as a sacred right, a pillar of independence and ethics, and a condition for a sovereign Syrian society, free from tyranny and foreign interference.

We support a free market with state protection and balanced interest sharing as an alternative to socialism, inspired by Western capitalism and Syria’s unique needs.

Pluralism unites Syrians around shared goals, rejects singular views and accusations, and calls for national cooperation toward a fair internal solution.
On the revolution’s anniversary, Azaz witnessed the renewal and raising of the Syrian free flag — a gesture of unity between civil and military forces for Syria’s future.

Democracy organizes freedom, prevents tyranny, and ensures peaceful participation and equal opportunity.