Assad watched in horror as the men whispered prayers in Arabic.
鈥淚 watched most of the video and I was horrified,鈥 Assad told The Catholic Register. 鈥淚 just remember feeling this overwhelming emotion and this need to make something good out of that feeling.鈥
As a daughter of a Syrian refugee, Assad always felt she carried 鈥渁 spiritual and emotional burden for Syria and her people.鈥
The rising violence in the Middle East and the growing number of people displaced from their homelands due to the war in Syria and the proliferation of the Islamic State there and in Iraq has kept her up at night. But watching the execution of Christian men became the trigger that inspired her to raise her voice.
鈥淚 would often lie awake at night thinking about Syrian mothers and children, just unable to move my thoughts from them. It really has disrupted my life in the best way. I feel unable to move on and I hope it鈥檒l drive me to greater advocacy for them.鈥
Immediately, she and Maher took to the spiritual outlet that they know 鈥 their music. That same day, the two began to write the first single for Assad鱿鱼视频app highly acclaimed album, Inheritance.
Assad calls her music 鈥渟oundtracks for prayer.鈥 The single 鈥淓ven Unto Death鈥 was her attempt to adopt the prayers of the men on the beach and all of today鱿鱼视频app martyrs.
鈥淚 was sort of putting myself in a place where I tried to pray what they were praying,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hat occurred to me was we don鈥檛 just need to pray for Middle Eastern people under duress... We need to pray in solidarity with them.鈥
鈥淓ven Unto Death鈥 was released as the preview song on iTunes when users pre-ordered the album before its February release. It quickly earned the album early acclaim from critics. In its debut week, the song propelled the album to No. 1 on the iTunes Christian/Gospel charts in Canada and the United States.
鈥淲ith everything I鈥檓 doing right now, I鈥檓 putting quite a lot of focus on refugee issues,鈥 said Assad. 鈥淓verything I鈥檓 doing right now is serving to raise awareness and inspire people to advocacy for Syrian people or for refugees of any type.鈥
In May, Assad wrote a piece for the We Are Refugees Movement web site in anticipation of World Refugee Day on June 20. She wrote about how her Syrian father, with his mother and two siblings, overcame hardships to resettle in the United States.
鈥淭hey lived very meagrely and were essentially homeless for several years,鈥 she wrote. 鈥(They were) living in what amounted to a large janitorial closet at a local Christian Missionary Alliance Church... They stayed together, and they found a way to make it work.鈥
Assad said she has always been connected to her heritage. When she was young, her father and her grandmother told her stories of when they had nothing but worked hard to make their way in the world.
She always admired her father鱿鱼视频app entrepreneurial work ethic. His motto is 鈥淒ream, believe, do, repeat.鈥
鈥淚t鱿鱼视频app four words that really sum up the way he has approached life in America and it鱿鱼视频app the way that I think I have always approached it by watching him,鈥 she said.
鈥淚鈥檝e learned to imagine big things, to believe that they are doable and to do them over and over... I just think it鱿鱼视频app a relentless optimism.鈥
Assad has harnessed her fourth album as a way of leaning into her heritage more publicly. She hopes to use her audience and her outlet to give the refugee crisis a more human face.
On June 23, Assad celebrated the week after World Refugee Day with a charity concert for the Office of Refugees Archdiocese of Toronto (ORAT). She said that in working with ORAT and the Office of Catholic Youth, it has given her hope.
鈥淚n the U.S., it鱿鱼视频app a little bit more of a hot button issue. I would say that many churches are not really sure what to do with refugees right now,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd so, I鈥檓 really grateful to be here in Toronto doing this because it鱿鱼视频app really encouraging to see the receptiveness here.鈥
Assad hopes to take the hopefulness she found in the Canadian advocacy for refugees and use it as fuel to raise awareness in her own country. She is currently partnered with the We Are Refugees Movement to empower the Church to be agents of hope and compassion to support refugees.