Abdel Razaq family: Sunni or Shi'ite?

Converts to Shi'ism?
According to German journalist Rainer Hermann in FAZ, three main families were targeted: one Sunni, one Alawite, and one Shi'ite. As translated, he explained the last: "several dozen members of one extended family, which had in recent years converted from Sunni to Shia [faith] were slaughtered." Hermann's information came from unspecified "opposition activists" who had gathered the information in unspecified ways. As the only family to have lost "several dozen" members among the 108 total victims, this must refer to the Abdel Razaqs, as others have concluded (see below). There is nothing further we know of to support this claim, directly, and much from activists and alleged survivors to contradict it. Syrian government sources initially declined to specify religion, thus failing to either support or confirm this detail accompanying a story otherwise like their own. Instead, their statements claimed the families were targeted due to not supporting the rebellion and remaining loyal to the Syrian government, irrespective of any religious motives.

A Sunni Family? A Sunni City?
Rebel sources and alleged survivors disagree on this conversion, describing the Abdel Razaq family as Sunni Muslims. Anti-government activist Maysara al-Hilawi told Khaled Oweis of Reuters, after "the rebels withdrew," Shabiha entered Taldaou around 6 p.m. Hilawi "said 63 people from a single extended family of Sunnis called Abdelrazzaq were killed in their houses."

The site "War in Context" reported on this discrepancy, and agreed with the opposition version after "Human Rights Watch confirmed to me that the Abdel Razzak family are indeed Sunnis and that after the massacre those members of the family who survived sought the protection of the Free Syrian Army.”

Human Rights Watch's report itself didn't mention their religion but did say: "Houla’s towns, overwhelmingly Sunni, are surrounded by Alawite and Shia villages, and sectarian tensions have been high since last year." Most early sources describe Houla/Taldou as around 90% Sunni, giving the impression the victims, by odds, were probablySunni. The UNHRC's Commission of Inquiry (CoI) said in its interim report of June 2012: [Al-Houla's three towns] have a population exceeding 100,000 of which the majority is Sunni Muslim. The towns are ringed by Shia villages to the southeast, and Alawi villages to the southwest and the north."

There were shortly accusations that most of the victims were from that less than 10% minority of non-Sunnis. A later report from Der Spiegel, based on a visit to Houla, reported back for clarity that the town was 100% Sunni and always had been, so all victims by definition were Sunni. "According to survivors, all of them residents of Taldou and other parts of Houla, there are no Shiite or Alawite families in Houla, nor were there any there before -- just as there are no Sunni families in the surrounding Alawite villages. Although there were occasional marriages between Alawite and Sunni families in the past, the wife, say local residents, always moved to the husband's village and converted to his faith." This same article makes much of how the Al-Sayed family was unlikely to have converted to Shi'ism, but no one has alleged that happening, so the argument is meaningless.

HRW: "Local activists provided Human Rights Watch with a list of 62 dead members from the Abdel Razzak family. According to survivors, their family owns the land and farms next to the national water company and the water dam of Taldou, and lives in eight or nine houses next to each other, two families to a house." HRW spoke to a 10-year-old boy, his mother, and an elderly woman of this family. Two other alleged survivors of this family, Rasha Abdul Razaq and her mother, spoke to interviewers with the BBC, mentioning an infant survivor with them. What sounds like the injured woman, other woman, and injured infant in a video we haven't yet seen, cited by Khaled Oweis. The main speaker there called the attackers "Alawite pigs. They attacked us and said 'die you pigs' and left."

Shi'ite killers?
If the Abdel Razaqs were a Sunni family instead of Shi'ite, it's possible they were targeted for being Sunni, as at least one survivor of the Al-Sayed family feels. (NPR) The BBC Interviewed Akrama Bakour of the Free Syrian Army in Houla. He gave a detailed recounting of the families attacked, especially numerous households of the Abdul Razaq family.

"The next house they entered was the house of Qutayba Abdul Razaq, he survived and his one-year-old daughter was injured. He lost his wife and five of his children. All of those I'm counting died by gunshots, direct fire. They were gathered in one room and shot. There was one kid however whose head was skinned with a knife. The knife was found among the bodies and we have its picture." (BW)

There is one other reference to a knife found and photographed at one crime scene of this possible converted Shi’ite family. The UN commission of Inquiry found, per their late-June report:

"Accounts collected from those who told the CoI they were among the first to arrive at the scene described the use of sharp objects in the killing of the Abdulrazzak family. Multiple interviewees described stab wounds and the apparent use of axes or similar (satour). One person early on the scene described to the CoI a bloody knife allegedly found in one house. Another described multiple knives found, one knife bearing the inscription “We will sacrifice ourselves for you Hussein” - which is a Shia slogan. The CoI viewed a video of a knife with such an inscription, although it could not verify its authenticity." (UN commission of Inquiry, oral update, p 9)

Not only was this family Sunni instead of Shia, according to all on the rebel side, they were apparently killed by Shi'ites of some stripe, who left their signs like this behind. They also chose to spare the vast numbers of other Sunnis in the 90% Sunni area, many of whom lived right around this one family of contested religion the provided more than half the total victims