DANA, Syria — Hundreds of mourners attended the burial of a Syrian goalkeeper turned opposition fighter Sunday after he died of wounds sustained in battle against regime forces.

Abdel-Basset al-Sarout, 27, died on Saturday after he was wounded on Thursday night in clashes on the edge of the embattled Idlib region in northwest Syria.

Before Syria’s grinding eight-year civil war, Sarout was a goalkeeper for the country’s youth football team.

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When peaceful demonstrations broke out against President Bashar al-Assad’s regime in 2011, he became a popular singer of protest songs in his hometown of Homs in the center of the country.

But after a brutal government crackdown on the protests, he took up arms, eventually joining the Jaish al-Izza rebel group, with whom he was fighting when he was wounded.

Abdel-Basset al-Sarout (L), a Syrian goalkeeper turner rebel fighter, has died of wounds sustained fighting regime forces in northwestern Syria, according to his faction and a war monitor https://t.co/zJhbsQV3rL pic.twitter.com/0s3CsBoJBo — AFP news agency (@AFP) June 8, 2019

On Sunday, hundreds of supporters joined a procession of vehicles driving Sarout’s body wrapped in a bright white shroud to the mosque in the northwestern village of Dana, an AFP reporter said.

Among them were fighters who brandished their weapons and fired shots into the air.

As his body was transported over the crowd outside the mosque, dozens held up their mobile phones to grab images.

A couple of men laid Sarout to rest in the deep red earth of a cemetery bordering golden fields, as hundreds thronged around to get a last glimpse of the young fighter.

Syrian activists and opposition supporters have flooded Twitter with eulogies for a man they describe as the “goalkeeper of the revolution” or “songbird of the revolution.”

Lebanese political researcher and university professor Ziad Majed said Sarout was “the truest expression of the Syrian revolution, its twists and turns.”

He went “from a peaceful protester and singer demanding dignity and freedom, to a fighter defending Homs… to successive changes of fighter identities,” he wrote on Facebook.

He was “close for a while to extremism and its black banner, but then distanced himself and returned to the northern Hama countryside” where he was mortally wounded, Majed said.

Sarout starred in the documentary “Return to Homs”, for which Syrian director Talal Derki was awarded at the Sundance Film Festival in 2014.

The Idlib region, which is dominated by the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham alliance led by Syria’s former Al-Qaeda affiliate, is supposed to be protected by a Turkish-Russian buffer zone deal.

But it has come under intense bombardment since last April from the regime and its Russian ally, killing more than 330 civilians, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group.

Since Thursday, jihadists and allied rebels have been battling pro-government fighters on the edge of the Idlib region in the north of Hama province, leaving more than 250 fighters dead in total, it said.