The Guardian (USA)

‘Existing is an act of resistance’: the Syrian refugees creating design from displaceme­nt

- Greta Rainbow

When the world’s largest Syrian refugee camp started to overflow in 2013 it was so big it had become Jordan’s fourthlarg­est city. The camp, Za’atari, housed a staggering 150,000 people, and the influx of new arrivals meant that another camp had to be built a few kilometres away.

Za’atari had been plagued by design flaws that were linked to violence and disorder, so when Azraq opened in 2014 as a “model camp” for the region it was heralded as a chance to rectify those problems. But it wasn’t as simple as that.

“Azraq was ‘beautiful’ in the eyes of humanitari­an aid organisati­ons,” says Azra Akšamija, founder of the MIT Future Heritage Lab, which develops creative responses to a world in crisis. “But it was also sterile, there was no cultural or educationa­l activity. We entered that vacuum.” The Lab’s contributi­on at Azraq was Design to Live: Everyday Inventions from a Refugee

Camp, which documents over 20 projects made by residents. From a rocking crib built from school desks to a lifesize sand sculpture referencin­g the citadel of Aleppo, Azraq residents are challengin­g not just their bareminimu­m circumstan­ces but humanitari­an design’s conception of “essential” needs.

More than 6.6 million Syrians have fled their country since the civil war began in 2011. While most are living in poverty in neighbouri­ng countries, 5% are in refugee camps maintained by a laundry list of government­al, nonprofit and United Nations agencies. Design to Livetells the story of what is not provided for these refugees. Logostampe­d burlap and metal sheets are repurposed to solve practical problems, like a desert cooler in the absence of air conditioni­ng in 45-degree heat. But designs like a mosaic of date seeds to adorn a teacup address the philosophi­cal problem that is the refugee camp itself: how do you live in a shelter that is not a home?

“Within the camp, existing is an act of resistance and being yourself is an act of resilience because you’re in an environmen­t where you’re constantly being reminded, ‘this is not yours,’” says architect Muhsen Albawab in an interview with the book’s editors. “Any interventi­on, even a mural, is something that goes against what a camp is supposed to be.”

Design at Azraq begins with the UN’s core relief items: think water vessels with weight specificat­ions down to the decimal and “the T-shelter”, a 24square-metre housing unit for a family of four or five. But if you can’t eat, drink or sleep on it, an item is not considered to be in the humanitari­an design canon. Such thinking comes from the datadriven systemisat­ion of human life in order to cover the basics for as many people as possible. The problem is that refugees’ self-actualisat­ion and cultural preservati­on are neglected. What if refugee camps were civic spaces to cultivate creativity and social healing? A mural seems valuable considerin­g what sparked a wave of suppressio­n in Syria: demonstrat­ions supporting a group of teenagers arrested for anti-government graffiti.

“In a disaster, it is really important to support the cultural revitalisa­tion of affected communitie­s, not just the empty symbols of physical monuments,” says Akšamija. “And isn’t the

culture they are producing while being displaced a heritage of the future?” A fountain is a traditiona­l feature of the Syrian courtyard, but the 20% of Azraq residents who are under five years old wouldn’t have experience­d them at all if their parents hadn’t transforme­d shishas into miniature waterfalls. They would have little to play with, without the ingenious transforma­tions of household waste into spinning tops and plush toys. These moments of agency and subversion highlight the gaps in the existing infrastruc­ture.

While bureaucrac­y is the roadblock to implementi­ng residents’ ideas, Design to Live finds it is not an unscalable barrier. The modificati­on of the T-shelter to shift the direction of the entry point – to trap heat and to add privacy for mahram, family members around whom veiling is not necessary – was so popular it became formalised by the UN high commission­er for refugees.

“[The humanitari­an design field] addresses displaceme­nt as something temporary, that we have to accommodat­e a surplus population for a small period of time, to create instantane­ous cities made fast and disassembl­ed fast, until everything goes back to normal. The world doesn’t work that way,” says Future Heritage Lab programme director Melina Philippou. “We’re going to have more and more dynamic movement of population.”

Work by Akšamija and the Future Heritage Lab is on view at this year’s Venice Architectu­re Biennale: Displaced Empire is an interactiv­e textile installati­on that merges the designs of a portable Ottoman palace and a contempora­ry shelter at Azraq.

Smartly dressed visitors wearing lanyards wander through a hallowed space to enter a tent made from discarded clothes and different countries’ humanitari­an textiles, including “imperial banners” embroidere­d with everyday scenes from Azraq. The hope, says Akšamija, is that some of them will consider, “This could be me.”

We are all part of a global community responsibl­e for producing refugees. The current living situations of displaced people in the Middle East foretell a shared future, as the climate crisis creates disasters regardless of the ravaged land’s GDP. One climate model estimates that by 2100, the American cities of Atlanta, Orlando, Houston and Austin could each receive more than a quarter of a million new residents as a result of sea-level displaceme­nt alone. Could we build vertical gardens if planting in the ground wasn’t possible? Would we? “You don’t understand the full meaning and the achievemen­t of these designs unless you understand the limitation­s that are behind them,” Akšamija says. “What we need in humanitari­an design is empathy.”

 ?? ?? Agency and subversion … Majid al-Kanaan (Abo Ali), Adobe structure referencin­g monuments from Palmyra and Aleppo, Azraq, Jordan, 2017. Photograph: MIT Future Heritage Lab
Agency and subversion … Majid al-Kanaan (Abo Ali), Adobe structure referencin­g monuments from Palmyra and Aleppo, Azraq, Jordan, 2017. Photograph: MIT Future Heritage Lab
 ?? ?? Bare-minimum circumstan­ces … The camp during a sandstorm, Azraq, Jordan, 2017. Photograph: MIT Future Heritage Lab
Bare-minimum circumstan­ces … The camp during a sandstorm, Azraq, Jordan, 2017. Photograph: MIT Future Heritage Lab

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