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‘URBICIDE NOT ONLY THREATENS GAZAN LAND, IT DESTROYS A SENSE OF BELONGING’

▶ Palestinia­n architects share what it will take to prevent the enclave’s complete erasure, writes

- Giovanna Dunmall

The Israel-Gaza war has killed about 33,900 Palestinia­ns, of whom 12,000 are children, and injured more than 76,000. Thousands more are still buried under rubble. Alongside these deadly statistics is another less talked about aspect: the wanton and intentiona­l destructio­n of much of Gaza’s urban fabric – the buildings and places that are vital to sustain life, health and culture.

Entire neighbourh­oods have been razed to the ground and countless hospitals, schools, shops, universiti­es, places of worship and administra­tive buildings blown up or bulldozed. Photovolta­ic and solar panels have been targeted, as have one-third of Gaza’s greenhouse­s and half of its farming land, according to satellite imagery analysed by multi-disciplina­ry research group Forensic Architectu­re.

This “urbicide”, literally the killing of a city and ensuring it becomes unliveable as there is nothing to return to, also includes the destructio­n of more than 200 cultural sites and monuments, including mosques, cemeteries and archaeolog­ical remains, according to a report by the Internatio­nal Council on Monuments and Sites in February.

“It’s very difficult to conceive because the scale this time is so absurd and beyond our peripheral vision that its effects are not possible to gauge, even for those of us it was already visible to,” says Dima Srouji, a Palestinia­n architect, artist and academic who lives in London. Neverthele­ss, Srouji says she wasn’t shocked.

“The Zionist aim since its inception as an ideology is to build a state on top of us whether dead or alive. As it seems, preferably dead,” she tells The National. Despite the resilience of Palestinia­ns and the enduring ties among second or third-generation diaspora Palestinia­ns to their identity, culture and land, what’s happening in Gaza is existentia­l and unpreceden­ted.

“The nightmares I’ve been having since October have been of the urbicide we’re witnessing,” says Srouji. “Inter-generation­al trauma aside, urbicide has a much longer effect than the attempt to ethnically cleanse the Palestinia­n people.

“Urbicide erases that land and the culture that we are all living for. Once that urbicide is complete, that spiritual connection with space and the terrain is threatened.”

The feelings of being overwhelme­d and angst are shared by many in Palestine and the diaspora, some of whom have family in Gaza.

Yara Sharif, a Palestinia­n architect who runs a practice with her husband Nasser Golzari, says: “Nasser and I lost around 40 family members in the first week of the genocide so we felt we needed to do something.”

For the pair, who also teach at the University of Westminste­r in the UK, this meant founding an organisati­on called Architects for Gaza, which has drawn interest from architects and practition­ers around the world. It aims to conceive of ways of “rebuilding Gaza in collaborat­ion with those displaced” and provide students from Gaza with the opportunit­y to carry on – or finish – their education online or in person through a platform called the Gaza Global University.

Embedded within the founding principles of the group, which is in the process of registerin­g for UK charity status, are the right to live in the city, the right to education and the right to reconstruc­tion. Also, importantl­y, the right to return.

Just as they do in their own architectu­ral practice, Sharif and Golzari say that Architects for Gaza is focusing on the pragmatic and immediate on the one hand, and the more speculativ­e on the other. “The latter allows us to imagine a future where we can push for a sustainabl­e reconstruc­tion, where there is no siege and Gaza and Palestine are free,” says Golzari.

In many ways, speculativ­e proposals are a way of cultivatin­g hope in what seems like extreme and impossible conditions. The practical strand Architects for Gaza is currently focused on is the design and build of a modular clinic, in collaborat­ion with a charity called Mist (which stands for Mobile Internatio­nal Surgical Teams), that could be attached to existing medical infrastruc­ture in Gaza and used as a classroom if needed.

It will be installed in one place for now, but more could be erected in different parts of Gaza. Sharif and Golzari hope to be among a team that will go to set it up. “We’re waiting for a ceasefire,” Golzari says.

If they manage to go, it won’t be the first time they have been to Gaza having visited in 2010 as part of another organisati­on they co-founded, Palestine Regenerati­on Team, or Part. A team of specialist­s in self-build, wastewater treatment and design went to Gaza to work on projects with locals and NGOs such as UN-Habitat and Unesco.

“The idea was to learn, rethink what can we do to rebuild and, most importantl­y, celebrate the local initiative­s happening in Gaza,” says Sharif.

“Because of the siege, Gazans have been forced to come up with countless innovative techniques to survive, whether it is in reconstruc­tion, water recycling or water heating. They’ve learnt how to create building

The nightmares I’ve been having since October have been of the urbicide we’re witnessing

DIMA SROUJI

Architect and academic

materials and bricks out of rubble, rebar, earth and clay, produced their own solar panels and converted cooking oil for use in engines and to generate energy.

“It’s this idea of creating possibilit­y or abundance out of scarcity.”

And it’s something the West could learn from, they say, given the limited planetary resources and environmen­tal crises we face.

The scale of what has been wrought on Gaza and what needs to be done is so immense and the future so uncertain that it seems almost strange to talk about reconstruc­tion.

“We don’t know what the political settlement will be, who will govern Gaza, what is left exactly and even whether the municipal buildings where all the property deeds are stored have been destroyed, because that is another big obstacle for reconstruc­tion,” says Fadi Shayya, a Lebanon-born lecturer in the UK, who is also part of Architects for Gaza.

He says he “was angry and depressed” during the first few weeks of the ongoing assault, but “survival mode” took over.

“Our region has been riddled with instabilit­y and conflict, which gives us little to no time to grieve; we are constantly in reserve mode, ready to help our students, families and networks,” he says. Being ready means reconstruc­tion efforts can start the moment it’s possible, he adds.

Both he, Sharif and Golzari speak of letting Palestinia­ns and Gazans take “ownership” of whatever is done post-ceasefire. “The only people who have the right to discuss reconstruc­tion in Gaza are Gazans and Palestinia­ns,” says Sharif.

That also means going beyond viewing Palestinia­ns as merely victims or passive participan­ts in the fate meted out to them. Sharif and Golzari speak of the richness of the heritage and culture of Gaza, and the diversity of its landscapes, which include dunes, significan­t amounts of farming land and greenhouse­s.

“Part of the ongoing colonial project of erasure is the imagery that keeps repeating itself so that we only ever associate Gaza with ruins, destructio­n and rubble and almost forget that it’s a coastal city very much associated with the Mediterran­ean and was a trading hub for thousands of years,” says Sharif. “It wasn’t so long ago that when you spoke of Gaza, you spoke of Alexandria, Beirut, Istanbul and even Marseille.”

Given the gravity of the current urbicide, it has become increasing­ly urgent to document, preserve and recreate what has been erased, the group insist.

Zain Al-Sharaf Wahbeh is a Palestinia­n architectu­re graduate who was born in Jordan and grew up in the UAE. For a postgradua­te project at the Royal College of Art in London, she focused on a lost territory in the north of Jaffa, partially reconstruc­ting the district using digital modelling methods.

Al Manshiyya was demolished after 1948 to create “an empty landscape as some kind of moral alibi for its replacemen­t into something else”, she says. Al Manshiyya is an Arab Islamic city with Palestinia­n vernacular infrastruc­ture, and it’s where her paternal family come from.

To recreate the neighbourh­ood, she used the testimonie­s and schematic drawings of a former resident of Al Manshiyya, Dr Ahmad Sharkas, who lived there as a boy. Beyond that, she had to “rely on the coloniser” for materials as only British Mandate and Israeli archives, maps and documentat­ion were available.

“The Palestinia­ns in Al Manshiyya and elsewhere were told they would be able to come back to their homes so they didn’t take their photograph­s or possession­s with them,” Wahbeh says. Documentin­g villages and towns in Palestine that were erased after 1948 is critical, she explains, because people with memories of life in places like Al Manshiyya are now in their eighties or nineties.

This forensic reconstruc­tion work is something she intends to continue and hopes will have wider applicatio­ns, for herself and others.

“It’s about developing methodolog­ies and methods of documentat­ion, analysis and mapping that could be transferre­d to any neighbourh­ood that has been demolished or is at risk of erasure,” she says.

“No one is immune to injustice, if it’s not our city or country, it could be another. So how do we create methods, even preventati­ve ones, to fight against that?”

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 ?? AFP ?? The Rimal district of Gaza city before October 7, left, and in January following extensive bombing campaigns by Israel
AFP The Rimal district of Gaza city before October 7, left, and in January following extensive bombing campaigns by Israel
 ?? EPA ?? Much of Gaza has been razed since the conflict began
EPA Much of Gaza has been razed since the conflict began
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