| Arab
Architectural Heritage Between Mirrors And Idols
Looking
Within And Beyond
The
Tradition-Modernity Debate
By
Jad Thabet
When
the issue of reconstruction was raised at the end of the Lebanese
Civil War, the discussion focused on the architectural heritage
and its connection to memory, as well as on the relationship
of this heritage with modernization and modernity.
Hardly a month passes
by without seeing a book of beautiful photographs about “Beirut
as it was,” reading an article reviving the memories of ayam
zaman [the good old days], or noticing an art exhibition
showing the magic and beauty of old Lebanese buildings and
traditional rural and urban homes.
It
is odd that until recently architectural heritage in Lebanon
had neither occasioned a position or significance. With the
exception of those tasteful few who congregated around the
Association of Old-Historic Buildings and Sites, the Lebanese
public has never shown an interest in this heritage.
Even
the number of studies on this issue are quite scant.
Jacques Liger-Belair book, published in 1962, is
considered the first attempt to study the characteristics
of traditional residential architecture of Lebanon. A 1973
book written by Friedrich Ragette, an engineer and former
director of the Department of Architecture at the American
University of Beirut , focuses on the history of architecture
in Mount Lebanon during the 18th and 19th centuries. Lastly,
a book published by Sursuk Museum in 1985 includes a general
overview of Lebanese architecture between the 15th and 19th
centuries. Except for these few contributions, the study of
traditional architecture in Lebanon was never a focus until
the past few years.
In
fact, legislative authorities in modern Lebanon have ignored
this issue since the country gained its independence. The
last laws that dealt with heritage were issued during the
Mandate. One law (number 166/L.R. issued on November 7, 1933)
deals with archaeological ruins. A second is the Environment
and Natural Scenery Protection Law issued on July 8, 1936.
With the exception of these two texts, Lebanese legislature
remains silent regarding Lebanese heritage.
What
does this silence indicate? If it tells us anything, it probably
provides a clear indication of the lack of importance that
heritage plays in Lebanese society and culture. Except for
a few critics, nobody complained when the souks
[bazzars] of old downtown Beirut were swept away. When the
current downtown Beirut reconstruction project was formulated
in the summer of 1991, the critics focused on its negative
elements. Yet, later on it seemed that no one resisted the
real destruction which touches the various quarters of Beirut,
from Ain al-Mraysseh to al Ashrafieh, where a whole heritage
is being massacred by real estate competition.
The
increased talk about architectural heritage is now considered
a healthy phenomenon, a cultural reaction toward the ongoing
destruction and obliteration of memory. But this need not
become a mere lamenting of heritage and crying over the ruins.
The current discussion should not become simplistic, categorizing
the positions on architectural heritage into two opposing
groups–the defenders of heritage versus the innovators. The
first group wants to transform the city into a museum of the
war’s ruins, and are nostalgic about bygone past, confining
themselves into grieving for the past and protesting anything
that restores life to the body of the city. On the other hand,
the second group consists of those who would like to formulate
a modernizing project based on a futuristic vision which is
free from nightmares of the past. As if modernity and heritage
are antithetical concepts.
Arab
architectural modernity is present today before our
eyes and we do not need to invent it or create it anew.
It is present with all of its richness and problems,
its beauty and ugliness, and its liveliness and contradictions.
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The
way out of this dilemma is to define some concepts that clarify
the problem of heritage in its various dimensions. We cannot
study the subject of heritage as if it is a simple, objective
topic, something rigid and unchangeable. On the contrary,
heritage is a complex concept, synthetic, and subject to interpretation
and judgements. We can easily say that every society at one
point or another forms its own unique heritage, that it produces
a heritage peculiar to its own.
Examples
abound in this regard. The designs drawn by Baron George-Eugene
Haussmann for Paris in the late 19th century, largely inspired
by modernizing reasons, resulted in destroying vast quarters
of the structure of the old city. Still, the Haussmannian
product today constitutes an essential part of the architectural
heritage of the French capital. When major buildings were
built during the Industrial Revolution in Europe (factories
and storage areas), they were considered for a long time as
simply functional structures with no connection to art or
architecture. Today, they have become major aspects of Europe
’s heritage, where many of these buildings subsequently have
been classified and turned into museums.
Until
the late 1960s, the concept of architectural heritage in the
world remained confined to a small circle that focused on
ancient ruins and historic buildings. Yet, the last few years
have witnessed an increase in the field of theoretical studies
of the subject in three areas: expanding the field of architectural
heritage, connecting that heritage with the surrounding culture,
and removing time boundaries.
The
first area broadened the field of architectural heritage to
include the city as a major center of collective memory, and
the natural environment as a domain in which the special relationship
between the people and the product of architecture is cultivated.
It became clear that focusing exclusively on the historic
buildings removed from the surrounding environment leads to
a disruption of the context in which they grow. It also leads
to severing the roots that connect these buildings with their
space which alone can give them an artistic and symbolic value.
The second area focused
on connecting architectural heritage with human activities
and as such moving it out of the museum into people’s lives.
Instead of heritage remaining a mummified body or a commodity
for tourist consumption, it can be viewed as an active element
in social life. It can grow and develop with the renewed connection
to the present while giving the present a historic depth that
continuously revives it.
The
third area was marked by the breakdown of time boundaries
which used to confine heritage within the products of old
historical phases. The Haussmannian heritage and the product
of the Industrial Revolution were both included gradually
in the field of architectural heritage in the West. Along
the same lines, there is today an increased interest in the
architectural projects built during the 20th century. For
example, there are the renovated buildings built by Le Corbusier
in France, and the reconstructed exhibition building in Barcelona
designed by Mies Van der Rohe.
It
is quite obvious that the issue of architectural heritage
is dealt with differently in Lebanon than in the West. This
variance is due to a difference in the understanding of heritage
in and of itself, a difference in the historic and social
circumstances, and a difference in our understanding of the
relationship between heritage and modernity.
Heritage
in Arab Architecture
The
method employed by contemporary Arab engineers in studying
architectural heritage is distinguished by the development
of two schools or trends. Each lays down a theoretical basis
that specifies the relation today’s Arab architecture has
with both tradition and modernity. These schools raised issues
which relate not only to architecture but include the relationship
between contemporary Arab culture and modernity, as well as
raising questions about reading our contemporary history.
Representing
the first school is the late Egyptian architect Hassan Fathi.
His discipline is based on a radical vision that claims that
modernity had brought fundamental change in Arab societies,
causing them to lose their authenticity and rich legacy inherited
from past generations. This intellectual concept focused on
rejecting modernity as cosmopolitan and causing our societies
to lose their distinguished peculiarity and to become consuming
societies which have no values other than those purely materialistic.
Emphasized also by this school is the notion that modernity
is a movement confined to the upper classes, groups connected
intellectually and culturally with the West, which use modernity
as a tool to oppress popular classes and set them apart from
their culture and history.
Accordingly,
this school stressed the necessity of using traditional materials,
such as clay and stone, as well as reviving the old handicraft
construction tools, rejecting reinforced concrete and advanced
technologies which subject our societies, economically and
culturally, to the domination of Western modernity. This school
urged confronting the disintegration of traditional culture
in the Arab world and the transformation of most Arab cities
into congregations lacking order and logic–large cities made
of decimated poor quarters with islands of wealth in the midst
of poverty.
Yet,
despite the fundamental positions embraced by this school,
the net result of the experiments conducted half a century
ago appear to have led to a dead end. The original experiment
initiated by Fathi in the town of Al-Karnah in Al Saiid province
of rural Egypt failed because the inhabitants refused to move
from their primary residential concentration–where they made
their living out of the search for archaeological artifacts
and their sale to tourists– and return to the village designed
for them. Al-Karnah stands today as a ghost town, a witness
to the failure of the utopian call for the return to the rural
life and the rejection of the civilization of the city.
Eventually,
Hassan Fathi’s experiment led to the opposite of what it called
for at its inception. Today, Fathi’s followers build huge
palaces and mansions for the Gulf rich in the Texas desert
and large tourist centers for international clubs. Subsequently,
the experiment of building for the poor became a pure manipulation
of geometric shapes and the production of a geometric folkloric
style to be consumed by the rich. Despite its aesthetic characteristics,
this school failed to solve the actual problems facing human
communities in Arab cities today.
The
obstacles encountered by the first school paved the way for
the rise in the mid-1950s of another school, best represented
by the Iraqi architect Rifaat al-Jadirji. This school exercised
a great influence on Arab contemporary architecture in its
totality. It formed a dominant intellectual approach based
on theoretical notions making up a comprehensive analysis
of the relationship of Arab architecture with modernism. These
notions can be summed up as follows:
First:
Modernity had been concentrated in the West since the 15th
century and started gradually to dominate the outside the
world, spreading its ideas and values.
Second:
When Arab societies encountered the obstacles of Western technological
developments in the 19th century, they were forced to adopt
modern Western principles to resolve these dilemmas. Thus,
the elements of modernity, in their Western peculiarities,
began to expand in the world, thereby producing a clash caused
by the incompatibility between these components and Arab societies
with their cultural specificities.
The
hegemony of Western modernity led the Arab world to lose some
of its peculiarities and many of the elements that made up
its identity. Nothing illustrates this better than Arab architecture,
as architectural heritage started decaying because of its
inability to face the dynamics of imported Western modernity
with its resources, technologies, and superb organization.
Is
Cairo today a traditional or a modern city or is it
a combination of both? Are Beirut ’s buildings of the
1930s and 1940s traditional or do they belong to a modern
Western genre? Can we consider modernity simply as wallpaper
that we can remove in order to return to our lost authenticity?
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Third:
Based on this clash, the second school refuses to return to
the traditional principles of Arab architecture which lead
to isolation, seclusion, and denial of modernity. Moreover,
this school claims that adopting the principles advanced by
Fathi could lead to the reproduction of some traditional forms
in a mechanical manner, and the failure to create new characteristics
consistent with the needs of time.
Fourth:
Faced with these undesirable prospects, the Jadirjian school
calls for subjecting the features of heritage to rational
criticism, choosing what is compatible with the needs of time,
and reintegrating those selected aspects with the elements
of recent resources and modern technologies. Through a process
of separation and connection, this school calls for transcending
the contradiction between tradition and modernity and subsequently
fusing them to create features which produce a contemporary
Arab architecture.
This
analysis raises a number of questions that should be seriously
debated. First, Arab heritage and Western modernity, the analysis
suggests, are two distinct concepts, totally independent from
each other. But such analysis is somewhat simplistic, primarily
because modernity remains an incomplete project that cannot
be confined today to one domain or overall unified pattern.
Equally inaccurate is the talk of the peculiarities of Western
modernity in opposition to Arab heritage, especially if we
consider the changes influencing modernity since its inception.
More than one stage
marks modernity. The stage of the “primary modernity” is distinguished
by the discoveries of the Renaissance in Europe. Another stage
is the modernity of the Enlightenment, which introduced a
theoretical reform in knowledge and in the view of the world,
religion, and political and authoritative frameworks. A third
stage is the modernity of the Industrial Revolution, which
introduced changes in production and transformed the social
spheres in most capitalist societies. Skepticism, ambiguity,
and suspicion characterize the final stage, referred to as
the modernity of the latter part of the 20th century.
Throughout
these stages, Arab societies have dealt with Western modernity
in a distinctive way, influenced by parts of it while rejecting
others. Arab heritage in turn is neither monolithic nor unchangeable.
Arab societies have undergone changes during the past century
and a half, and especially after World War II– basic changes
which cannot be ignored. There had been changes in the public
domains of social life, imbalances between rural and urban
areas, changing patterns of production, consumption, and systems
of transportation, as well as transformations in the ways
of living, residence and day-to-day activities, all producing
fundamental changes in space and time according to which Arab
societies are organized. At the level of the material environment,
the general appearance of Arab cities has undergone change,
becoming huge residential concentrations of migrants from
the countryside, and also marked by architectural forms and
new building types that transformed the features of these
cities significantly.
In
the midst of all these changes, can we easily distinguish
between what belongs to heritage and what belongs to modernity?
Is Cairo today a traditional or a modern city or is it a combination
of both? Are Beirut's buildings of the 1930s and 1940s traditional
or do they belong to a modern Western genre? Can we consider
modernity simply as wallpaper that we can remove in order
to return to our lost authenticity?
Modernity
has become one of the inseparable components of Arab cities
to the extent that we can no longer talk about an imported
modernity and an authentic heritage. Arab architectural modernity
is present today before our eyes and we do not need to invent
it or create it anew. It is present with all of its richness
and problems, its beauty and ugliness, and its liveliness
and contradictions. As in most of the world, modernity in
Arab cities has the good and the less good, the beautiful
and the ugly. What is important is that modernity has now
become a part of our architectural heritage.
Should
we then define the task of Arab architects today as “sifting
through the salafi heritage to select what of this
legacy suits for modernity” or as “criticizing imported modernity
to identify what is consistent with our traditions?” In fact,
the fusion between modernity and tradition is already present
in our cities, and the experiment of Arab architectural modernity
with its formative characteristics is a self-existent experiment.
Our task today is to start from this reality, this fusion,
as well as from a critique of this experiment, to find new
means to voice the demands of this stage instead of adopting
an eclectic method which is bound to produce half solutions.
Hashem Sarkis, in an article published in An-Nahar in March
1995, called upon the “Great Masters,” the generation of Lebanese
architects that built the monuments of modernity in Beirut
of the 1960s, not to abandon what they produced, and to be
aware that their modernity is soon to become today’s “only
remaining heritage.”
Rejecting
Architectural Modernity
What
then explains the approach that rejects the modernity we produced,
an approach that dominates the architectural field today,
not only in Lebanon but in all Arab countries? Did this rejection
form a permanent element which became part of an integral
position that distinguishes our relationship with heritage
and modernity since the Arab world opened up to the West?
It is important to
note that when the initial attempts of modernizing Arab cities
at the hands of the Ottomans began in all parts of the empire,
and similarly by Mohammad Ali in Egypt, the issue of heritage
was not raised as an obstacle to the attempts of architectural
modernity. Instead, the only texts which discussed a threat
to Arab architectural heritage by modernization were written
by Orientalists influenced by European romanticists yearning
for an exotic culture that had not been subjected to the shocks
of the Industrial Revolution. Available documentation and
records, in the form of photos, paintings, and texts offering
descriptions of Arab traditional cities are solely Orientalist
works. Thus, our view of our architectural historical heritage
is, to a large extent, the product of the West.
Consider Beirut, for
example. When Al-Walli Azmi Bey destroyed the old city of
Beirut during World War I, there had not been any opposition,
despite the incurred social disaster. In fact, Beirut notables
warmly welcomed the destruction of their old city, considering
it an introduction into the age of modernity. Only Dumesnil
Dubuisson, a French scholar who visited Beirut during the
entry of the Allied forces during WW I, expressed regret for
what he witnessed, recording his observations and describing
the tragedies caused by the destruction, including his sorrow
over the historical buildings that were swept to the sea.
Confirming
this paradox is the observation that during the stage of direct
British and French colonial control, most Arab countries witnessed
the emergence of an architectural style that can be described
as “Arab colonial style” (Style colonial arabisant).
It was an attempt to establish a distinct architectural language,
a combination of selective European architecture at the end
of the 19th century and a romantic Orientalism through the
adaptation of terms and concepts drawn from local heritage.
This
means that our architectural practice today should be
critical, that is a “resistant practice,” to use the
expression of the American critic Kenneth Frampton.
Resistance practice means a practice that is distinguished
from the current trend generalizing a universal culture
increasingly marked by sluggishness and superficiality,
as well as from the pathological attachment to exact
traditional forms which emerge as obstacles to the development
of our societies. |
Arab
societies experienced important changes in the post independence
era, including an increase in population, demographic concentration
in cities, and demand for housing, factors necessitating the
use of new materials and construction methods. These developments
influenced the architectural types and geometric forms and
thus pushed Arab architects to adopt a pure modernizing language
and to abandon former experiments. The architectural production
of the post independence era dominated most Arab cities, transforming
their organization of space as well as their architectural
features.
Although
this production did not always succeed in offering the appropriate
solutions, mainly due to improvisation and blind trust in
imitating Western types, it was not questioned until the late
1960s. Instead of subjecting the first period of Arab architectural
modernity to criticism, questions evolved during the 1970s
and 1980s into a complete rejection of the language of modernity
and into an open invitation to cling to traditional forms
and a return to the “Eastern” style of architecture.
Why
did these questions arise in that particular period? One notes
an association between the rejection of architectural modernity
and the demise of the Nasserite project, which diminished
the hope in unifying the Arabs into a developed Arab state.
Equally noticeable is that the center of decision-making shifted
to the Arabian Peninsula and the oil-producing countries,
dominated by tribal societies which remained until the 1960s
isolated from world developments and contemporary cultural
trends.
Like
what happened in Europe in the end of the 19th century, or
in Russia in the 1930s, whenever a new social group gains
controls of the government, it will have a natural inclination
to adopt old forms of expression upon which it bases its cultural
visions and artistic tastes. It seems that the compulsory
process of modernization in these societies at the economic
and social levels is accompanied by a tendency towards traditional
forms of expression at the ideological level.
If
we connect this with the crisis experienced by modernity in
the West since the late 1970s, and comprehensively rethink
the essential premises which formed the intellectual base
of this modernity since the age of Enlightenment, then we
may be able to understand why heritage has become today a
refuge where we search for our identity. Heritage is a mirror
in which we attempt to discover the features of an identity
we feel we have lost.
But
if heritage is a mirror, what images does this mirror reflect?
Do we see our real image or the image we would like to see?
Is heritage a mirror reflecting our real identity, or does
it reflect our dormant desires?
Reflecting
on the reconstruction experience in Lebanon after the war,
we find that while we destroy our genuine architectural heritage,
at the same time we create an imaginary heritage,
clothing our new buildings with it as if we are trying
to hide their modernity behind an old mask, a mask of tradition.
Examples of this phenomenon abound. How many buildings were
recently built at the ruins of a traditional Lebanese house
or a beautiful building from the 1930s, attempting to hide
the new building’s poor design and lack of harmony with its
surroundings under a forged “traditional” guise which has
now become a common fashion? Some of Beirut ’s elegant buildings
of the 1960s are being defaced by adding arches to their facades
and dressing them with a “Tarabish” [traditional caps or fezes]
of red bricks. These arches usually appear on the additional
stories that were added illegally during the war or added
due to the implementation of the famous “Mur Floor” law [a
law that allows building additional stories in return for
an additional tax].
One
of the most significant examples of the relationship that
has developed between our heritage and modernity is the St.
George Hotel. Designed by the Lebanese architect Antoun Thabet
in 1929, this hotel signaled the declaration of the first
principles of modern architecture in Lebanon. A number of
characteristics distinguish the St. George Hotel, making it
an exceptional model and giving it a central role in the history
of Lebanese architecture. It is the first building in Lebanon
which used reinforced concrete for long-range buildings. It
is also the first to clearly show the reinforced concrete,
revealing the potential capability of this new material in
accomplishing an aesthetic architecture. Based on the principles
of the Rational school in modern architecture, which Thabet
adapted from his teacher, the famous French architect Auguste
Perret, the structure draws upon the size
of the building and sets its rhythm in a way that establishes
a compatibility between its vertical terraces and longitudinal
lines. The facades are balanced and enhanced by the protrusion
of their windows, the decoration of their balconies, and the
details of their corners, thus lessening the harshness of
the structure and bringing to it a feeling of life.
What
is more important is the fact that this modern building stands
in its location as if it has always been there. Is it because
it rises up above the seashore like traditional Lebanese houses
that overlook the ocean? Or is it because of that Eastern
touch that imprints its facades and connects it to an authentic
heritage, despite its use of a pure language of modernity?
Or is it because it has become a major formative part of Beirut
’s narrative, and as such one of its symbols?
War
hit this symbol just like the rest of the city. Yet, the current
era of reconstruction might become more devastating than the
destruction of war. The owners of the St. George Hotel proposed
leveling the hotel and rebuilding it anew in the same location
with two additional stories, all under the pretext of befitting
recent investment conditions. Despite the controversy caused
by this project and the protest spearheaded by the Lebanese
architectural community, which appealed the case through an
open letter to the Minister of Culture and demanded that the
government classify the hotel as a building of cultural and
artistic value, the owners of the St. George were granted
a permit to tear it down on the condition of rebuilding it
in accordance with its original style.
This decision is an
architectural heresy, a clear proof of the level at which
architectural heritage is dealt with in our official culture.
Rebuilding a new hotel that exactly conforms with the current
one is almost impossible. How is it possible to add two more
stories to the already existing four without defacing the
gracefulness of the building and upsetting the balance and
the harmony of its facades? How is it possible with the new
construction methods to reproduce a masterpiece made in an
almost craftsman form? How can we restore to the concrete
its character etched by the sun and the sea winds? Where then
is the loyalty to the architectural message carried by this
structure, the message of openness and honest expression of
the spirit of the period in which it was built? Are we not
losing that spirit when we build a crude copy of an original
in the wake of its demolition, just like the Roman temples
built out of reinforced concrete in the recreational facilities
of Disneyland?
The same method is
used in “renovating” the structure of Beirut ’s al-Sarayeh
[City Hall]. This historic building was completely demolished
except for its exterior. These facades are
used to mask what is happening behind the new construction,
and has no relationship whatsoever to the historic configuration
of the building. Additionally, one notes another story added
to the historical structure under the pretext of providing
new space.
Besides violating
the most simple and basic principles of loyalty to heritage,
we have been witnessing the emergence of an official tendency
to produce what can be called an architectural “national style,”
a trend that has become a basis for post-war reconstruction.
We can identify the elements making up this style in a collection
of buildings known for their official symbolism, either recently
rebuilt, constructed, or still under construction. Examples
of these structures include the Presidential Palace, the Sporting
City, and the permanent residence of the Speaker of the House,
etc.
It
is noticeable that this trend is almost confined to generalizing
the arch form to decorate facades and uses red brick, at times
to the edges of the reinforced concrete ceilings. Equally
visible is that there is a hidden model that lies behind this
“national style,” and that can be defined as a mixture of
palaces in Mount Lebanon which were built during the eighteenth
century and the buildings of the rich classes in Beirut in
the late nineteenth century. The selection of this model is
far from being innocent; it has intellectual, political and
aesthetic assumptions.
This
choice make us look as if we are relinquishing our rich architectural
heritage, characterized by bifurcation and ability to benefit
from various influences, starting from the architectural models
inspired by Old Persian architecture to the new elements adapted
from the Italian architecture of the Renaissance. These influences
were merged with environmental and climatic conditions, the
characteristics of the social structure, and the ways of living,
to produce a complex body continuously developing.
Instead, our architectural
heritage today is confined to a rigid formation, something
like a ready made medical prescription, popularized as a simplistic
model all over Lebanon. In doing this, we seem as if eclectically
choosing isolated elements of our rich heritage to form something
similar to heritage but not actual heritage, while destroying
our real heritage.
This
might seem natural in a society recovering from civil war
and looking for signs to construct a unifying discourse. Other
societies have passed through a similar experience, whether
in France after the Second World War, when the Vichy regime
attempted to found principles of “local architecture” to ward
off a modern trend labeled “cosmopolitan,” or in the post-revolution
Soviet Union, when Stalin chose a neo-classic style of architecture
(imitating the model used by the nobility in Czarian Russia)
to lay down the basis of Socialist realism in architecture.
This development is merely a reaction, and if allowed to continue
it will soon lead to the deformation of heritage and its transformation
into a dead body of no use, except for producing static images
that shackle society’s dynamism and prohibit the creation
of expressive structures that conform with its development.
This
attitude seems to wear an appeasing stamp. On one hand, it
responds to the popular rejection of the commercialism that
marks most of the modern architectural production by meeting
the inclined interest in “traditional” forms, while at the
same it shows no hesitancy in sacrificing the actual heritage
for real estate speculation. Nevertheless, the “unifying”
function of this attitude remains a temporary development
that cannot replace a critical review of the relationship
between heritage and our current situation, defining the nature
of heritage, in both its traditional and modern forms, and
the role it can play in producing the space in which we live.
...we
should not perceive our heritage as mirrors reflecting
the masks we would like to hide our faces with, nor
as an idol we worship without ever daring to untangle
its mysteries. |
The
first thing we could learn from this review is how to invent
new rules to build upon our modern and present architectural
practices. Because of technological advances, the multiplicity
of resources available for the architect to build any imagined
form, and changes in the traditional ways of life which used
to form a specific framework for creativity, we are free today
from factors that used to limit our ability to create. At
the same time, we have lost all the rules and laws that once
protected us from the madness of greatness, as well as from
being taken over by the intoxication when we imagine that
we can haphazardly reproduce the world by the stroke of a
pen. The tendency towards imitating traditional forms represents
a retreat to stable positions in a world abounding with doubt
and lost confidence in almost everything. But it is possible
to understand the basis according to which traditional forms
were built, without necessarily having them demolished or
mechanically recreated, in order to work for a new modernism.
This
means that our architectural practice today should be critical,
that is a “resistant practice,” to use the expression of the
American critic Kenneth Frampton. Resistance practice means
a practice that is distinguished from the current trend generalizing
a universal culture increasingly marked by sluggishness and
superficiality, as well as from the pathological attachment
to exact traditional forms which emerge as obstacles to the
development of our societies. The strategic direction of such
resistance practice would be to produce a contemporary architectural
language to be formed out of restructuring elements indirectly
inspired by our indigenous characteristics.
This
is what our ancestors did when they created in the nineteenth
century the model of the “Traditional” Lebanese house with
the middle open living area. The architects of the Mandate
period had developed this model and produced the “yellow buildings,”
which used to represent a unique form of architecture compatible
with our environment and our way of life. The same thing was
done by pioneers of modernity in the early days of independence,
when they expressed through a distinguished language the development
of our society and the influence of modern technologies.
Today,
we have to reconnect this broken thread because of the promotion
of these vulgar architectural forms and the transformation
of architecture into a commodity removed from any value. We
also have to give back to architectural practice its poetic
energy, which is produced from interaction with the environment
and the social circumstances in which it grows.
Last
year, a dear friend paid me a visit and asked me to design
a building for him in one of the quarters of Beirut . His
only condition was that he wanted the building to be “different”
from anything that is being built today. I asked him about
the nature of the function of the building. He answered immediately:
“It is easy…. It will be like all these other apartments which
are being built everywhere.” So I answered: “If you want to
build apartments ‘like all the ones being built everywhere,’
how come you want the architecture of your building to be
different?”
Of
course, I understood what my friend meant. He wants me to
create a different exterior, to play with the facade and decorate
it so that it looks different from other buildings. But the
issue lies not simply in manipulating the decorative elements
and the exterior. The exterior becomes a secondary element
when considered part of a general framework that organizes
the structure of the building, defining the forms and the
shapes as well as the relationship of the building with the
surrounding general space, including streets and courtyards.
The exterior will also be secondary if compared with the goal
of creating unity within diversity instead of simply having
an accumulation of isolated buildings, and if it is connected
to the production of space for social relationships, a space
that connects and not separates.
We
can conclude from the study of our architectural heritage
(and the heritage of other cultures, since all architects
around the world face similar problems today) that we should
not perceive our heritage as mirrors reflecting the masks
we would like to hide our faces with, nor as an idol we worship
without ever daring to untangle its mysteries. We should instead
transform it into a living body that guides us constantly
whenever we lose direction, allowing us to produce an always
evolving modernity.
This
crisis of Arab architecture constitutes today a clear expression
of the crisis of contemporary Arab societies. It manifests
itself in the deadly search for iconic images and the transposition
of adapted forms from any style or age, glued together with
each other, accompanied by a clear inclination toward imitating
derivative/lineage forms in a superficial way. The crisis
also expresses itself in the dominance of intellectual confusion
and the loss of any methodology approaching the study of architecture.
The
early 1960s in the Arab countries were marked by architectural
tendencies whose proponents attempted reproducing the modern
architecture in the world in a mechanical form, without taking
into consideration that such architecture is not simply a
model that can be copied but rather the outcome of economic
and technological development of profound social dimensions.
Arab architectural production is dominated today by an approach
that is only concerned with the external appearance of buildings
and focuses only on the formalism of the form. Thus, there
is a spread of extravagant and conspicuous buildings, with
poor taste being the common feature of most local production.
Baghdad
of the 1980s was jam-packed with arches as if the arched buildings
were in a contest, a phenomenon unleashed by a governmental
decision to use the “Abassid” arches in governmental buildings.
This resulted in an intellectual boredom and an architectural
tarnish that stretched across streets, quarters, and public
plazas. A similar trend is sweeping most of the Arab world
today, where we witness the “fashion” of adding forms called
“Arabic” or “Islamic” on all buildings without any regard
for the resulting paradox in the formalism of these forms,
nor in their incompatibility with the nature of these buildings
and their function, the used technology of production, and
even the surrounding environment.
The
generalization of this vulgar pattern in dealing with traditional
forms (which is dealt with as if it is a magical recipe that
adds this “Eastern” flavor to buildings) cannot be separated
from the general tendency towards the hegemony of intellectual
trends from the Gulf countries, where Western technology is
being consumed in its most modern forms while most societies
are still preserving their traditional, pseudo-tribal structures.
The
phenomenon common to all Arab societies, including attachment
to traditional forms and the sanctification of the past, are
merely masks that hide the ghastly paradox in which these
societies live. These masks have a clear social and political
function. They allow the dominant groups to open up to the
world market without allowing this opening to upset the base
of their traditional authority. It also allows for the renewal
of the dependency of Arab architecture on dominant Western
thought, in that it remains chained to the complex of traditional
forms without the capability of recreating these forms within
an all encompassing understanding of their relationship to
modernity. This is the necessary condition to produce a contemporary
thought capable of universal dimensions.
Today
we have to cut this umbilical cord. At the same time, we have
to liberate ourselves from the problem of clinging to traditional
forms and from the inferiority complex towards world modernity.
This requires that we structure a new practice for the profession
of architecture. This practice should be capable of combating
the culture of authority and its official conduct as well
as its drift behind the dominant market powers. Thus, on the
one hand, we need to abandon the “rhetorical discourse” which
is often used in dealing with traditional architecture, an
approach which in turn freezes heritage and simply transforms
it into an empty formal framework. The new practice also demands
the creation of an architectural language based on expressive
forms free from dominant intellectual frameworks dictated
by the mechanics of the market.
In
a lecture about the novel in the Third World, delivered at
the University of Colombia, Elias Khoury called for the discovery
of new forms of language, forms connected with speech, and
that “what is considered unfit for writing to be thus left
outside traditional rehetoric.” Discovering these forms will
allow for opening up the language of literature and the structure
of novels to accept diversity, and to help to establish a
real relationship with history ungoverned by historical mythology.
This
literary analogy helps us to understand the process of establishing
a resistant architectural practice. Abstract architectural
forms have no meaning if they do not answer to the social
demands and the actual needs of the inhabitants, and are not
connected with their declared, unconscious or even their repressed
desires. These needs and demands do not appear clearly, initially,
since they are subject to various kinds of change and transformation.
These needs could be hidden behind various masks which could
cause obliteration and distortion. Societies that undergo
quick transformations are prone to interference by the ideologies
of the dominant classes for the purpose of producing illusionary
needs reflecting the orders of the political authority and
the mechanics of the market forces.
Th
e essential beginning for laying down the basis of a contemporary
Arabic architecture free from dead forms lies today in a rediscovery
of the usually actual and hidden social necessities. As speech
constitutes a margin allowing popular literature to free itself
from the culture of authority and the rhetoric of repression
to insure uninterrupted living, an equivalence exists in the
field of architecture, where there is a space through which
society expresses its living needs without disguising them
in rhetorical mechanisms or cultural power backgrounds.
This
space is being created outside of professional architectural
practices and appears in the forms that are built spontaneously
in the suburbs or in some of the rural areas, thus remaining
on the margin of institutional architecture and dominant market
forces. However, these formations do not constitute “architecture”
in the real sense of the word, since they are usually characterized
by obscurity, improvisation, and ugliness. Yet, they express
the reality of life and the persistent needs which usually
are excluded from the interests of official culture.
By
paying attention to these marginal formations, studying how
they are formed, and discovering their expression of the living
needs that are in demand, we may find the defect in the current
structure. We can then start building a new architectural
practice that searches for a historical connection that is
the antithesis of the repressive continuum imposed by the
dominant official culture.
Doesn’t
this lead us to fall in the trap of nostalgia for spontaneous
forms of building and the illusion of “purity” that preceded
the introduction of modernity into our world? The only solution
is to go back to simple things, to the details, to the land,
the location and the atmosphere, and to the everyday needs
of the people and the way they interact with their environment.
When we have an architecture that creates appropriate solutions
for every condition and every location, then we can avoid
falling into new illusions and the mythology of lost purity
and authenticity. We can then be freed from the schizophrenic
conditions we live in today, flee the nightmare of imitating
frozen traditional forms, and rid ourselves of our inferiority
complex towards world culture. Then the Arab architect will
be able to move from one condition to the other in his or
her relationship with global thought, and produce local and
contemporary elements which insure a living connection, surpassing
the illusion of myth to discover a world open to diversity
and to continuously renewable authenticity.
Translated
from the Arabic by Zeina M. Zaatari
These
articles appeared in Al Jadid, Vol. 4, Nos. 25 and 26 (Summer
and Fall 1998)
Translation
Copyright ©1998 by Al Jadid
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