How Much Is Enough?: Culture Shift
- Gaza, a Surprising Model for Urban Living
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Gaza, a Surprising Model for Urban Living
Gaza has been forced to rely on high-efficiency solutions for political reasons. Soon, the rest of the world will have to do so for climate-related reasons.
In 2013, I left a small cafe in Bologna, Italy, and decided to take a long walk around the ancient city. This would be a dusky 诲茅谤颈惫别, a situationist drifting through this and that street with no direction or plan in mind. After about 15 minutes, I stumbled into a section of the city whose streets and buildings seemed more compressed than the rest. I stopped and looked around to make sense of this dramatic spatial change.
I had clearly entered a distinct section of Bologna, but what was it? An investigation revealed, by way of a sign for tourists such as myself, the answer. This was what remained of a medieval ghetto.
In the middle of the 16th century, Pope Paul IV forced, by papal power, all the Jews of Bologna to live in this small section of the city because they were… Jews. The ghetto became a miniature of the rest of Bologna. Space became of the essence here. As I walked the streets of what was one of the world鈥檚 oldest ghettos, I kept trying to imagine how small the capital of this region of Northern Italy would be if it, too, were scaled down to this size. This line of thought led me to this conclusion: The density imposed on Jews by the Pope matched in appearance the ideal for urban life in the present age of rapid global warming.
In March 2021, the American University in Cairo Press and Terreform published , edited by the noted American urban scholar Michael Sorkin and the British urban geographer Deen Sharp. Sorkin, who is recognized in the architectural, urban planning, and critical theory community as one of the major voices of 20th century leftist urbanism, lost his life at age 71 to COVID-19, a year before the book was published. His co-editor, Sharp, is a geographer noted for his focus on urbanization in the Middle East. Their book is exceptional because it has no illusions about the everyday social and political conditions of the Gaza Strip, a small area on the eastern coast of the Mediterranean Sea that鈥檚 packed with 2 million Palestinian souls.
Over the past two decades, this area has become what many describe as an open-air prison. When not being bombed to bits, its contact with the outside world is increasingly restricted. Indeed, while I was reading Open Gaza in May 2021, Israel Defense Forces were bombing the city for the third time in a little under a decade. Hamas, one of the armed organizations within Gaza, initiated the war by firing rockets at Israel over an explosive policing-related crisis that the government, under the right-wing Benjamin Netanyahu, decided to downplay. At the end of the conflict, the dead on one side (the Gaza Strip) numbered 256; and those on the other (Israel), numbered 13.
Open Gaza remains relevant after the most recent Israel-Palestine war because the situation in that territory has not changed, with the exception of Netanyahu鈥檚 fall from power on June 13, 2021. Another explosive crisis could emerge and erupt, and Hamas and its allies could once again fire rockets at Israel, and Israel could once again drop bombs on Gaza City鈥檚 already crumbling buildings. Also, a blockade is still in effect, and there is no sign of an end to the city鈥檚 isolation enforced by the wall, surveillance, and economic restrictions.
The aim of the contributors to Open Gaza is the extension of a social justice program that the 20th century French urban theorist Henri Lefebvre called 鈥渢he right to the city.鈥 This means, in essence, ending the 鈥渟ick circular economy of destruction and reconstruction鈥 and suggesting 鈥渄irections in which a reimagined Gaza might grow and prosper,鈥 as Sorkin and Sharp write in their introduction. The book is so dense (geographical facts, graphs, images of everyday life, untold stories, recommendations, plans, speculations, outrage, calls to action) that it鈥檚 best read in the manner of a 诲茅谤颈惫别: Begin with the introduction, then read the chapters in any order (for me it was: 鈥淭imeless Gaza鈥 by Mahdi Sabbagh and Meghan McAllister, 鈥淔our Tunnels鈥 by Bint al-Sirhid, 鈥淪olar Dome鈥 by Chris Mackey and Rafi Segal, and 鈥淎rchitecture of the Everyday鈥 by Salem Al-Qudwa, and so on).
A weird thought entered my mind while in the book鈥檚 pages, a thought confirmed by this passage from one of the best essays in the collection, Absurd-City, Subver-City by Yara Sharif and Nasser Golzari:
鈥淪ubver-City … explores spatial means of reinhabiting the city. While looking at the many challenges and constraints that exist, we try to rethink reconstruction and the domestic space of the everyday, insisting on the importance of offering propositions that build on what is already there. While doing so, we use design to question the notion of 鈥榟ome,鈥 especially in a fractured city with exposed skin and fabric, where the relationship between the internal and external, the street and the room is now blurred. This reading of the city could create new typologies for inhabiting it.鈥
The thought of 鈥渘ew typologies for [habitation]鈥 is similar to what I was thinking when I left the Bologna ghetto. It鈥檚 the idea that resource stress imposed by political and cultural means has forced a response that is in fact ideal for life during the age of global warming.
Terreform, an urban research studio founded by Sorkin, offers this statistic in a city plan for Gaza presented in the book: Gaza has one-tenth of Israel鈥檚 ecological footprint, which is a stunning 鈥6.2 global hectares (gha) per capita.鈥 Meaning, 鈥渢he average Israeli uses 6.2 hectares to produce their resources, the largest number among nations in the OECD.鈥 (The average for the world as a whole is 2.7 hectares.) The inhabitants of the Gaza Strip are actually living by energy standards that, though imposed unfairly by military and economic constraints, should be considered realistic in a world whose urban population must consume far less energy, recycle more materials, and use renewable sources of power. Gaza has been forced to rely on these high-efficiency solutions for political reasons. Soon, the rest of the world will have to do so for climate-related reasons.
From Gaza we learn about what Helga Tawil-Souri, in her vivid essay 鈥淭he Internet Pigeon Network (IPN),鈥 calls 鈥渓ow-technologization.鈥 I call this 鈥減rogress without waste鈥 or 鈥渉orizontal advancement,鈥 as opposed to the 鈥渧ertical advancement鈥 programs that developing countries adopted mid-century to catch up with the West. The most viable future for Gaza is not the freedom to consume as much as Israel (all of its blood-earned lessons would be lost if such were the case). Instead, it鈥檚 developing ways from its present situation to consume in a manner that can mitigate the ever-mounting dangers of global warming.
This is what I call 鈥渓earning from Gaza.鈥
CORRECTION: This article was updated at 2.07 p.m. on 08/27/2021 to clarify that Gazans are forced to rely on high-efficiency solutions because of political reasons. Read our corrections policy here.
Charles Mudede
is a Zimbabwean-born cultural critic, urbanist, filmmaker, and lecturer. He is senior staff writer of The Stranger and teaches at Cornish College.
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