Ammar Azzouz’s essay for “Where Heritage Meets Violence” traces ways of resisting memoricide: the killing of memory. Azzouz examines how memoricide has affected Syrians throughout the last decade of war and displacement, including through their exclusion from telling their own stories. But he also shows how Syrians have sought to restore their past, celebrate culture, and counter destruction by using memory as hope.
Ammar Azzouz
Ammar Azzouz is a London-based architect, artist, and writer. He has been working at Ove Arup & Partners, London since 2017, and in 2019, he joined the University of Oxford as a Short-Term Research Associate. Azzouz completed his PhD in architecture at the University of Bath, UK. He is also a collective member at CITY academic journal and an editor at Arab Urbanism. His work has been published on several platforms including the Independent, the New Statesman, and the Architects’ Journal. His book on domicide, the killing of home, will be published by Bloomsbury in 2023.