Syrian archives images of vulnerable Old Damascus

DAMASCUS-Strolling through the alleyways of war-torn Syria's capital, Rania Kataf snaps photos of the city's famed houses, capturing their nooks and crannies for posterity.
After seeing how vulnerable they became during the country's devastating civil war, the 35-year-old began creating a digital archive of the buildings of Old Damascus.
"I was inspired by European photographers who tried to document buildings in their cities during the Second World War so architects could later rebuild part of them," she said.
The old city of the Syrian capital is famed for its elegant century-old houses, usually two stories built around a leafy rectangular courtyard with a carved stone fountain at its center.
Their many rooms usually include both a summer and a winter guest room, both looking out onto the courtyard.
While the capital has been largely spared the violence of Syria's almost 10-year war, several of these traditional homes have been abandoned by their owners or damaged in the conflict.
Some have even become home to families displaced by the fighting, who have settled in their high-ceilinged rooms and sometimes made slight alterations to their interiors.
In 2016, Kataf created a group on Facebook called Humans of Damascus, to which more than 22,000 Syrians from the capital have sent in photos of their homes.
"You don't need to be an expert to document something," she said.
Already her pictures are proving useful in restoration efforts.
Inside a palatial Ottoman-era home called Beit al-Quwatli, Kataf painstakingly captures shots of each section of an ornate wall, then scribbles in her notepad.
The building once belonged to the family of Syria's first post-independence president, Shukri al-Quwatli.
Part of the home collapsed in 2016 after rebel rocket fire nearby cracked its walls, but today the authorities and private partners are sprucing it up to turn it into a cultural institute.
In a large hall, workers in yellow vests and blue hard hats dust off long beams painted in dark green and gold, propped up on trestles.
Kataf's pictures of surviving features of the building will help as a reference as they repair the damage.
In 2013, UNESCO decided to add all six of Syria's World Heritage sites, including the Old Cities of Damascus and Aleppo and the ruins at ancient Palmyra, to its World Heritage in Danger list.
Kataf, who studied nutrition in Lebanon's capital Beirut, said she was spurred into action after seeing the conflict damage or destroy architectural gems elsewhere in Syria.
"I was scared the same would happen to Old Damascus, so I started to document as many of its details as I could," she said.
Agencies via Xinhua

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