The Casbah of Algiers: an Imperiled Heritage

The Casbah's homes, shops, and other structures, built over centuries with traditional methods and materials, require constant maintenance. Above, braces support a wall in the lower Casbah.
Almost every first-time visitor to the Casbah, the walled historic quarter of Algiers, has the same reaction upon entering: "Wow, this place is amazing." And in almost every case, a second reaction follows right after: "But it sure is in bad shape."

Those were my own reactions on my first visit, during one of my early trips to Algiers. Since moving here two years ago, I've found many more opportunities to explore the Casbah, including some in just the last few weeks. Even today, every time I enter the place, those same two thoughts keep dueling in my head.

* * *

For centuries, the Casbah was Algiers. As I have written before (See "Come With Me To The Casbah"), the old city was the epicenter of Algerian culture and history, and the heart of the resistance against the French colonizers. Even today, the
mere mention of its name stirs nostalgia in the heart of many Algerians, particularly those from Algiers. Today, devotees maintain Facebook pages solely to share old black-and-white photos from the Casbah's glory days: the steep streets filled with robed merchants, shoppers picking their way among the wares, workers driving donkeys or carrying bricks, and children playing on the stairways.

Fast forward to 2015. Some of the houses, with their naturally lit open courtyards, claustrophobic stairwells, and rooftop terraces, are still occupied. Satellite dishes, geraniums in window boxes, and laundry still hang here and there above the narrow alleyways, but it hardly resembles the Casbah's heyday.

Despite holding protected status as a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1982, today the Casbah is disintegrating. A widely cited estimate is that one third of the Casbah's structures have collapsed. Walk the streets today and it's an easy figure to believe; tumbled houses are all around, and the narrow, once-bustling alleyways of many sectors are now all but empty.

Why? One reason is that in recent decades, many longtime residents have left to seek their fortunes elsewhere. Some of the houses left behind are rented to tenants uninterested in investing in their upkeep, many others are split between dozens of inheritors and thus effectively frozen (a common problem not just in the Casbah, but across Algeria), and others still have simply been abandoned.

As more structures crumble, neglect spreads. One house slumps onto another as it slowly collapses. Few residents have the will—much less the financial means—to fix their house while all those around it crumble. (In the interconnected web of the Casbah, after all, the collapse of one house weakens all its neighbors.) Builders with the know-how to repair the traditional wood and mortar constructions are a dying breed. Tumbled houses become repositories for trash; children play among the garbage in every empty lot. More buildings fall, people die.

* * *

None of this is news. The alarm bells have been sounding for years, particularly in Algeria (e.g. Babzman article) but also abroad (e.g. New York Times or AFP articles, or the Smithsonian piece that first piqued my interest in the Casbah).

So what's being done about it?

The Algerian government has announced initiatives to spend some of its oil riches to preserve the Casbah, but seems forever wrapped up in planning processes that have produced few visible results. (See a recent summary here.) Under current tourism, the handful of tourists who visit Algeria each year aren't nearly sufficient to entice new investment into the Casbah (in the way that neighboring Morocco's ancient medinas, for example, have been preserved and revived by the tourism industry). Strict regulations on foreign investment block them anyway. UNESCO and the EU manage to mobilize modest sums for restoration projects, helping to finance the scaffolding and joists that brace the Casbah's least stable structures, but are fighting a losing battle against the effects of time. Neighborhood associations and local NGOs have had little success in fundraising for restoration or organizing residents in meaningful ways. The pleas of concerned preservationists and academics either go unheard or get little reaction.

A year ago, I turned up for a cleanup day I saw advertised on Facebook. The local environmental group that organized it rallied several dozen volunteers for two consecutive Saturdays, during which we put one trash-strewn lot through a total transformation, preparing it for conversion into a park:
An immediate before/after comparison of the cleanup effort.
This action was sufficiently unusual to merit national news coverage:



When I returned six months later, the lot's reconversion to a garbage heap was well under way. Knowing what I will find, I haven't had the heart to return since:
Perhaps others will have more success sustaining improvements. On a visit to Algiers in November 2014, Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan—in a nod to the Casbah's Ottoman past—pledged his country's financial support for restoration of the Ketchaoua Mosque, in the lower Casbah, with potentially more projects to come.

* * *

Despite these modest efforts, the deterioration continues. After exploring the Casbah a bit, few would likely conclude that it has serious protectors.

The longstanding neglect—perhaps unsurprisingly—breeds mixed reactions among Algerians, ranging from remorse to contempt to recriminations to conspiracy theories. One activist made an emotional video titled "The Casbah: downtrodden, forsaken, and scorned… where did the billions go?" Another penned a screed blaming the destruction on the Casbah's modern residents, who have failed to "master the efficient organization system" of its traditional inhabitants. And one close Algerian friend of mine, who hails from a family that has lived in Algiers for generations, is certain that the government is deliberately neglecting the Casbah, because it symbolizes the rich cultural heritage of the capital, not of the nation at large. Because so many of the country's leaders come from other regions, he assures me, they don't want to invest in reviving Algiers.

* * *

What do I think of all this? No doubt, watching an irreplaceable piece of the world's cultural heritage slowly crumble before your eyes is sad.

But as an outsider in Algeria, my position is a delicate one; my pointing the finger, no matter who I might blame for this sad state of affairs, won't help anyone. Instead, I try to focus on positive actions, like helping with the cleanup day, or sharing my photos of the Casbah (as I did in the recent exposition "The Casbah of Algiers, from Yesterday to Today") and encouraging others here and around the world to visit and appreciate this very special place without delay.

Timeless as it may seem, the Casbah may not be around forever.
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