The Jewish Quarter or “Mellah” of Essaouira, Morocco, was once a bustling port town known as Mogador, then the heart of a large Sephardic community. While it remains a pilgrimage site for many descendants of Moroccan Jews, its built heritage is under threat of demolition due to both neglect and the increasing demands of its tourism industry. Following its inclusion on the 2018 World Monuments Watch and the conclusion of this heritage documentation work in early 2020, this presentation seeks to describe and reflect upon this interpretive experience at World Monuments Fund, with emphasis on how to navigate the process of uncovering key themes through the oral histories recorded during site visits. Translation of these oral histories of a historically excluded part of the Jewish diaspora into a comprehensive yet digestible story was a team effort, and the final results of the research, including web slideshows and an interactive web map, allow for the wider dissemination of these significant personal histories. Today these sites within the Mellah remain as a testament to the history and possibility of peaceful coexistence between religions in Morocco.
Adam is an urban planner, heritage conservationist, and graduate student in the Architecture PhD program at UCLA AUD. His research engages the intersection of critical heritage studies and migration studies, with applied research experience from projects based in Ethiopia, Finland, Spain, Haiti, Palestine, and Morocco. He is a graduate of the dual M.S. in Urban Planning and Historic Preservation program at Columbia University and has taught GIS coursework at Barnard College. At UCLA, he also works as a Research Associate at cityLAB.