Financial District gets a colorful monument honoring its roots as ‘Little Syria’

Catalina Gonella, Gothamis, 30 April 2026
A newly unveiled permanent public artwork in Lower Manhattan that was more than a decade in the making pays homage to the historic “Little Syria” community that once thrived there.
 
The city parks department on Thursday revealed the multipart monument, named “Al Qalam: Poets in the Park,” by French Moroccan artist Sara Ouhaddou. The piece, which is located inside Elizabeth H. Berger Plaza in the Financial District, honors what officials described as New York’s first Arabic-speaking community, which took root from the 1880s to the 1940s, and its literary legacy.
 
The monument's centerpiece is a bright yellow 3D sculpture — a visual representation of the Arabic word “al-qalam,” or “the pen,” in an abstract alphabet created by Ouhaddou. The piece is covered in mosaics, along with plaques naming the writers it honors.
 
Two long, curved mosaic-covered backrests in the same shade of bright yellow were added to existing stone benches located south of the sculpture. They showcase excerpts from the work of nine writers in Ouhaddou’s colorful calligraphy, including Elia Abu Madi, Nasib Arida and Kahlil Gibran.
 
The Washington Street Historical Society, which championed the artwork, also created an augmented-reality app to accompany the installation, allowing visitors to point their phones at the mosaic and hear or read the excerpt in Arabic and English.
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