A Promise

How does one begin to quantify the dead when they are in the hundreds of thousands? How does one begin to comprehend the sheer loss of life that the Syrian people have suffered in their quest for freedom and dignity? How does one remember? How does one vow never to forget?

In a quest to answer these impossible questions, we created the How Many More? Oral Memorial for Syria in 2014. The Oral Memorials are a series of temporal events designed to remember Syria’s dead by reading their names aloud in public spaces around the world. A Book of Syria’s Dead is the physical artifact of the How Many More? events. The books are a permanent, living, and growing document of the names of the thousands of Syrians we have lost since March 15, 2011. It is a list of death; a record of loss. Each name represents everything that person is or was supposed to be. As we record the thousands of names, our dead gain the weight of recognition that they deserved but were never granted. Within each name in this book, there is an embedded question: How many more?

Although it seems that Syrians cannot escape death, in this project we choose to face it, expose its cruelty, and honor the memories of those we lost to its brutal grip on Syria. Over the past decades, over several genocides in different countries, the international community solemnly vowed: Never again. With each name, we remind the world of that universal promise to protect innocent civilians; a promise that was not granted to Syrians.

We will continue to record and remember the names of the dead and ask, “How many more?” Until it stops. Until the books of Syria’s dead are complete and the last name is written on the last line.

This project is a testament of solidarity with the Syrian people who, like every other people in the world, deserve the right to freedom, dignity, and self-determination.

It is a promise to never forget the dead. It is a promise to never give up fighting for the living.

How Many More, Inc. is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization. 

Our Team

Lina Sergie
Lina SergieFounder
Lina Sergie Attar is CEO and Co-Founder of Karam Foundation. Sergie Attar is an architect and writer with degrees from the University of Aleppo, Rhode Island School of Design and Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Through her work leading Karam Foundation, Sergie Attar strives to develop innovative, effective, and technologically advanced ways to make the most impact for Syrians and their future. @amalhanano
Nada Hashem
Nada HashemFounder
Nada Hashem is a nonprofit professional dedicated to build positive and sustainable solutions for marginalized communities. Since 2011, she has served as a leader in community and international organizations dedicated to the ideals of the Syrian Revolution. Nada holds a Masters degree in Computer Information Systems with a concentration in Health Informatics from Boston University.
Kenan Rahmani
Kenan RahmaniFounder
Kenan Rahmani is a Syrian-American political and human rights activist, currently pursuing a law degree from American University in Washington, DC, and a masters in foreign policy. Kenan makes regular trips to Turkey and Northern Syria to work with civil society activists and deliver humanitarian assistance. He has been interviewed about Syria by news and radio outlets including: Aljazeera, CNN, Fox News, BBC, The New York Times, and The Washington Post. @KenanRahmani
Aya Samman
Aya SammanFounder
Aya Samman is the Communications Director at Karam Foundation. She received her B.A. in Communications and Arabic Studies from DePaul University. Aya is currently pursuing her Masters degree in Public Policy and Humanitarian Studies. She finds humbling gratitude in being a part of a powerful community of the Syrian-American youth who work tirelessly at giving a voice to the voiceless, and honor to the names of human beings who have been reduced to forgotten numbers.

Our Partners & Supporters