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The Zoo on the Road to Nablus: A Story of Survival from the West Bank - A Review by Jim Miles
This tale from the West Bank operates at several levels. Nominally it is about one man Dr. Sami Khader and his attempts to sustain the dream of having an internationally approved zoo in the town of Qalqilya in the West Bank.
Almost completely surrounded by the infamous wall, impoverished
by the conditions of the Israeli occupation, Qalqilya would seem to be
one of the least likely places in which to sustain this dream. By
keeping this intriguing narrative on a basic descriptive level, an
anecdotal history of current events, Amelia Thomas reveals not only the
pathos of the situation, but also the indominatable will to survive
for both the human and animal menagerie and the humour and everyday
ordinariness of those involved.
It took a few chapters to
become fully involved in the work, perhaps more so as my expectations
were not in line with the essential point of the story. But then
having realized that this truly was the story of one man and his
efforts to sustain his dream, and not a political or religious tract, I
let the story speak for itself.
First of all, its peaks of Dr.
Sami Khader and the people that he interacts with. Dr. Khader is an
unpretentious veterinarian trying to create a zoo with minimal
resources. His character is softened by the patience of his wife Sarah
and the pleasure that his first-born daughter Uzhdan provides with her
desire for knowledge and education. At first seemingly aloof and
single-minded, his character grows on the reader as his humour,
compassion, sensitivity, stubbornness and positive thinking create a
likable if eccentric -eccentric by nature, as who would conceive of a
zoo under the conditions present in Qalqilya character. The other
characters are the many people employed at the zoo, the municipal
politicians, and the visitors received at the zoo ranging from the
Cairo zookeeper and the many school children from the local area to the
donkey lady, and the lion lady too.
It is the interactions
with these many other people that provide the comedy of the story.
There are comic elements throughout, not the staged studio laugh comedy
familiar to most North Americans via Hollywood, but a comedy of the
absurd and ironic. There is the donkey lady, who having heard about
the deplorable conditions at the zoo through an animal rights group,
visited in order to ensure the safety of the donkeys: not much concern
for the residents of Qalqilya itself, but particularly grieved by the
donkeys - worn out from a life of toil and labour - being led to the
butcher house to be fed to the zoos carnivores. Following her comes
the photographer lady, looking for a story of some kind, finding
herself in a very unfamiliar world.
She comments about the spent
shells and grenades not looking very biological, and provokes Dr.
Khaders reply to her pronouncement about Bill Gates greatness that It
must have been a different man. It was only very little money.
The
latter comment also reveals a second level to the story, that of the
political situation within the greater world around them, the
confinement and deprivations of the people of Qalqilya that they have
to take in stride every day. Understated throughout the work, the
reader cannot help but form a picture of the human zoo that is Qalqilya
and the West Bank, wherein zoos provide, as stated by one of the
characters, the illusion of freedom. Perhaps it is too much to read
into the book, but at that level the story becomes a metaphor, maybe
unintended but certainly accessible, of the conditions under which the
people of Qalqilya live and their apparently normal responses to
them.
Going to prison, arrested in the middle of the night, is
an unscheduled leave of absence from work. Dr. Khader wished to
purchase a car a newish model, just two decades old. The seeming
indolence of the workers reconstructing parts of the zoo covers their
need for employment after being cut off from their former Israeli work
at the same time keeping them on the UN dole, money often not
forthcoming for months at a time. Obtaining permission to travel
requires both extensive time and effort either within the West Bank or
especially to another country, as Dr Khader journeys to the Giza Zoo in
Cairo, where he views both the poverty and opulence of that city,
leaving him wishing ironically for the quiet and slower speed of his
home town.
Metaphor meets reality: as Dr. Khader prepares to
leave Cairo he is questioned by a friend Muhammed Badur who had left
Palestine for Cairo: But how can you call that place your home, when
you are trapped inside it like a cage? Khaders reply is that home
is the place where you have everything you need.
Home.
Illusions of freedom. Everything you need. The Zoo on the Road to
Nablus works at several levels and, beyond the entertainment value of
the story, leaves the reader wondering about the struggle and the will
to survive under deplorable conditions.
Jim Miles
is a Canadian educator and a regular contributor/columnist of opinion
pieces and book reviews for The Palestine Chronicle. Miles work is
also presented globally through other alternative websites and news
publications.
Amelia Thomas
Public Affairs, New York, 2008
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