City of thorns Nine lives in the world's largest refugee camp

Ben Rawlence

Book - 2016

A researcher for Human Rights Watch describes the refugee camp in Dabaab, home to those fleeing civil war in Somalia, and highlights the life of various residents, including a former child soldier, a schoolgirl and a youth leader. --Publisher

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Subjects
Published
New York : Picador [2016]
Language
English
Main Author
Ben Rawlence (author)
Physical Description
xvi, 384 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781250067630
  • Maps
  • The Residents of Dadaab Who Appear in the City of Thorns
  • Prologue
  • Part 1. Ma'a Lul - Famine
  • 1. The Horn of Africa
  • 2. Guled
  • 3. Maryam
  • 4. Ifo
  • 5. Nisho
  • 6. Isha
  • 7. Hawajube
  • 8. A Friday in Nairobi
  • 9. Maiden Voyage
  • 10. The Silent March
  • 11. Muna and Monday
  • 12. Live from Dadaab
  • 13. Billai
  • Part 2. Rob - Rain
  • 14. Kidnap
  • 15. The Jubaland Initiative
  • 16. Tawane
  • 17. Heroes Day
  • 18. Kheyro
  • 19. Police! Police!
  • 20. Nomads in the City
  • 21. We Are Not Here to Impose Solutions from Afar
  • 22. Y = al-Shabaab
  • 23. Buufis
  • 24. Grufor
  • 25. In Bed with the Enemy
  • Part 3. Guri - Home
  • 26. Crackdown!
  • 27. The Stain of Sugar
  • 28. Becoming a Leader
  • 29. Too Much Football
  • 30. The Night Watchmen
  • 31. Sugar Daddy
  • 32. Italy or Die Trying
  • 33. Waiting for the Moon
  • 34. Eid El-Fitr
  • 35. Solar Mamas
  • 36. Knowledge Never Expires
  • 37. Welcome to Westgate
  • 38. Westgate Two
  • 39. A Lap Dance with the UN
  • 40. A Better Place
  • Epilogue
  • Notes
  • Further Reading
  • Acknowledgements
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* The saga of Dadaab refugee camp in northern Kenya, the City of Thorns of the title, reveals the sort of intersection between humanity's greatest nightmares and triumphs that seems to belong more to fiction than to the real world. That Rawlence has managed to capture so much of this unlikely city's chaos and confusion in a narrative that is very nearly impossible to put down is an achievement in reportage that few have matched. Dadaab's half a million residents could not have asked for a better champion than this researcher for Human Rights Watch, and while the facts and figures he shares are stunning, it is the nine individuals whose stories he focuses on who give the book its heart. Their nearly insurmountable struggle for the most basic of human dignities, the right to work and love and live in peace, will make readers yearn to know more about the politics of international aid and the rights of refugees. Comparisons to Katherine Boo's Behind the Beautiful Forevers (2012) are spot-on. Rawlence has written a book that just might change the world or, at the very least, awaken readers to one criminally forgotten corner of it. A tour de force.--Mondor, Colleen Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Rawlence (Radio Congo), who worked in Africa for Human Rights Watch between 2006 and 2012, brings to horrifying life the conditions in the U.N.-administered refugee camp in Dadaab, a town in northern Kenya. By combining his own experiences with interviews with residents of Dadaab, he makes the human rights crisis-rarely covered in the media-vivid and immediate for readers. Rawlence delves into the stories of nine people, putting particular emphasis on Guled, who was born in Mogadishu in 1993 at the same time as the downing of two American Black Hawk helicopters. Rawlence describes how the Black Hawk wreckage became a play area for Guled, foreshadowing his life of deprivation and struggle, mostly within the confines of Dadaab. These and other telling details will resonate with readers long after they finish the book. Rawlence eloquently expresses his moral outrage at the conditions Guled and others endure, as when he notes that a "refugee camp has the structure of punishment without the crime," running on "visibility and control-the same principles that guide a prison." This is a compelling examination of the tragedy of a place where one "can only survive... by imagining a life elsewhere." 5 b&w maps. Agent: Sophie Lambert, Conville & Walsh (U.K.). (Jan.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Rawlence (Radio Congo) humanizes the refugee experience in East Africa by focusing on a cross-section of nine refugees from Dadaab, a camp in Kenya close to the border of Somalia that began in 1992 and has grown to the size of Atlanta, with nearly half a million residents. During the 2011 famine in that region, 260,000 people in Dadaab died. Rawlence focuses on this theoretically impermanent shelter for refugees that has become a permanent home for families, for child soldiers forced into the militant al-Shabaab Somalian group linked to al-Qaida, and for the NGOs and UN workers managing the relief work there. The situation in the camp and the surrounding countries is complex and somewhat unknown to American readers. Rawlence effectively penetrates this complexity by exploring Dadaab through the lives of nine of its residents, all of whom have hopes, are beginning families or are struggling to feed and care for them, are trying to get access to more education, and are resisting the financial stability offered by fundamentalist militias such as al-Shabaab. VERDICT Essential for humanists, those who are contemplating the struggles of refugees worldwide, and those interested in how humanitarian aid and other international efforts impact those in the midst of crisis. [See Prepub Alert, 7/20/15.]-Candice Kail, Columbia Univ. Libs., New York © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Former Human Rights Watch researcher Rawlence (Radio Congo: Signals of Hope from Africa's Deadliest War, 2012) tells the distressing story of Kenya's vast Dadaab refugee camp, where nearly 500,000 people fleeing civil war in nearby Somalia live in a "teeming ramshackle metropolis" the size of Atlanta. Drawing on hundreds of interviews conducted during a series of extended visits to Dadaab since 2010, the author plunges readers into this hellish city of "mud, tents and thorns," where three generations of displaced persons have lived amid malnourishment and disease. With remarkable intimacy, Rawlence recounts the stories of nine individuals, including Guled, a former child soldier, and his wife, Maryam; Nisho, who finds work as a porter; and Muna, a beautiful, independent woman who was one of the first Somalis to arrive in the camp. As he weaves this complex, densely detailed narrative, Rawlence reveals the humanity of these people in crisis who must struggle to survive in the overcrowded camprun by the Kenyan government with United Nations fundingwhere bribery, rape, robbery, kidnapping, and cultural clashes are commonplace. While Kenyan leaders demonize the refugees and want them out, local politicians, military, and police all benefit from exploiting the refugees in Dadaab and in Somalia. For their part, those living in the camp remain mired in "a culture centered on leaving"; they long to resettle in Canada, the United Statesany country that will take them. "There was a crime here on an industrial scale," writes the author, who intersperses his story to cover outbursts of international concern, evinced by visiting celebrities and TV reporters and meetings of international and humanitarian-aid leaders striving to understand the "refugee crisis." The disjuncture between the harsh realities of life in the camps and the view from the boardrooms of world power centers is extraordinary and damning. A significant, timely, and gloomy tale that reveals the human costs of a growing world crisis. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.