Dounia and the magic seeds

Marya Zarif

Book - 2023

"Dounia is the story of a little girl who loves her home city of Aleppo, Syria, and its many smells, sights, and traditions. But when war breaks out, Dounia and her grandparents must flee Aleppo to find safety. Before they go, their neighbour reads their future in a cup of coffee - she sees a long difficult journey ahead of the family and a blue house awaiting them at the end. Taking only a bird carved from Aleppo soap and four little barake seeds in her pocket, Dounia faces dangerous waters, a camp surrounded by barbed wire, and unfriendly soldiers, and she wonders where she and her family belong in the world. Remembering the ancient knowledge that barake seeds ward off evil, she pulls one from her pocket to use for each of the threat...s they face. Magically, the seeds from their faraway home help them along their way, until they finally find the blue house at the end of their journey. In her new home, Dounia plants her final seed in a pot so it can grow and offer more seeds, while also keeping a piece of Aleppo with her. The baraké seeds represent the Syrian culture -- although Dounia is fleeing her country, she carries with her the strength of her people. It is by tapping into her roots, represented by the seeds, that she finds her own strength and resilience. The magical moments brought about by the baraké seeds can be interpreted as Dounia's imagination - it's a way of seeing the war and the migration from a six-year-old's perspective. Dounia does not understand everything that is going on, but she is not a powerless victim. By using the seeds, she feels she is taking an active part in her own destiny. In the end, whether it is magic or Dounia's imagination at play, it's a story about obstacles faced by migrants and about the courage they have in facing these obstacles. As Marya puts it in her article for TBI Magazine, it reverses the common narrative in North American media that "Syria" is synonymous with devastation and destruction, and that Syrian refugees can only be victims of their circumstance, rather than brave, vibrant heroes who can take charge of their own stories."--

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Children's Room Show me where

jE/Zarif
0 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jE/Zarif Due May 14, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
Toronto : Owlkids Books 2023.
Language
English
French
Main Author
Marya Zarif (author)
Other Authors
Yvette Ghione (translator)
Item Description
Translation of: Dounia.
Physical Description
32 unnumbered pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm
ISBN
9781771475235
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A young girl and her grandparents must leave war-torn Aleppo, Syria, to find a new home. Dounia, whose name means the world in Arabic, goes to the souk to get baraka seeds for her grandmother Teta Mouneh. The spice seller, Abdo, gives her the seeds and tells her they are magic. At home, her neighbor Mrs. Dabbouss reads the coffee grounds in Teta Mouneh's cup and foresees an arduous journey that will end with "a blue house in a bright white country." Teta tells Dounia to hold on to some of the seeds. One night, as the two of them dry eggplant on the roof, a bomb explodes in the courtyard, breaking windows, destroying the fountain, and killing Kiki, the family's pet canary. Jeddo Darwish, Dounia's grandfather, announces that they must leave and gives her a dove carved from soap. As they travel, Dounia realizes she still has several of the baraka seeds, and each time she tosses one, something happens to ease them along on their trek. In this tale translated from French, Zarif captures the perilous journey well, blending grim elements--travel by boat, barbed wire fences, soldiers--with the fantastical. The artwork has a whimsical feeling that makes the tough subject matter manageable. In an author's note, Zarif discusses her sadness at seeing the devastating of Aleppo, where she grew up, and her hopes for her people. (This book was reviewed digitally.) A moving refugee story laced with optimism and magic. (Picture book. 4-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.