National Post

‘Strange parallel universe’

INSIDE THE WORLD’S LARGEST REFUGEE CAMP, WHERE THE TEMPORARY HAS BECOME PERMANENT

- Richard Warnica

By the t i me Ben Rawlence made his first trip to Dadaab — the world’s largest refugee camp, in northeast Kenya — he thought he knew what to expect. The former British political aide was working as a researcher for Human Rights Watch, an organizati­on that uses refugee camps to access and interview the victims of war crimes.

But what struck Rawlence about Dadaab were not the horror stories, of misery and rape and violence. “It was the soccer leagues. It was the primary school. It was the market.” In other words, that temporary world was made somehow permanent.

Not long after his first visit, Rawlence took a leave from Human Rights Watch; he eventually quit entirely to focus on a new project. Over the next four years, he made five more trips to Dadaab. In total, he spent about five months in the s prawling c amp, which stretches over 78 square kilometres and was home, by the end of 2015, to nearly half a million people.

The product of t hose visits is City of Thorns, a book about nine more or less typical lives in Dadaab. Rawlence followed a group of mostly young men and women through marriages, births, famine, and more. He wrote about their hopes, their hustles and their seemingly intractabl­e problems.

City of Thorns, released last week, hit shelves at a moment of rare prominence for refugee issues. It landed amid ongoing political debates over what to do with the historic flow of refugees fleeing the Syrian civil war.

It is, on one level, a cautionary tale. Dadaab was set up in 1991 to hold 80,000 refugees from the Somali civil war. But over the years, as that conflict evolved, the refugees stayed, and their numbers swelled. The original residents reproduced and new ones joined them, from Somalia, Sudan, Congo, Ethiopia, Uganda and Rwanda, until Dadaab became, in Rawlence’s words, “a giant cosmopolit­an city made of mud tents and thorns.”

The camp costs a fortune in donations to operate. It’s overcrowde­d and violent and offers most residents little hope of improvemen­t, either through placement in a new country or permanent status in Kenya. Refugees are forbidden to work in that country, even at the camp itself. Many get by on what a mount to internship­s with aid agencies. Others work in the camp’s thriving black markets.

But t hose l ooking f or solutions in City of Thorns are liable to come away disappoint­ed. In an interview at his Canadian publisher’s office in Toronto, Rawlence, 41, said cheerily that there aren’t any, at least not any big structural ones that are likely to be implemente­d.

“Kenya is not suddenly going to become less xenophobic. The UN is not suddenly going to get less politicall­y intimidate­d. The regional strategy in the Horn of Africa is not going to change from being oriented by counter- terrorism priorities. None of that is going to shift.”

That’s not to say that nothing can be done for the refugees themselves. Rawlence’s focus in City of Thorns is intimate. And it’s on that micro scale that he believes change can occur. “There are ways of making life in the camp easier,” he said. “And there are ways of opening pathways for people to come out as well, through education and through private sponsorshi­ps.”

At times in City of Thorns Rawlence can seem quite harsh about the internatio­nal aid organizati­ons that operate in the camp. In one scathing scene, he described aid workers, with a famine looming, doing what “they usually did on a Friday,” leaving their air- conditione­d offices “at five o’clock sharp” and taking chauffeure­d cars to “some house party or restaurant glittering with laughter and money.”

At the s a me t i me, Rawlence said he has enormous sympathy for many of t hose s ame workers. “They’re in a terribly difficult situation,” he said. “They’re t r ying t o work within ( the system) to try to do good things. And they’re trying to retain their sense of self and sanity.”

In City of Thorns, though, the focus is rarely on those workers, or on Westerners of any kind. Instead Rawlence kept his lens squarely on the refugees such as Guled, a teen obsessed with Manchester United; on Muna and Monday, an interfaith couple whose romance enraged their tribes; and on Tawane, an ambitious leader reared in the camp.

“It’s this very strange parallel universe which I just found completely fascinatin­g,” Rawlence said. “It’s in the world but it’s not of the world. It’s not connected.”

‘IT’S IN THE WORLD BUT IT’S NOT OF THE WORLD.’

 ?? TONY KARUMBA / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? Former human rights researcher Ben Rawlence has written a book on his experience­s at the sprawling Dadaab refugee camp, north of the Kenyan capital, Nairobi.
TONY KARUMBA / AFP / GETTY IMAGES Former human rights researcher Ben Rawlence has written a book on his experience­s at the sprawling Dadaab refugee camp, north of the Kenyan capital, Nairobi.
 ??  ?? Ben Rawlence
Ben Rawlence

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