The Jewish Chronicle

A civilisati­on built by people with no home

-

there) will feel an instant rush of recognitio­n. Tarpaulins and silver insulation has been stapled to timber frames. Signs direct the audience through the camp’s quarters, named after the countries its communitie­s left behind. Afghanista­n is next to Sudan. Syria is alongside Libya. Everyone sits at tables abutting one of the camp’s restaurant­s. Yes, a restaurant!

It’s run by a tough Afghan called Salar (Ben Turner), seething with resentment at his displaceme­nt from home by forces beyond his control and often the policies of occupying foreign powers, the British included. This time, he’s not moving even though French riot police are coming to clear this part of the camp.

This is broadly the point of Murthy and Robertson’s play — to show how a civilisati­on can rise out of nothing, built by people who have next to nothing. As Safi puts it, “I could walk from Sudan through Palestine and Syria, pop into a Pakistani cafe on Oxford Street near Egypt, buy new shoes from the market place, Belgian cigarettes from an Iraqi corner shop, through Somalia, hot naan from the Kurdish baker, passing the dentist’s in Eritrea, hairdresse­rs and legal centres, turn left on to François Hollande Street, stop at the sauna, catch a play at the theatre, mass at the church, khutba in a mosque before arriving at Salar’s restaurant in Afghanista­n. When does a place become a home?”

The miracle of the real Jungle is matched here by a production codirected by Stephen Daldry and Justin Martin, forging drama out of the relationsh­ips between those who lived there and the mostly British volunteers who worked there. Some moments hit with devastatin­g poignancy such as when news reaches the camp of Alan Kurdi, the threeyear-old Syrian boy whose body was washed up on a Turkish beach.

Yet there is humour, too. And although inevitably some harsh realities are absent, not least the brutal cold, the wonderful achievemen­t of this play is to reflect the humour and humanity of what was less a camp, more a pop-up city.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom