
Publisher:
New York : Picador, [2016]
ISBN:
9781250067630
1250067634
1250067634
Branch Call Number:
967.7305 Rawl
Characteristics:
xvi, 384 pages : maps



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Add a CommentListening to the stories of 9 refugees living in the largest refugee camp in the world will inform your understanding of the difference between immigrants and refugees. Dadaab, in northern Kenya is a UN sponsored refugee camp metropolis the size of New Orleans! The book is well-researched and well-written. I recommend listening to the downloadable audio and reading the book to see the maps and spellings of names and places.
An insightful portrait of Dadaab, a refugee camp of more than 600,000 people in northern Kenya, told through the stories of nine vulnerable people, mostly from Somalia, living in limbo. The author was with Human Rights Watch and spent many months in the camp. A wake-up call to the suffering of others. Well-done.
This is simply stunning. Since Hennepin County is fortunate enough to enfold many thousands of these refugees, could the library please pick up a few more copies of this book? It's a slow, demanding read, and I want to finish it.
The tragic backgrounds of the people consigned to life in the camps are the result of inter-tribal wars that have occurred relentlessly and drought. Rawlence does a wonderful job in humanizing some of the victims. With religious fanaticism, rampant government corruption and greed, there would appear to be no solution to the refugees of Dadaab and other such camps.
'Life was only a process of waiting'.
An eye opening account of what life really is like in the world's largest refugee camp. Ben Rawlence exposes the dramas and politics of Dadaab located in the desert of northern Kenya.
Overall, this was an informative and capitivating read. As the world's refugee crisis is only getting worse, due in part experts say to global warming, I would highly recommend this book.
'There was a crime here on an industrial scale: confining people to a camp, forbidding them to work, and then starving them; people who had come to Dadaab fleeing famine in the first place.'
The stories of nine people living in the camp are told from their intimate perspectives and bring you right inside a place of extreme hardship. It is easy to forget that these people love their families and want to achieve good things in their lives just like anyone else. By the mere fact of the place in the world they are born, they have such tragically limited opportunities for even the basic ability to provide for themselves and their loved ones. It is hard to read about the political machinations that go on, the horrible conditions that are just life as usual for the refugees because of the greed of powerful individuals. Even worse are the bad judgments that happen from misconceptions or just lack of knowledge.
This was a very well-written book. The narrative drew me in and kept me reading in spite of the complicated political background and emotionally rough subject matter. Rawlence seems to have a very good understanding of the world of the UN and NGOs, as well as strong empathy for the residents of Dadaab.