War ravages – yet
one family on the warfront still adopted an unusual pet – two lion cubs that
have been rescued from Gaza zoo by local refugees who have lifted the baby
lions from the claws of poverty.Mona and Alex, the adorable two-month-old lion
cubs, have been living with refugee SaadAldeen Al-Jamal and his six children at
their home in the Palestinian city of Rafah, in southern Gaza.The 54-year-old
father says he bought the cubs from the impoverished Rafah zoo and the unusual
pets have become an integral part of his family.
He is quoted as
saying that they pets are living inside the house just like the children. They
eat and drink inside the room and they have a bed that they both sleep on. They
also play football. Things are not rosy
– the majority of inhabitants of the conflict-hit city are refugees and poverty
affects humans and animals as well. Zoo
are no longer sustainable – in bad economy, there is little leisure activities,
people will not venture to zoo spending amount to see animals and owners of
zoos find it difficult to provide food for the animals. The new owners too would soon find it too
difficult as the cubs reportedly consume half a kilo of meat every day.The
family might be able to make the situation work for now, but once fully grown,
lions can weigh more than 400 pounds, or nearly 200 kilograms ~and cubs could
grow to become dangerous.
The pair - the
female, Mona, and her brother, Max - became well known across the Palestinian coastal
strip as al-Jamal took them to parks or the beach where children who were brave
enough would come up to pet them. Locals say the cubs' presence has elevated
spirits in the camp — a welcome change for residents who have suffered eight
years of a crippling economic blockade and a seemingly endless cycle of war
with Israel.
Ticket sales to
Fat'hi Zoo — which is home to the cubs' parents as well as hyenas, peacocks,
monkeys, kangaroos and more — total less than $102 per week. That’s hardly
enough to keep its doors open and animals fed, said its owner, Mohammed
Juma. Gaza is in dire economic straits
- Israel has enforced a strict economic
blockade on the Palestinian territory since 2007 — shortly after Hamas rose to
power — controlling Gaza's land borders, airspace and shores and limiting the
import of such necessities as food, gasoline and concrete. The blockade has
driven both costs and poverty to record highs and caused a complete economic
collapse.
Most of the zoo
animals in Gaza have been hauled into the isolated territory through smuggling
tunnels linking the territory to Egypt.In 2013, a pair of newborn lion cubs
died shortly after they were proudly unveiled by Gaza’s Hamas rulers. Gaza's militant Hamas rulers recently allowed a pair of lion cubs en route to a
wildlife sanctuary in Jordan back into the Palestinian coastal strip after the
animals and their entourage had been stuck for several hours on no-man's land
at a Gaza-Israel border crossing.Earlier in the day, the cubs were taken from
Gaza resident SaedEldin al-Jamal, who had kept them over a year as pets at his
family's home in the border town of Rafah, and transported to the Erez crossing
with Israel.By the time they arrived at the border, the Israeli side had closed
and the cubs remained on no-man's land after Hamas guards refused to let them
back into the Palestinian territory.But after several hours, Hamas allowed them
back in and the cubs' entourage checked into a Gaza hotel, together with the
lions in crates, to wait there until the Israeli crossing reopens later. The Israeli security branch responsible for
the crossings said the lions and their entourage showed up out of the blue
after the crossing had closed and without any prior coordination and
appropriate preparations, unlike in a previous case involving lions.
For
the pair Mona and Max, life is no bed of roses – lions do not live in
apartments and sleep on tiles – but inside the woods of Savanna on grass and
sand. As one thought so, here is a photo
from Daily Mail showing lions sleeping on trees at Serengeti !
In an unrelated
instance Hamas had given controversial
names to the two latest additions at its Bissan amusement park, African lion
cubs Fajr and Sjel. The brother and sister, were the offspring of lions smuggled from Egypt in
underground tunnels. The names give a
defiant message during the one-year anniversary of the eight-day conflict with
Israel in which more than 100 people - almost all Palestinians - were
killed.While Sjel - arabic for "clay" - is the name Hamas gave to the
conflict, Fajr - translated as "dawn" - is the name of the
Iranian-made missiles they fired at Israel.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
6th July
2o15.