Morocco's Extraordinary Donkeys
The author returns to Fez to explore the stubborn animal's central role in the life of this desert kingdom
- By Susan Orlean
- Photographs by Eric Sander
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2009, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
The Fondouk's original mission was to serve the working animals of Morocco, but long ago it began to dispense free care to all manner of living things, with the exception of cattle—a luxury in Morocco, and therefore free care seemed unnecessary—and pit bulls. "I was tired of patching them up so the owners could take them out and fight with them again," Dr. Frappier said, as he was checking the hooves of the lame mule. The mule was poorly shod, as are many of the donkeys and mules in the medina, with rubber pads cut out of old automobile tires; the corners of its mouth were rubbed raw by a harsh bit; he would have looked better if he weighed another 30 or 40 pounds. It took Frappier several years to adjust to the condition of the animals here; at first he was utterly discouraged and put in a request to resign his post and return to Montreal, but he settled in, and he has learned to sort out "dire" from "acceptable." The Fondouk has quietly pushed an agenda of better care, and in large part it has been successful: it managed to spread the word to the mule and donkey owners that sticking cactus thorns in harness sores didn't encourage the animals to work harder, and that rubbing salt in their eyes, a folk remedy to get them to walk faster, was not only ineffective but left the animals blind. There are animals everywhere you look in Fez, and in Morocco. Cats tiptoe around every corner; dogs lounge in the North African sun; even on the roaring roads of Casablanca, horse-and-buggies clatter alongside SUVs and sedans. Twelve full-time veterinarians work in Fez, but even so, on two separate occasions the royal family of Morocco, which could certainly afford any veterinarian in the world, has brought its animals to the Fondouk.
On my first trip to Morocco, I had heard of Souk el Khemis-des Zemamra, one of the country's largest donkey markets, held every Thursday, about two hours southwest of Casablanca, and ever since hearing of it I had wanted to go. I wanted to see the epicenter of the donkey universe in Morocco, where thousands of creatures are bought and sold and traded. A few years ago, the government began visiting Khemis-des Zemamra and the other large souks to take stock of the transactions and levy sales tax on them, and since then more of the trade has migrated away from the souks toward word-of-mouth impromptu markets, out of reach of the tax man. The number of donkeys sold in Khemis-des Zemamra these days is perhaps a third less than what it was five years ago. Still, the souks thrive—besides donkeys, of course, they sell every single food product and toiletry and household item and farm implement you could ever imagine, serving as a combination Agway, Wal-Mart, Mall of America and Stop & Shop for the entire population for miles around. If you want chickpeas or hair dye or a fishing net or a saddle or a soup pot, you can find it at the souk. If you want a donkey, you will certainly find the one you want any Thursday morning in Khemis-des Zemamra.
I set out on the five-hour drive from Fez to Khemis-des Zemamra on a Wednesday night. The market starts at the crack of dawn; by noon, when the sun is searing, the fairground where it takes place would be empty, the grass trampled down, the mud marked with wagon wheel tracks and hoof prints. I was traveling there with a young Moroccan man named Omar Ansor, whose father had worked at the American Fondouk for 25 years until his recent retirement; Omar's brother, Mohammed, has been working there with Dr. Frappier since 1994. Omar told me he loves animals, but he found my fascination with donkeys puzzling. Like many Moroccans, he considered them tools—good, useful tools, but nothing more. Maybe to him, my enthusiasm about donkeys was like being enthusiastic about wheelbarrows. "A donkey is just a donkey," he said. "I like horses."
The drive took us back past Casablanca, with its smoking chimneys and thicket of apartment buildings, and then to El Jadida, a whitewashed resort town on a flat spread of pinkish beach, where we stayed the night. Thursday morning was warm and clear, the light pouring over wide fields of corn and wheat. In several fields, donkeys and mules were already at work, pulling irrigation machines and plows, leaning into their harnesses. Carts hurtled alongside us on the shoulder of the road, loaded with entire families and nearly toppling loads of bulging burlap bags, boxes and miscellany, heading in the direction of the souk, the donkey or mule or horse moving snappily, as if the sound of the car traffic was egging them on. By the time we arrived, just after 7 a.m., the fairground was already mobbed. We had no trouble parking, because there were only a handful of cars and another handful of trucks, but the rest of the parking area was cluttered with wagons and carts and scores of donkeys and mules—a few hundred of them at least, dozing, nibbling on the scraps of grass, swaying in place, hobbled by a bit of plastic twine tied around their ankles. These weren't for sale—they were transportation, and they were parked while their owners were shopping.
A roar floated over the fairground; it was the combined chatter of hundreds of buyers and sellers haggling, and the smack and thump of boxes being opened and sacks being slapped down to be filled, and vendors hollering for attention and a blast of Moroccan music playing out of an unattended laptop computer that was hooked to man-size speakers, beneath a tent of fabric cut from a Nokia cellphone billboard. We walked in through a section of the souk where vendors sat behind mountains of dried beans in baskets four feet wide, and past stalls selling fried fish and kebabs, the greasy smoky air trapped in the tents, and then we arrived at the donkey area. At the entrance were rows and rows of vendors selling donkey and mule supplies. A young man, deep furrows in his face, was selling bits made of rusty iron—his inventory, hundreds of bits, was in a stack three feet high. Beside him, a family sat on a blanket surrounded by harnesses made of tan and orange and white nylon webbing, and every member of the family, including the children, was stitching new harnesses while they waited to sell the ones they had already made. The next row had a dozen stalls, all offering donkey saddles—V-shaped wooden forms that sit on the animal's back and support the cart shafts. The saddles were made out of old chair legs and scrap lumber, the corners nailed together with squares cut from old tin cans; they were rough-looking but sturdy, and they had thick padding where they would rest on the animal's skin.
Just past the saddle sellers was a small field jammed with donkeys for sale, their owners scanning the crowd for buyers, the buyers strolling among them, stopping to glance at one, size up another. There was much milling around, the crowd moving in and out of the clusters of donkeys; the donkeys, though, stood quietly, nodding off in the warming sun, idly chewing a bit of grass, flicking off flies. They were a rainbow of browns, from dusty tan to almost chocolate, some sleek, others with the last patches of their thick winter coats. For someone who loves donkeys, it was an amazing sight. I stopped near one dealer who was in the center of the field. A small woman with piercing blue eyes, covered head to toe in black fabric, was completing her transaction—she had traded her older donkey and some cash to the dealer for a younger animal. The donkey dealer was tying a hobble on his new acquisition, and when he finished, he told me he was having a busy day and had sold eight donkeys already that morning. His name was Mohammed, and his farm was ten miles from the souk; he brought his load of donkeys here on the back of a flatbed truck. It was a good line of work. His family had always been donkey dealers—his mother and his father, his grandparents, their grandparents—and business was steady, 50 donkeys or so sold each week. He had brought 11 donkeys to the souk that morning, so he had three small, sturdy animals left.
"How old is this one?" I asked, patting the smallest of them.
"He's 3 years old," Mohammed said. As he said this, a young man behind him grabbed his elbow and moved him aside and said, "No, no, he's only 1."
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Comments (35)
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Eleanor Hoffmann discovered Morocco in 1927. Her first juvenile story was published by Thomas Nelson and was about a donkey who eventually ended up at the Fondouk. It was titled Melika and her Donkey.
Posted by Caroline Williams on June 20,2012 | 03:11 PM
My son and I were disheartened to see the cruelty of dunkeys, cats and dogs in Morocco. There need to be a school of Veterinarians that are willing to do a good deed and have the cats and dogs spayed and neutered to stop the reproduction. They are also in dire need of medical attention, with bruises and cuts being untreated. It is not enough to post pictures of these poor animals. Lets do something about it!
Posted by on June 28,2011 | 07:29 PM
After having raised donkeys, or, asses, as they are referred to in the Bible, the article brought back memories, very dear memories of our herd which once numberd about sixty. All were dear friends, and part of our family. They came in many sizes from nine hands to fourteen hands in height. Most amazing was just how much work each one could do relative to their sizes, whether they were doing draft work or were carrying loads. We learned that they can carry fifty percent of their weight. No need to worry if the load was too heavy, or unbalanced. In such instances they would not move. Once the matter was corrected they would perform tasks asked of them. Once tired they stopped, and rested. So sad that humans would interperet such as their being stubborn rather than as a show of intelligence. All were grand friends, kind, gentle, watchful, sure footed. It is no surprise the the author would have liked to have had one of her own. She had better move out of New York City to the more pristine areas of New York State where she could have members of that noble species. They would,very soon, become as dear to her as her own chlldren.
Dana Allison
Posted by Dana Allison on June 25,2011 | 08:53 PM
Have read most of the comments about donkeys and feel for them greatly. However, we can do something as well as holding up Amy Bend Bishop as the lovely benefactor that she was.
I am sure if you look there will be a donkey rescue site in most capital cities. Small gifts are usually very well received.
Posted by valerie on March 29,2011 | 11:16 PM
Great story about the donkeys. I was born in Morocco, and have felt sorry for the poor creatures ever since I was a child (especially the hard working ones in the Fez medina). I am so glad to read that some manage to find their own way to the American Fondouk! I always wanted to adopt a baby donkey, or a baby dromedary, but my parents never let me!
Kitty Morse, author
Cooking at the Kasbah: Recipes from my Moroccan Kitchen
www.kittymorse.com
Posted by Kitty Morse on February 5,2010 | 11:27 PM
Lovely story. I personally know the Vet who looks after these animals and they are very lucky to have such a caring vet. He is a fantastic vet as well as a human being. He always has time for his patients, 4 legged and 2 legged.
I remember my husband getting transferred to the States from Canada, and seriously, the only person I regretted leaving was my vet, but, in fact, he took this position the same time that we left Montreal. I have not seen him for 15 years, but I can tell you that I miss him and his humour.
Posted by Donna Crossley on January 6,2010 | 07:03 PM
Thank you for the wonderful article! I was a Peace Corps volunteer in Taza, Morocco and have many fond memories of the donkeys there. They always seemed so patient and hard-working and were not very well treated. I always wished I could do something for them, and am very glad to hear about the American fondouk that is doing so much for the donkeys and other animals. Great story!!
Posted by Laura on December 28,2009 | 06:03 PM
LOVED your article,it broke my heart when I remembered seeing those poor animals carrying all those heavy loads.
Donkeys have been my favourite animal since I was a child.I was brought up in Alexandria,Egypt.On summer vacations, we would go to our farm.The first thing I used to do was run and kiss my little Donkey.I saw her beautiful...those long eyelashes,those big sad eyes, mesmerised me.
I live in NC now and have a donkey shrine.A picture of my donkey and myself at age 10.3 donkey statues,one (carried all the way from Italy)ceramic,2 ceramic donkeys from South Africa.All topped with water colour paintings of Donkeys.Also on another table a silver one from Marocco and a Baccara from France. Donkeys are not stubborn,they just know what they do not want to do.They are determined,hard working and loyal.Dislike the phrase "stuborn like a mule or donkey".
Posted by Jihan El Shayeb on October 5,2009 | 07:01 PM
Many thanks to author Susan Orlean and photographer Eric Sander for reviving fond memories of our family’s visit to Morocco in 1992. During our six-year assignment in Port Gentil, Gabon (French Equatorial Africa), we had the opportunity to visit a dozen or so countries on the African continent – none more memorable than our tour of Morocco and her four royal cities.
Dragging our 2-1/2 year old son and 6-year old daughter up and down the crowded and narrow walkways of Fez’s medina seemed insurmountable until our guide, Mohammed suggested hiring a donkey. After a brief departure, Mohammed returned with “Gray” (our name for the sturdy, gentle creature) who would cost us the equivalent of $15 for the day. “Not bad” I thought as we folded up our wheeled stroller and began strapping it and our children onto Gray’s back. “One problem” Mohammed took us aside and whispered. “You must hire the driver for the day, too”.
“Here’s the pinch” we thought as visions of our souvenir shopping trip dimmed, “how much for the driver”? Obviously of lesser importance than the donkey, the driver cost us only $10 bucks for the day. We took Mohammed and his wife to a nice, local restaurant for dinner (complete with belly dancers) as a way of thanking him for his service and friendship during our 4-day visit. He reciprocated by having us all to his home for couscous on Friday.
Spencer Harris, Shafter, California
Posted by Spencer Harris on September 27,2009 | 01:00 PM
Great story. My father was stationed in Kenitra for two years in the early 70's. He insisted we live in town. We also traveled everywhere. Including Fez. The donkeys were not only funny but a cultural experience. As were the food and the people. Good to see that some things will never change. PS to Al about the smell. Some places in this country smell worse.
Posted by Bill on September 26,2009 | 11:19 PM
To Ms Orlean, I realy enjoyed your artcle on the donkeys of Morrocco. To see what donkeys can do and do in the US,
I invite you to look at my website;
BUTTERNUTRIDGEDONKEYS.COM
Here are photos of our guys visitig in hospitas, nursing homes, ARC sites etc.
The donkeys seem to know what is being asked of them and make great contact with patients and staff. We have several stories of people coming up and out of silence to touch and feel the healing cotact.
Please let me know what you think, thanks ken p
Posted by Rev. Dr. Ken Parker on September 25,2009 | 10:49 PM
Great article, but it left out what happens to the waste from 40,000 donkeys that is dropped every day all over the city? If the donkeys do a dump twice a day that's 80,000 piles plus all the sheep, mules, dogs, etc. And it must rain sometime.. That city must stink, yet not a word in the story. Phewwww!!! Have a nice day, Al
Posted by Al on September 15,2009 | 10:16 AM
I loved this article. I was especially touched by the veterinay service - how the animals that appear to arrive of their own accord! What a meaningful and noble pursuit. My husband is a veterinarian and I have him reading this article as well. I hope to visit the city and the clinic one day soon. Thank you for a wonderfully written piece. I enjoyed it thoroughly.
Posted by Natalie on September 12,2009 | 11:06 AM
i loved the article. i lived in morocco for two years and traveld around the country a great deal. your article took me back as my wife and i did in 07. she thought all the donkeys looked sad and the sheep and goats looked as though they were to closely related. we in america have animals in our families s pets......in morocco life is not so easy on man or beast. keep up the good work. i enjoy the mag.
dan hayden
Posted by dan hayden on September 9,2009 | 01:00 AM
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