Tristan McConnellDecember 26, 2012
“There
has to be some point in your life when you go back to look after your relatives
and contribute to your country."
British-Somali woman Ayan Hussein stands behind the counter at her newly opened Kulan Art Cafe in Hargeisa. (Tristan McConnell/GlobalPost)
HARGEISA,
Somalia — The Kulan Art Café is a bright airy place with murals and framed
paintings by local artists, potted plants, fresh coffee and ice cream, homemade
cakes and a menu featuring Western staples like pizza and hamburgers.
In
Hargeisa, the capital of the breakaway state of Somaliland, there is nothing
else like it. Nor is there anything like it elsewhere in Somalia, which is
attracting increasing numbers of diaspora Somalis as the country gradually
emerges from decades of conflict.
Among
the returnees is the café’s owner Ayan Hussein, a striking woman in her 40s who
decided to return to Somalia two years ago.
Clutching
her three young children Hussein fled the capital Mogadishu in 1997. They
settled in London, first as refugees then as British citizens. The north London
suburb of Hampstead became their home, and her children grew up as Londoners.
With
an eye for fashion Hussein worked as a freelance stylist, designing weddings
for wealthy clients and advising fashionistas on the right handbags to carry.
She often worked at Browns, an uber-trendy boutique in London’s West End.
But
after 15 years she decided it was time to return to Somalia. “There has to be
some point in your life when you go back to look after your relatives and
contribute to your country. It’s a beautiful time to come back,” she told
GlobalPost over a cup of Ethiopian coffee at Kulan one recent morning.
The
more than 20 years of chaos, warfare and destruction that ripped Somalia apart
propelled many of its citizens abroad. Today Somalis constitute one of the
largest, most far-flung diaspora communities on the planet, with an estimated
1.5 million in the US, Europe and the Gulf States.
In
many cases they were the lucky ones. But although they left they continued to
support networks of relatives in Somalia, sending back up to $2 billion a year
in remittances according to World Bank estimates.
As
Somalia’s war begins to subside, the trickle of returning diaspora Somalis is
becoming a tide. The more hardy among them head to the capital Mogadishu, where
the beginnings of an investment boom have been discernible since Al
Qaeda-aligned militants left in August 2011, but where suicide bombings still
threaten.
Others,
like Hussein, choose the far safer option of Somaliland — a region that has run
its own affairs since declaring independence in 1991, but has yet to be
recognized by any foreign state.
“I
know Mogadishu is getting better but I have family here and it’s safer,” she
said.
Diaspora
Somalis often bring with them skills, education, money and new ideas, making
them better equipped to profit from Somalia’s fragile peace. But they also face
culture shock and resentment from those who stayed behind.
More
from GlobalPost: Reverse brain drain, Thais ditch the American rat race
Hussein
admitted she finds it easier to identify with others from the diaspora because
“they understand the ways of living outside.” Her businesses reflect this.
The
inspiration for Kulan Art Café came from watching as her own children struggled
to settle into their new home, and wanting to provide something familiar from
“our other home,” as she calls London.
“A
lot of children from the diaspora, my own included, suffer in the sense that,
where do you get pizzas, burgers, ravioli with cheese? There’s no place,” she
said.
Hussein’s
oldest son Mohamed, 23, refused to leave London but her 26-year-old daughter
Sagal, and younger sons Guled, 19, and Gabriel, 5, moved with her.
Sagal
and Guled work at the café and also at Hussein’s fashion boutique across the
road which stocks imported clothes, accessories, makeup and perfume, but for
them the move has not been easy.
“Even
though I’m from here I’m also from London so the way things are here, I didn’t
expect it. It was a total culture shock,” said Guled, who can understand but
cannot speak Somali.
“I
tend to make friends with people from abroad,” he said.
In
London he was a skater riding the concrete ramps and slopes of Cantelowes
Skatepark in Camden, north London. “Here everything is dust. You can’t skate on
dust,” he said. The road outside is typical: broken tarmac and dust verges
studded with telegraph polls capped by crazy birds’ nests of telephone and
electrical wire.
“What
I like doing here and what I like doing in London are two completely different
things. I had to adapt and change,” said Guled.
Guled
misses his skate parks, but for Hussein it’s the green outdoor spaces, running
water and reliable electricity that she longs for. And in conservative Somalia
she has had to work hard to indulge what she calls “my passions: food and
fashion.”
At
both her café and shop customers are mostly from the diaspora. They sit at
tables chatting in British and American accents drinking $0.50 cappuccinos and
sharing $2 slices of homemade carrot cake.
The
young women who buy designer jeans from Hussein’s shop have to hide them
beneath long abayas.
“It’s
difficult because it’s an Islamic country there’s a very thin line and you can
easily make a mistake,” she said.
Tristan McConnellDecember 26, 2012
“There
has to be some point in your life when you go back to look after your relatives
and contribute to your country."
British-Somali woman Ayan Hussein stands behind the counter at her newly opened Kulan Art Cafe in Hargeisa. (Tristan McConnell/GlobalPost) |
HARGEISA,
Somalia — The Kulan Art Café is a bright airy place with murals and framed
paintings by local artists, potted plants, fresh coffee and ice cream, homemade
cakes and a menu featuring Western staples like pizza and hamburgers.
In
Hargeisa, the capital of the breakaway state of Somaliland, there is nothing
else like it. Nor is there anything like it elsewhere in Somalia, which is
attracting increasing numbers of diaspora Somalis as the country gradually
emerges from decades of conflict.
Among
the returnees is the café’s owner Ayan Hussein, a striking woman in her 40s who
decided to return to Somalia two years ago.
Clutching
her three young children Hussein fled the capital Mogadishu in 1997. They
settled in London, first as refugees then as British citizens. The north London
suburb of Hampstead became their home, and her children grew up as Londoners.
With
an eye for fashion Hussein worked as a freelance stylist, designing weddings
for wealthy clients and advising fashionistas on the right handbags to carry.
She often worked at Browns, an uber-trendy boutique in London’s West End.
But
after 15 years she decided it was time to return to Somalia. “There has to be
some point in your life when you go back to look after your relatives and
contribute to your country. It’s a beautiful time to come back,” she told
GlobalPost over a cup of Ethiopian coffee at Kulan one recent morning.
The
more than 20 years of chaos, warfare and destruction that ripped Somalia apart
propelled many of its citizens abroad. Today Somalis constitute one of the
largest, most far-flung diaspora communities on the planet, with an estimated
1.5 million in the US, Europe and the Gulf States.
In
many cases they were the lucky ones. But although they left they continued to
support networks of relatives in Somalia, sending back up to $2 billion a year
in remittances according to World Bank estimates.
As
Somalia’s war begins to subside, the trickle of returning diaspora Somalis is
becoming a tide. The more hardy among them head to the capital Mogadishu, where
the beginnings of an investment boom have been discernible since Al
Qaeda-aligned militants left in August 2011, but where suicide bombings still
threaten.
Others,
like Hussein, choose the far safer option of Somaliland — a region that has run
its own affairs since declaring independence in 1991, but has yet to be
recognized by any foreign state.
“I
know Mogadishu is getting better but I have family here and it’s safer,” she
said.
Diaspora
Somalis often bring with them skills, education, money and new ideas, making
them better equipped to profit from Somalia’s fragile peace. But they also face
culture shock and resentment from those who stayed behind.
More
from GlobalPost: Reverse brain drain, Thais ditch the American rat race
Hussein
admitted she finds it easier to identify with others from the diaspora because
“they understand the ways of living outside.” Her businesses reflect this.
The
inspiration for Kulan Art Café came from watching as her own children struggled
to settle into their new home, and wanting to provide something familiar from
“our other home,” as she calls London.
“A
lot of children from the diaspora, my own included, suffer in the sense that,
where do you get pizzas, burgers, ravioli with cheese? There’s no place,” she
said.
Hussein’s
oldest son Mohamed, 23, refused to leave London but her 26-year-old daughter
Sagal, and younger sons Guled, 19, and Gabriel, 5, moved with her.
Sagal
and Guled work at the café and also at Hussein’s fashion boutique across the
road which stocks imported clothes, accessories, makeup and perfume, but for
them the move has not been easy.
“Even
though I’m from here I’m also from London so the way things are here, I didn’t
expect it. It was a total culture shock,” said Guled, who can understand but
cannot speak Somali.
“I
tend to make friends with people from abroad,” he said.
In
London he was a skater riding the concrete ramps and slopes of Cantelowes
Skatepark in Camden, north London. “Here everything is dust. You can’t skate on
dust,” he said. The road outside is typical: broken tarmac and dust verges
studded with telegraph polls capped by crazy birds’ nests of telephone and
electrical wire.
“What
I like doing here and what I like doing in London are two completely different
things. I had to adapt and change,” said Guled.
Guled
misses his skate parks, but for Hussein it’s the green outdoor spaces, running
water and reliable electricity that she longs for. And in conservative Somalia
she has had to work hard to indulge what she calls “my passions: food and
fashion.”
At
both her café and shop customers are mostly from the diaspora. They sit at
tables chatting in British and American accents drinking $0.50 cappuccinos and
sharing $2 slices of homemade carrot cake.
The
young women who buy designer jeans from Hussein’s shop have to hide them
beneath long abayas.
“It’s
difficult because it’s an Islamic country there’s a very thin line and you can
easily make a mistake,” she said.
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