The sun rose over the region of Puntland, northeastern Somalia. Ali Abdirashid got up and said his prayers before tending to his father Jalil's goats. The old man had gone to the town of Bosaso on business, the business of selling goats to numerous halal shops mere days before Eid, leaving his only son to take care of the land and the animals. It was just the two of them since Jalil's wife Muno Rahman passed away five years ago. Jalil Abdirashid needn't have worried, for his son Ali knew exactly what to do in his absence. Many things in this life are complicated, but goat herding doesn't have to be one of them. All it requires is patience and a bit of common sense...
Goat herding has been the family business for untold centuries, and Ali Abdirashid could have taught a class on the subject. Six feet two inches tall, lean and athletic, with a smooth shaved head and a slick goatee, Ali is a proud son of Puntland. The rocky, mountainous region that Ali calls home has been the site of much conflict over the years. There was even a time when Puntland residents considered themselves apart from the rest of Somalia. Lately, though, Somalis everywhere have begun to see the light, acknowledging that they are one people, whether residing in Somalia, Somaliland, Puntland, Djibouti or even Ethiopia.
Ali led the goats down the rocky mountain path, steering them toward fertile grounds where the grazing was best. At the age of nineteen, Ali knew the entirety of Puntland like the back of his hand. He'd been born in the environs of Bosaso, and his parents, Jalil Abdirashid and Muno Rahman, were poor farmers just like their parents before them. Ali sat on the grass as the goats grazed peacefully, his alert gaze scanning the landscape for dangers. A lot of people ignore the fact that the lion, the cheetah, the reticulated giraffe, the African bush elephant and the wild dog roam the Somali landscape...
"Wish I were elsewhere," Ali said to himself as he watched the goats under a clear blue sky. Last summer, Ali had a world-changing experience. It all began when his best friend Omar's cousin Khadija Adan visited the town of Bosaso from her hometown of Ottawa, Canada. The tall, slender young woman was twenty two years old and Somali in blood only, that much was clear. Even though Khadija wore the Hijab and a traditional long dress, she carried herself like a foreigner. Khadija stared at people and things like any foreigner would. Even the Somali which Khadija spoke was accented, and filled with English words. At first, Ali disliked Khadija, but found himself entranced by the world she hailed from...
"Ali, my friend, my cousin Khadija is like the sister from another planet," Omar Adan told him, ahead of Khadija's arrival. With his curiosity piqued, Ali made sure that he was around to visit Omar's family when Khadija arrived in Bosaso, having flown in from the Mogadishu Airport. Ali had never met a Somali person who was born outside Somalia before. Ali knew about Somali American celebrities like Congresswoman Ilhan Omar, and of supermodel Iman of course, but he'd never met them. For Ali, the chance to meet an authentic foreign-born Somali was the opportunity of a lifetime. He is a simple goat herder, after all...
"The City of Ottawa is big, with tall buildings and trains and buses that take you anywhere you want to go," Khadija said excitedly, and Ali could only smile and nod. Khadija showed Ali pictures of Ottawa, and the seemingly enchanting world in which she grew up. Ali had lived in Puntland his whole life, and was considered bright among the local goatherders because his town's preacher, Imam Ibrahim, taught him how to read and write in Arabic, Somali and French. Ali's knowledge paled in comparison to Khadija's, that's for sure...
"Your world sounds amazing to me, Khadija, why do you bother coming to Puntland?" Ali asked, and for some reason, Khadija shot him a look. Ali hastily apologized, for he hadn't meant to offend her. Life in Somalia is far from easy, with rebel groups stirring trouble left and right, and problems such as food shortages, infrastructure and healthcare issues complicating things for the already embattled population. Ali was fortunate that he lived in the countryside of Puntland, instead of a big metropolitan area like Mogadishu. The big towns and major cities were prime targets for troublemakers...