handmade egg tempera on panel, 18 x 13 cm
White phosphorus bombs fracture the sky, raining down on the city. A Medecins Sans Frontieres hospital, protected by sandbags, is in ruins and Rose, a former trainer at the Aleppo Zoo, sits surrounded by animals. In a twist of fate, she joined the army where she is called Abu Ja’far, named after a lion that she raised at the zoo. As so many have lost their lives under bombs and starved under siege during the ongoing war in Syria, so passed away the last lion of Aleppo, where he was eaten by people.
This miniature references the story of Layla and Majnun, a love story between Qais ibn Al-Mulawah and Layla that took place in the 7th century Arabia. The poet Nizami Ganjavi also wrote a popular poem about their love story in the 10th century, which has been famously illuminated in manuscripts hundreds of times. Qays and Layla fall in love with each other when they are young, but when they grow up Layla’s father doesn’t allow them to be together. Qays becomes obsessed with her, and the community gives him the epithet Majnun (the mad one).
When Majnun learns of Layla’s marriage to another man, he flees the tribal camp and begins wandering the surrounding desert, where he befriends animals. He is said to be sometimes seen reciting poetry to himself or writing in the sand with a stick. This painting references that period of Majnun’s life, titled in period miniatures as 'Majnun in the Wilderness.'
Here, the reference to 'Majnun in the Wilderness' speaks to the heartbreak of so many Syrians unable to return to a home that no longer exists.