With their 2020 picture book The Cat Man of Aleppo co-authors Irene Latham and Karim Shamsi-Basha tell the inspiring, thought-provoking and indeed true story of Mohammed Alaa Aljaleel (who is actually and in reality known as the Cat Man of Aleppo).
Yes and basically, in The Cat Man of Aleppo Latham and Shamsi-Basha textually and with an understated but celebratory personal accolade show how Mohammed Alaa Aljaleel refuses to leave (to flee from) his home city of Aleppo, Syria when civil war breaks out, how he, how Alaa (even during the intense horror of unrest, of strife, of indiscriminate bombings) is still working every day as an ambulance driver in order to help and to provide aid to his fellow citizens (those who have not tried to leave, those who are unable to leave Aleppo). And narrationally accompanying Alaa driving his ambulance, The Cat Man of Aleppo (and of course Irene Latham and Karim Shamsi-Basha) then depict poignantly, heartbreakingly but equally with a sense of sweetness and hopefulness that as he, as Mohammed Alaa Aljajeel is driving through the often bombed and destroyed streets of Aleppo, he is often encountering stray and feral housecats (many of them abandoned because of their human families being forced to flee their homes), that filled with compassion and loving pity for these abandoned and unfortunate felines, suffering only due to a war completely caused by humans and by human bigotry and hatred, Alaa begins to feed and give clean water to the stray cats of Aleppo, which ends up winning Mohammed Alaa Aljaleel international media attention, and charity aid from abroad (with which an animal sanctuary is able to be built, as well as a playground for the local children).
Now on the surface, with The Cat Man of Aleppo Irene Latham and Karim Shamsi-Basha's presented text clearly and painfully demonstrates that during wartime, domesticated animals (from companions to livestock) are also and equally often and sadly victimised (and in every way as much and as horribly as people), are brutally injured, are killed or are like it is being described with the stray cats of Aleppo, Syria abandoned as their human families are forced to to become refugees (and it is indeed textually encouraging to see how Mohammed Alaa Aljaeel in The Cat Man of Aleppo actively provides both help and affection to and for Aleppo's stray felines and how charities from abroad have responded with enough generosity to help not only the abandoned cats but also Aleppo's children).
But yes, if I do dare to dig a bit deeper, there is also left one main and for me totally necessary, required question that really should be asked as well as answered by the authors in The Cat Man of Aleppo, by Irene Latham and Karim Shamsi-Basha (even though I must admit that my inner child is not really asking, but that my older adult self most certainly is). For considering how much of an ecological and environmental problem (and even a potential fiasco) feral cats can be (and in particular for small perching songbirds), that domestic feral felines tend to be prolific breeders and can thus easily overpopulate and spread diseases, I for one do find it rather sadly frustrating and actually quite ridiculously lacking that NOWHERE within the pages of The Cat Man of Aleppo is there any information provided by Latham and Shamsi-Basha whether helping and caring for the abandoned stray housecats of Aleppo also entails them being spayed and neutered, having veterinary care and necessary feline specific vaccines being provided. For no, while Mohammed Alaa Aljajeel providing food and water for the stray cats of Aleppo is of course something positive in and of itself, without a spaying/neutering and veterinary care campaign, just feeding and watering the abandoned felines in my humble opinion actually has the tendency to do more harm than good in the long run both for the environment and also for the cats themselves.
And indeed, that in The Cat Man of Aleppo Irene Latham and Karim Shamsi-Basha make no mention AT ALL regarding the latter, yes, this is majorly and personally annoying and frustrating, this is a huge textual problem for (in particular older and critical adult) me and enough so to only consider a three star rating for The Cat Man of Aleppo. Because even though The Cat Man of Aleppo is poignantly and sweetly recounted and that I can certainly understand why and how Yuko Shimizu's delightfully expressive black ink and digitally colourised accompanying illustrations have won her a Caldecott Honour designation for 2021, that spaying and neutering the abandoned felines of Aleppo, Syria seems to not be considered even remotely important, well, to point out that this is majorly grating on me is both true and also kind of an understatement (and in particular since Yuko Shimizu's pictures in The Cat Man of Aleppo of huge masses of feral stray cats totally visually demonstrate that there is in fact a massive problem with feral felines overpopulating Aleppo, Syria and needing to be not only helped, not only aided but also controlled with regard to to their obviously increasing numbers).