Now, more than a decade after his death, Afghanistan remains battered by war but Kabul zoo is buzzing again -- a haven for women, children and young lovers in a capital city that has little public space for anyone but men.
The carnival of animal life may be a mundane affair compared to other places, but it seems like an anomaly in Kabul, a war-scarred city benighted by post-traumatic stress, which still faces a high risk of insurgent attacks.
Men with children, women in blue burqas, crowds of young students, girls and boys, come to this haven to relax.
"My wife is a bit sick. I brought her here so she can breathe fresh air and enjoy the normal things of life," he adds, as his wife gazes at a bear inside a cage.
Children peer through a wire mesh fence, amused by monkeys swinging their tails and frolicking from one tree to another, as some of them imitate their whoops and barks.
Other picnickers seek respite from the scorching afternoon heat under the shade of trees, while enjoying platters of cantaloupe, honeydew and watermelon.
Blushing young lovers sit on a bench opposite the gazelle cage, seeking an escape from prying eyes in a city where harassment is otherwise commonplace.
The zoo has since undergone a slow and painful reconstruction, now housing around 600 animals, many of them gifted by countries such as India and China.
The Kabul zoo -- the only one in the country -- is located in the heart of the Afghan capital, surrounded by a dense warren of muddy flat-topped houses.
But most of them were either killed or escaped as mortar rounds slammed into the zoo during fighting, leaving only a bear with a nose injured by children who jabbed it with a stick, a scattering of monkeys, an assortment of birds of prey -- and Marjan, the showpiece lion who was blinded by a grenade blast in 1993.
Many of the smaller and tamer animals, such as sheep and goats, were stolen for food. More exotic creatures, such as rare species of birds, were sold on the black market or smuggled out of the country.
"Families feel safe here. They see the zoo as a place for rejuvenation," he told AFP, adding that last year more than 700,000 people visited the zoo, including 50,000 students.
The zoo, he said, earned 17 million Afghanis ($250,000) last year from ticket sales and other revenues, making it self-sustainable.
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