Abstract
Doctor Jadi Hamadi is a Moroccan veterinary surgeon living and working in the port of Tangier. His work ranges from private large and small animal practice, through farming to public health duties and animal welfare work. I met Dr Hamadi in the bar of a hotel on the Tangier beachfront. Over coffee at a barside table we began by discussing his entry into the profession. Initially, it seemed surprising that he went to the Madrid veterinary school for six years, obtaining his degree in 1975, until he explained that until 1956 much of the territory around Tangier was part of Spanish North Africa. Like many Tangerines he was multilingual, being proficient in Arabic, Spanish, French and able to conjure up the right English phrase when appropriate. There is a Moroccan veterinary college in the capital, Rabat, taking about 20 students a year, but in the late '60s it made more sense to travel to Madrid for training. After qualifying he went back to Morocco and had two jobs before returning to Tangier in 1981.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Ian Neville
Ian Neville qualified from Liverpool University in 1982. After four-and-a-half years working in mixed and small animal practice and for animal welfare organisations in the UK he became a travelling veterinary locum. Since then he has visited over 40 countries and worked as a locum in over 50 practices and as a freelance journalist for British and French veterinary journals.