Tuesday, January 27, 2026

An old post with a sad update.

This column is about 11 years old:

Long ago, there was a girl who left for Afghanistan. While she worked at the university there, she met a cat, Maki, a large Afghan street cat who had been picked up so many times by the Nowzad animal shelter for getting his butt kicked by other Afghan street cats that the shelter finally did not return him to the street. They got tired of treating his wounds.

When Cara went to the shelter, Maki saw her from across a crowded room, marched square over and climbed up next to her. She felt that the cat had chosen her. She decided to choose him. 

When Cara and I were in New Orleans about six years ago, we stayed in an artist's home, and she had a portrait of her golden retriever painted in the manner of a religious icon. Cara thought it was hilarious.

When I came back, I contacted an artist that I know and commissioned a portrait of Mack for Cara's Christmas gift. 

                                              I'd found a portrait of the Emir of Caubal
and had Mack painted in the same manner. 
Ellen, being a gentle soul fell in love with the story of Maki, and to this day says that he is one of her top selling prints. A percentage of her Maki sales goes back to the Nowzad animal shelter.

It is a funny thing to think of Mack these days. He is actually a citizen of Great Britain now and is currently wintering in Tlibisi, Georgia...this after summering in Spain, which happened after a year in the UK with stops along the way in France and Switzerland.  He has learned to unzip tents in Italy, and sometimes the campers there left notes and gifts for him when they decamped. His picture hangs in the homes of people we will never know.

Ellen published a book of her work and I bought an autographed copy for each of the grandchildren. Much to my surprise, Mack was in it.

He's come a very long way from the war torn violence of Kabul's streets, hasn't he?



Today, January 27th. 2026, old Maki passed away in the arms of the girl who loved him, held to the window of the orangery so that he could look out at the beloved garden he'd spent so much time in. 17 years ago, he was born in the  streets of Kabul, Afghanistan. He died a British aristocat. 

50 comments:

  1. What a precious story! I hope Maki is up in kitty heaven having the time of his life telling everyone his stories.

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  2. What a wonderful story, with a naturally sad ending when time had run its course.

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    1. You know as well as anyone that every love story will end with many tears.

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  3. What a beautiful and touching story!

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  4. What a cool story. Thanks for sharing. Cali

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  5. Tears and I've not even had my wake up tea yet.

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    1. Lots of people shedding tears for a cat they never met.

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  6. What a wonderful story of a beautiful cat! His ending was the best it could be.

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  7. Taking in a stray is wonderful, we had ours for 13 years, it's a beautiful story and a wonderful image.

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    1. As an owner (if cats can be owned) of a long line of strays and ferals, I agree.

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  8. What a happy story. Mack had a good journey through life.

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  9. What a dear sweet story. Animals can be so very important in our lives when they become our loving companions.

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    1. She sent me one picture of him. He was on her lap staring calmly into the fading light. That picture was very moving to me.

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  10. Maki had an adventurous and loving life after being rescued from the Afghan streets thanks to your friend. He is now in kitty heaven making new friends. Gigi

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  11. Thank you for this lovely story Debbie. It's an affirmation of good things that can happen in a cold harsh world. May Maki rest in peace.

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    1. The miracles may be small, but they are still there.

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  12. Definitely an aristocat, with all that travelling and adventures.

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    1. That cat saw more of the world than most Afghan people. He was beloved.

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  13. What a wonderful tale of an adventurous cat. Fly free Maki!

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    1. I am glad he had his chance to adventure. He certainly outlived street cats.

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  14. A very sweet, yet sad, story to start my Wednesday morning with!

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    1. It was a sad day, trying to be 'present' from so far away. She is a practical girl, but this cat and she had been through earthquakes and a terrorist attack. Bonds forged in iron.

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  15. Not sad at all. Mack had a wonderful life.

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  16. He did. Endings are always awful, but the before was besutiful.

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  17. Well, that is certainly a remarkable life story. It would be remarkable for a human being, and even more so for a cat! To be essentially a refugee and wind up traveling through Europe and the subject of a well-regarded portrait published in a book -- hey, we should all be so lucky.

    (Your post sent me scurrying around the interwebs because my former Peace Corps country director was named Ellen Paquette! I thought, "This can't be the same Ellen, can it?" And no, it's not. But still, pretty freaky.)

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    1. It is quite a coincidence! Ellen's husband, Thomas Paquette is also an artist. He is well known for his landscapes, which are displayed at 21 US embassies.

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  18. There are some animals that are just special, and Maki clearly was one of them. RIP

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  19. What an incredible, amazing life Mack had. Thank you for telling us the story of his life.

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  20. Big hugs to Cara on this very sad day, and thank you so much for sharing a bit of beloved Maki's story.
    Chris from Boise

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  21. I'm so sorry to hear this, Debby. My condolences to Cara.

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    1. It is hard to be a comfort to your child when an ocean separates us.

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  22. Oh wow, what a beautiful and bittersweet story. Maki really lived a whole epic life, from Kabul street scrapper to British aristocat with fans across multiple countries and his portrait hanging in strangers homes. What a legacy for a scruffy guy who just decided one day to walk across a crowded room and choose his person.

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  23. It is quite a story isn't it. I suspect he would not have survived 17 years if he had not have been rescued.

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