Part One: Marrakesh the "Red City"
My last travel in Morocco before returning home. I had a week and a half off from Arabic classes and two other students from ALIF center and I ventured off to the south once again. Katie goes to ASU and is graduating in May and Jay just graduated from Harvard with a degree in comparative religions.
We began in Marrakesh...the "red city", which was shockingly infested with tourists given that it is the off-season. Following the advice of an ex-Peace Corps volunteer who was also a student at ALIF, we stayed at a little hotel called Sindi Sud in the narrow labyrinth of the medina right off of the famed Djemaa el-Fna or "Square of Infinity". After our 8 hour train ride from Fes, we wondered down to the Kutubia Mosque and surrounding gardens and stuck around to hear the Maghrib call to prayer. We dined in the square along with many locals who were breaking fast, and were attacked by all of the food-stall owners trying to coral us into eating at his booth rather than the 50 other identical stands surrounding his. We settled for a spot on the outskirts with optimal people-watching potential. After slurping down traditional harira soup with huge wooden spoons, I ate the vegetarian couscous which was garnished with big hunks of meat and flavored with an odd spice that I couldn't place. I washed it all down with a glass of hot spiced tea consisting of clove, ginger, cinnamon, and ginseng. Intense stuff.
Let me just insert here that the entire time that you walk around the the square, you are continuously harassed by kids trying to sell you flowers, men yelling "ça va?" in your direction, beggars asking for money, café owners, henna artists, snake charmers, carriage drivers, musicians...pretty much the entire population is trying to bully you into giving them money. Absolute chaos. We reached such a state off annoyance and furry (which Katie coined "medina rage") that we would have to escape back to the hotel to relax.
Our second day in Marrakesh we wandered outside the square to the Kasbah district to visit the Saadian tombs. The Saadians ruled Morocco in the 16th century and established Marrakesh as the capital and also constructed some magnificent buildings and mosques in the meantime. There are over 100 Saadian elite buried in and outside of the tombs. The architecture was most impressive; however, the atmosphere was soured by the herds of European tourists being regurgitated off of their tour buses into the site. Needless to say, we left soon after we arrived.
While trying to find the Palais el Badi, an old Marrekeshi palace open for viewing, we got ourselves lost well outside of tourist country. While wandering aimlessly, we discovered a graveyard that was virtually deserted albeit a few beggars and where there was maybe a million or more laid to rest. Seeing these millions of headstones all facing towards Mecca uniformly row after row was strikingly moving.
After taking a taxi back to the hotel (we were really lost) we lounged on the terrace to satisfy our mid-day laziness. After a catnap, we wandered down yet another Ave. Mohammad V past the beautiful and eerily clear cyber-park to the Jardin Majorelle. The garden was created by French painter Jacques Majorelle whose cobalt blue villa now houses a museum of Islamic art. Wandering amongst the bamboo forest, cactus gardens, lotus pond, and palms was truly magical and a wonderful escape from the city. I could have spent an entire day there...enjoying the rich blues and greens, lush bougainvillea, trickles of fountains, and elegance of cats.
Day three we traveled via a hired and unnecessary land-rover to the Cascades d'Ouzoud, over 150 km north-east of Marrakesh. The waterfalls are about 100 m high and the tallest in Morocco. After dodging eager guides we guided ourselves some 20-odd meters to the top of the falls. We took the path less traveled down to bottom through muddy olive groves rather than the stone steps on the opposite bank which were lined with souvineer stands and cafés, putting a bit of a damper on our desire to be in nature. The falls were even more stunning from below: about 6 streams thundering down the moss-covered rocks into a huge pool about 2/3 of the way down which then emptied the rest of the way in one huge cascade. A slight mist rose from the bottom casting a faint rainbow over the waterfalls...just as picturesque as it sounds. We packed a nice picnic of La Vache Qui Rit, bread, dried fruit and nuts, and yogurt drinks which we ate on a shady rock facing the cascade. On our way back up to the top, Katie spotted the famed Barbary Macaque my dad has so intently hoped I would see, just off the trail. There was maybe 7 or 8 of them - the small ones leaping about playfully on the elders and in the trees. Soon, other tourists flocked around us and we all observed intently; the monkeys were entirely unfazed.It was sad for me to see how tame they had become and suddenly it was clear to me just how easy it is for them to be captured and made into attractions in the Djemaa el-Fna in Marrakesh...slaves to the tourist dollar on chains and ropes. I enjoyed watching them in their real habitat a while longer before heading the rest of the way up the falls.
I was glowing the whole drive back to Marrakesh, thrilled from having finally seen the falls I had heard about for months and also from seeing the Macaca sylvanus which my Dad's enthusiasm for had inevitably been passed along to me. It was strange seeing those apes...standing with a Hawaii-scale waterfall behind me, red, rocky mountains a'la Sedona, AZ to the right of me, and a hairy troop of monkeys in front of me. I couldn't help but ask myself, "where am I again?"







1 Comments:
Hey Angie!
I cannot resist to read your interesting blogs.
I like your adventures in Marrakesh.
Known as the "Red City" Marrakesh is the capital of the south. The atmosphere is distinctly more African than that of the other Imperial cities, Fez, Rabat and Meknes.
Keep on writing such masterpieces!!!
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