Marrakech, Motorcycles and Sufi Chanting



Marrakech, Motorcycles and Sufi Chanting

We're here and getting established with the help of a medina map which we highlight with our routes. Marrakech is both overwhelming in its massive material good industry and calming in its obvious catering to tourists and people like ourselves. We, for the first time since coming to Morocco, are not exceptional here at first glance. But it is hard to describe the calamatous souks and vibrant colors of Marrakech when right now my head is in the sufi world. Yesterday afternoon we had a woman come to talk to us about some of the ins and outs of basic sufism. She herself is writting a book on the femal sufi saints, so naturally our talk drifted in that direction and we had a fantastic discussion. But this evening we had a sufi chanting group come and perform for us. We sat in Riad Arabesca's zelliged courtyard lulled by the ups and downs, ins and outs and shouts and silences of the five sufis chanting for us. They were following a path of only their knowing as first one then another took up the lead, clapping a gentle beat, tapping an almost silent rhythm and singing the praises of Allah. The sufis use this chanting to lull them into a trance-like state enveloping themselves in the music and the pattern of their familiar words. It was amazing as I felt myself calming with the musical sound of the sufi poems. Any tension or worries seemed to ebb and take a place furthur back in the recesses of my mind, what might have seemed pressing and urgent felt feather-light and easily dealt with. It was a period of meditation where silence was not the object, but release in music.
After they finished their chants we sat up near them and asked them as many questions as we could think of, in French. They started at their 'zawia' or gathering house for budding sufis and teachers at the age of seven. They also attended regular school as well as lessons on the Qu'ran. Of the five men chanting one was a high school economics teacher, one a retiree who was volunteering for the religious part of the government inspecting mosques around the country, one was a music teacher, one was a taxi driver and one was an aide to the minister of the interior for Morocco. When we asked how many were in their group they said about 200, and these five came because they were the best. They also have between 100 and 150 women at their zawia, but the women and men don't sing together. Not learning about their backgrounds until after we heard them chant was really interesting, because hearing how they interacted with one and other and how they blended their voices I thought that the pursuit of sufi knowledge through continuing scholarly education and practicing of singing would be their full time job. But they only get together to sing every friday for two hours for prayers when the public can come, and special gatherings like our 'soiree'. It was an amazing experience and I think it is an integral part of Moroccan culture that can only be understood through actual conversations and hearing the chanting.



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Additional Preparation/Packing Advice

Additional Preparation/Packing Advice

1) You don't need to bring an international phone card or cell phone as public use phones are widely available (you pay by the minute and the cost is very affordable)

2) Your group leaders will be carrying a laptop which you can use for blog postings or downloading photos (don't bring your own laptop it will be cumbersome to carry and there are plenty internet cafes which come with computers you can use if you need to send an email or check facebook).

3) We suggest you bring $500- $1000 in "spending money". This will cover your snacks/beverages between meals/gifts/mementos and internet/phone costs. ATM cards work at many locations, but can occasionally not work for mysterious reasons. Do not bring more than $100 cash. Bring a money belt.
Travelers' checks are a great option for India, but inconvenient in Morocco.

4) If you have not booked your ticket yet, contact sue@aviatravel.com and be sure to get on the flight your group will be on!

5) If you have not sent in your final paperwork or tuition balance, please do so immediately (send to our Woodside, NY office).

6) Students going to Morocco will be issued a visa upon arrival. Students going to India should apply for their visas as soon as possible. You can fill out the application on-line but you need to send in your actual passport to the visa agency.

7) If you wear contacts- bring lots of solution, you might want to bring glasses too.

8) We will be meeting for pre-travel orientation the afternoon of the eleventh of September- more info on this coming soon! Both programs depart internationally on Sept 13.

9) If you have any questions you can contact michelle@global-lab.org or alex@global-lab.org or you can reach Michelle or John at 800 984 4522.

10) Keep checking the blog- new information will be going up regularly.

Morocco Semester Overview


Morocco Semester Overview

Each time I go to a place I have not seen before, I hope it will be as different as possible from the places I already know.
–Paul Bowles, author of The Sheltering Sky, desert explorer, Morocco expatriate
A mere 17 miles south of Europe, across the Strait of Gibraltar, a very different experience awaits—an intriguing place of great contrast, color, culture, history, and hospitality: Morocco was the first nation to recognize the United States as an independent nation in 1777. The Moroccan-American Treaty of Friendship stands as the U.S.'s oldest non-broken friendship treaty. Signed by John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, it has been in continuous effect since 1783.



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