arabian souk-arabic souk

arabian souk-arabic souk

The Souk Marrakesh77108



Find out what a souk is, and about the wonderful things that happen there, in this account of the author's visit to Morocco.
The Arabic for Morocco is Al Maghrib, or, the furthest west, the place where the sun sets. Seen from the perspective of the Middle East (the heartland of the Arab World), this makes sense. Morocco has a fascinating mix of conservative Islamic traditions and more liberal French ones. Because of its proximity to Europe (Spain is virtually a quick swim or a faster ferry ride away), Morocco enjoys a looseness, a spirit not common in other Arab states.

And then there are the blue—or brown—eyed street urchins who greet you in English, French, Arabic and even a little Japanese. They are everywhere, and if you sometimes tire of their persistence, you'll admire their ingenuity and the quickness of their smiles. Despite reports to the contrary, most don't have nimble fingers, but they do have nimble minds.

Travelers (especially women traveling alone) may be hassled by young men, or shaabab. The hassling is more annoying than dangerous, and the best response is a firm, la shookran. No, thanks! On the other hand, a hired guide can become your shield, warding off the unwanted attention.

My Market Was Never So Exciting

In Morocco, the sky is impossibly blue, set off by towering mountains and vivid yellow lemon trees. But if anything sums up this still mysterious country, it's probably its Souks. The Souks of Morocco! Crowded, overpowering, exciting outdoor market places with names that seem to come from the movies: Marrakech, Fez, Tangier, and my favorite, the Berber mountain market Souk of Chechaouen. Never mind that these Souks (Arabic for "markets") are the forerunners of our modern malls, which are as insipid as these markets are vibrant. There's no comparison.

A Souk is an absolutely crazy series of twisting streets crowded with stalls and linked by corrugated tin roofs, straw or flapping tent tops. Everything imaginable is sold or bought here, from camels and spices to herbs (legal and illegal) and fine wrought gold ornaments. Leather may be the country's prime product and is considered by many to be the finest in the world.

Weavers At Work

Up on the rickety second floor of the outdoor courtyard, weavers are hard at work making the famous Moroccan jalaabas, or loosely woven tunics. These skilled craftsmen also weave dazzlingly colorful magic carpets. The weaving rooms are very small and very cramped with four or more workers crowded together. A few words of shouted greeting soon dissolve the initial suspicion and tension: "Salammu allaykum," we called out. "Wa allaykum wa sallam," came the answer. Peace be upon you, and upon you, peace. That did it. We were gestured into the stall.

The sound of the loom seems ancient, the rhythmic thump, thump, thump stirs some long lost memory from a primitive time and place. A tiny radio perched on a ledge blares forth decidedly non-traditional music. It helps relieve the tedium of the work as the weavers ply a trade handed down through generations. The Berber mountain dwellers in the Riff mountains bring the wool to the weavers. It's not surprising that the jalaabas and rugs are so richly colored since the Berbers wear bright, tall, conical straw hats and multicolored skirts. Their faces and hands are colored with tattoos that sometimes cover the face entirely, but they don't hide the generous smiles, generous in spite of imperfect teeth.

One of the women explains that it takes about two days to make a jalaaba and several weeks or so to make a typical Moroccan carpet. How much does it cost? The art of arriving at a price rivals the skill of the weavers. Let's just say you can pay as high a price as you wish. They won't refuse your offer. But you can pay as little as $16, it seems. Not bad. Then again, the nature of your haggling depends on your relationship to the economies of developing countries.



Stonemasons & Metalsmiths

The thump of the looms blends with the contrapuntal sounds of tap, tap, tap. Out on the street repairmen are tapping individual cobblestones into place. The only concession to labor-saving devices is an ancient wheelbarrow. They work carefully, precisely, replacing rutted and worn cobblestones along twisting alleys. The alleys themselves twist and turn and wind with no logic and less direction. To be lost is to be able to marvel at the doors, so vividly colored blues against a white stucco house. Moroccan doors are famous, and one of them is wide open.

Inside, there's a very different kind of tapping. In this shop young men are creating intricate designs on pure bronze plates, which scatter sunbeams around the dust-filled room. The master of the shop proudly tells us he has designed ornaments for the royal palace, and these are his apprentices. The young men work intensely, barely looking up to notice us. One of them is squeezing lemon juice into the cracks and crevices to clean the plate. My friend asks how you can tell the difference between bronze and brass. We hold our breaths wondering if we asked a stupid question. The master smiles and hits the plate with a wooden mallet. The "gong" vibrates around the small room, bouncing of the walls and my head. With a slight bow, he pronounces the verdict: "100 percent bronze!" I learn that bronze has a deeper, longer-lasting vibration, while brass apparently falls a bit dead to the ear. So, keep that in mind when you shop.

Outside, the cacophony of sound borders on madness. Tinkers yelling, selling their wares. Donkey carts whizzing by loaded with protesting chickens. French and Arabic exhortations to "Come, see. Buy, now, here. The very best, and just for you! Walla (by God), I promise you, never in your life have you seen such a _______ (fill in the blank)."





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GEOGRAPHY AND CLIMATE
Morocco is a North African country that lies in the northwest of Africa. It is surrounded by the Atlantic Ocean, the Strait of Gibraltar and the Mediterranean Sea. Deserts, plains and mountains make up the majority of this area 446,550 square kilometers, which includes nearly 34 million Moroccans. Besides the climate dry Sahara desert, Morocco has an Atlantic climate as Mediterranean as Casablanca and Al Hoceima.
HISTORY AND ADMINISTRATION
Morocco has long been occupied by Capsian ancestors of modern Berbers followed by Phoenician traders from the XIth century BC The Arabs arrived in Morocco in 649 and Berber convert to Islam. This constitutional monarchy is the only African country not party to the African Union, but attempts since 1987 to access the European Union.


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Islamists take to the beaches


Islamists take to the beaches

Morocco's beaches are popular with locals and tourists
By Nick Pelham
The crowds heading for Morocco's beaches this summer are not just going to flaunt their bodies, they are going to flaunt their souls too.

The beach towels they will tuck under their arms will double as prayer mats. Their picnic hampers will hide banners.

And when they reach the sands, they will not bother to change. They will wade into the waters fully clothed in scenes reminiscent of Victorian Britain.

They are Morocco's Islamists and they are taking their struggle for an Islamic state to the beach.


Morocco's Islamists do not approve of stripping off

Preachers like prophets in gabardines prowl the coastline, calling on less modest Moroccans to put their clothes on.

"Why debauch yourselves in nudity?" they cry, as if all the women were topless. "Repent and Return to Islam."

The ice-cream boy peddles Koranic injunctions with his Cornettos.

The fire and brimstone pulls the crowds. After years of suppression, leaders of Morocco's largest Islamist movement, Justice and Charity claims the people are so happy to see them emerge from the underground, that on one beach they threw rose petals.

Under the long, harsh reign of Hassan II, Justice and Charity was forced to advance its ambitions for power in secret. Under the more lax rule of his son, Mohammed, the movement feels free to challenge the ban and proselytise in public.


Worshipping in an outdoors mosque
At midday the beach turns into an open-air mosque, revealing just how numerous the ranks of Morocco's Islamists have grown.

Lines of believers several rows deep stretch hundreds of yards along the beach. Women line up behind.

It is a scene repeated up and down the kingdom from the Algerian border on the Mediterranean to the south where the Atlantic laps the Sahara.

Sectarianism on the beaches

There is resistance. Morocco's more provocative hedonists strut in front of the rows of prostrating worshippers. In a desperate attempt to resist, believers bury their heads deeper into the sands.

At the sight of an approaching Islamist, Munir shouts: "We're not Iran, we'll stay modern Muslims"

His girlfriend snaps at the ice-cream boy, she will well wear what she likes.

Un-Islamic or not, young Moroccans are not about to let these spoilsports sacrifice just about the only leisure activity open to both rich and poor.

Unlike elsewhere in the Arab world, Morocco's beach culture is homegrown, not just for tourists.

But slowly, slowly, the beach boys are in retreat. You have to trek a fair distance down from the main beach before the beards grow thinner, and the lovers more courageous.


The authorities fear the growing Islamist movement
Moroccans call it a two-state solution. The authorities are nervous. They have denounced what they call sectarianism on the beaches.

And they fear the growing Islamist presence could mark an indirect challenge to the king, as he tries to reconcile his role as Commander of the Faithful with that of celebrated jet-skier.

Banning litter and beards

Last month, the minister of interior went on national television to announce an anti-litter campaign for the beaches, and he then broadened its range to say his police would target all forms of pollution, apparently ideological as well as material.

His police have erected checkpoints along the main roads leading to the seaside to bar men who sport beards. Repeatedly, riot police have made arrests on the sands.

Like the tide though, next day the Islamists come back. All of which is beginning to scare the travel agents - all too wary of North Africa's precarious record on tourism.

In Egypt, religious fanatics crippled the country's tourist trade, after taking pot-shots at foreigners who they blamed for spreading Aids and encouraging alcohol.

In Tunisia, a bomb blew the legs off a British tourist. And in neighbouring Algeria -- well, in Algeria. the arrival of a hundred tourists is enough to make a headline.

Battle for the beaches

But Morocco has two million of them. Tourism is the kingdom's top earner. It is a solitary bright spot in a country gripped by depression and until recently, there was no cloud on the horizon.

But now there is the question emblazoned on Morocco's best selling newspaper: "Battle for the beaches, or war on tourism?"


Tourism earns vital revenue for Morocco
The organisers of the beach campaign, Justice and Charity, reject violence. They say that unlike their Egyptian and Algerian brothers they have no problem with tourists, whether Muslim or not.

They say they just cannot see why a Muslim state should discriminate against men who sport beards. God's creation, they say, should be open to all.

Call me naïve, but I wonder whether it could just be that Morocco's Islamists are taking to the beaches because they do not want to be left out of the fun of the country's distinctive beach culture.

Okay, they want segregated swimming, and their women bathe fully clothed. But they too can be found playing beach ball with girls in bikinis.



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