Well, that ‘eye-opening’ was actually two days ago, and I think we’ve only now maybe started to learn those life skills come today, after experiencing the medina in Marrakech. Wow. And I do mean, WOW!
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| Making necklaces for the kids, holding and manipulating the blade by foot. |
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| Ceramic ‘tajine’ pots, used to cook. |
Anyway, after the bus ride with a couple of stops that I won’t elaborate upon for fear of losing you to mundane details, we arrived in Marrakesh and our tour guide walked us through some of the old medina souks, after which we stopped for a couscous and tajine lunch (it was good, but I won’t digress into culinary details).
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| A ‘magic’ box. |
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| We sat through a medicinal healing schpeel, bought a few spices, etc. |
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| Bahia Palace rooflines. |
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| Our intrepid guide, Mohamed. |
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| Quite the skylight! |
Before lunch we didn’t get messed with too much due to the ever-presence of our guide, Mohamed, but after lunch it was a completely different story. He set us free to wander for a couple of hours, and I think it may have been the longest 120 minutes of Reade and Tate’s lives. Everyone, and I do mean everyone, tries to get your attention! You’re trying to look at stuff without getting caught looking for fear of being accosted, all the while trying to become aware of the whine of the scooters approaching from all directions so that you don’t get taken out in what would be a yard sale of epic U.S. vs. Peugeot/Honda/Cat Daddy proportion (some of the scooters have very funny names).
Djemaa el-Fnaa (deemed by UNESCO a Masterpiece of World Heritage in 2001) is Marrakesh’s main square and open-air market, surrounded by the souks of the medina. Imagine much of Berkeley (or Pearl St. in Boulder) on steroids, twenty times bigger, but in a different language, one that virtually everyone (save you) can speak. 10,000 people can be out here on busy days (Fri and Sat the busiest), but they’re out every day of the week, until the wee hours of the morning, this Sunday no exception. A site of public executions back around 1000 AD, it is still an assault on the senses, mostly visual and aural, sometimes olfactory, both good and bad. BBQs, snake charmers, monkey tenders, water men, hawkers, fortune tellers, you name it, it’s all coming at you from myriad directions. In this square, many kids are out and about, either outwardly asking for handouts or trying to sell trinket jewelry. Some of the younger kids speak fairly good English, but most do not. Few adults were begging outright, it was only kids or the very old/infirm who did. We also saw the occasional woman with small child sleeping on either back or lap, at first appearance seeming sick, upon further inspection looking healthy but sleeping very, very deeply. This scenario is apparently more commonplace in India, where kids can even be ‘lent out’ and lightly drugged to appear sick, for begging purposes. Hard for us Westerners to comprehend, to be sure.
Oh yeah, I forgot about Lesson Learned #9: If some dude offers you 20,000 camels for your wife, just smile and nod, keep on moving…
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| Traditional Moroccan couscous. |
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| Yes, Reade and Tate belly-danced (sort of). |
After dinner, a gaggle of 20 or so college students headed into the melee, looking for the kind of fun I’m now far too old to even want to imagine. People on the ship keep wondering if Heidi is a student, and I keep getting asked if I’m a Lifelong Learner (the several dozen 50+ year old people joining the voyage to both learn, and to interact with the younger people on board). Harumph!!!




























One Comment
Sorry, I can't help but chuckle at so many images. Talk about throwing you into the melee right off the bat! Hugs to my fearless nephews!