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Our first steps off the ship onto Moroccan soil! |
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Tate wondering what lies ahead… |
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This lady appeared to be a rock star in her neighborhood, with photos and news stories on the wall of her selling oysters. |
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Reade watching a different part of the world go by. |
The El Hassan II mosque was built using primarily Saudi and Dubai money, and is very impressive. It is hard to appreciate the scale of it until you get inside, similar to seeing the Grand Canyon only from the rim, without going down into it. Once inside, the immense space becomes evident looking down its length, with people at the other end of it looking like ants. The ceiling is 100m high, with the minaret being substantially higher (the minaret in any Islamic community is supposed to be the tallest point within the city, so the imam could be heard in prayer from all around). Lots of Moroccan stone, some imported marble from Italy, gargantuan titanium doors (>20′ high); part of this structure is literally built above the Atlantic, as in the Koran the prophet was ‘of the sea’ (or something like that). Men and women pray separately (our guide had a difficult time explaining this away), and during last week’s Ramadan there would have been as many as 110,000 praying within and around this structure, 25,000 actually inside. Downstairs is an open bathing area with huge stone lotus flowers feeding water in different directions so all these people can cleanse themselves prior to prayer.
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The interior of the El Hassan II mosque, an incredibly impressive structure. |
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One of the 20′ high titanium doors. |
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Ornate detail work on a very large ceiling |
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Marble lotus flower bath area downstairs from the main level. |
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The minaret of the Ell Hassan II mosque, at left. |
One Comment
Love it! The negotiating sounds like Bali. Can't wait for the next post!