Friday 24 April 2009

Dispatch from Ghadames

Ghadames

post-office-with-hook

At Libya’s border with Tunisia and Algeria, Ghadames sits.

Or reclines, in a Bedouin kind of way. Lazily, I give you Lonely Planet:

“There’s nowhere on earth quite like Ghadames, which could just be our favourite place in Libya. The Unesco World Heritage-listed old city is a magical evocation of an idyllic caravan town of the Sahara – a palm-fringed oasis, the sense of an intricate maze, stunning traditional houses huddled together for company amid the empty spaces of the Sahara, and extensive covered walkways that keep the desert heat at bay.”

lookoutI think I liked most the post office (see photo above), where a member of departing caravans would search through bags hung on a hook in the passageway to see if any letters were bound for destinations along his anticipated route. And the lookout (see photo), from where someone would scan for signs of approaching caravans; like sailors on a sea of sand, the Ghadamsis wanted always to know what was on the horizon.

* * *

In the carpet-bedecked tent for tourists at the base of the dunes I lie on cushions. Several black men in traditional Tuareg nomad garb tend to tea trays near the entrance, conversing in Arabic (or is it Berber? Or even Tuareg?). Now, for some years I’ve maintained a habit, which I highly recommend, of travelling with old novels set in the place I’m visiting. From my pack I extract 1939’s “Wind, Sand and Stars” by Antoine de Saint-Exupery (who wrote The Little Prince as his last literary act before being shot down by Germans off France’s Mediterranean coast; he was an aviator with the Aeropostale). At random, I crack it open – you will not believe me – to this passage:

tent-and-tea“Then the slave, without a word, fills the stove with dry twigs, blows on the glowing embers, fills the kettle, setting in motion for a girl’s task muscles that would uproot a cedar. He is untroubled. Absorbed in the sequence of actions: brew the tea, look after the dromedaries, eat. March under the burning of the day towards the night, and long under the chill of the naked stars for the burning of the day. Happy are the northern lands whose seasons can compose a legend of snow in summer and a legend of sun in winter; sad are the tropics where in the sweating-room nothing really changes, but happy too is this Sahara where day and night swing men so simply from one hope to the other.”

The weather, on this mid-winter early evening however, is balmy, warmish, neither hot nor cold; I’m very comfortable in a T-shirt and trousers. The tea is sweet, like I like it, and poured from a height so it froths like cappuccino. The bread is hot and fresh, and the sand baked into it squelches against my tooth enamel as I chew.

* * *

my-driver1In the hotel lobby, I bump into the US defence attaché, visiting from Tripoli with his family for the weekend. I ask something I’ve been wondering all week: “So is Libya all right now as far as we Yanks are concerned?” “We’re still keeping an eye on them.” But assuming the government here continues to straighten up, I think, just give ten years to this expansive, stable, storied, oil-rich and well-located territory of 5 million inhabitants and it will become what my old boss Kudlow used to refer to as ‘a real country’. One of a handful in Africa.

Inshallah (god willing).

Your humble correspondent,
Jeremy

PS Though I felt surrounded by the mystique of camels since arriving here, the closest I actually got to one, funnily enough, was in the lunch I ate in one of the Ghadames’ traditional houses. If my guide (whose name was Mohammad Ali; he trained not as a boxer but as an air traffic controller) hadn’t pointed this out, I’d have thought it was tender and mild stewed lamb.

camel-with-pepsi

Written by Jeremy in: Dispatches, Nation brands |

1 Comment »

  • andreita says:

    I got this long time ago! Reading it again, I realized I vividly remembered the images you provide in your narrative. They must have made such an impact, because i read it again and felt like I was going on a second journey to a place I had already been to lol….I am dying to go the Middle-East!
    xoxo

Medina and suuqs



TRIPOLI:


Tripoli, Libya / Medina


Tripoli, Libya / Medina

Tripoli, Libya / Medina


Medina is the Arabic word for town, and suuq for market. The two mixes in Old Tripoli, as in other cities and towns in this part of the world.
Tripoli's medina, the part of the city that lies inside the old city walls and out to the Mediterranean Sea, is clearly the most appealing part of town, although it is not even nearly as fine as medinas of Tunisia.
The medina houses a few sites of Tripoli that are described in each their article, especially the Gurgi Mosque, the Karamanli House and the Aurelian Arch.
The suuqs are of some interest, as a few shops continue to produce handicrafts and necessities according to old traditions. More and more, however, the items sold in the suuqs are industrially produced.
Across the media, there are many remains of the European presence in Tripoli. Since European tradesmen and states built their own houses, some of the finest buildings of the medina are largely of European origin.

Tripoli, Libya / Medina



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By: Tore Kjeilen

Saturday 18 April 2009

The Libyan artist Hassan Uraibi gone


, died today in the pre-Hassan Uraibi
Saturday, April 18, 2009 Libyan artist known Hassan Uraibi after suffering a sudden heart attack and was taken to a hospital in Tripoli, where Green died there and buried on Sunday after Asr prayer Hani martyrs cemetery. the God to Him we shall return
Hassan Uraibi singer and composer Libby and one of the pioneers of music and singing in Libya, especially in the art of Andalusian unusual. Uraibi Hassan was born in the city of Tripoli. The work of a staff member at the beginning of the Ministry of Transportation in Benghazi, before the opening of the radio-General in Benghazi, Libya 1959, known as the late singer Mohamed Sedki, who discovered his talent by singing the first song 'How Nosvk people', to join the music department as a radio technician. Also made in that period many of the tunes for a number of Libyan and Arab singers, including: Mohsen Attia, Ibrahim Hfezi and Egyptologist Mohamed Hoda Sultan Nazek, Lebanese, Tunisian and high, a blessing.
After his return to Tripoli, the foundations of 'the familiar and the task force aroused and Arabic music' on radio in 1964, to encompass members of the group and a radio voice of the famous names in the song on the radio, such as the time Alcypron, Abdul Latif Huwail, Said and Khaled Fakhri track, and those who have aroused a range of music .
Hassan Uraibi won many medals and certificates of appreciation was also the first captain of the Artists Union at the level of Libya after the establishment of the year 1974.
Chosen as the Arab Society for Music in the Arab League, which brought together the top musicians in the Arab world and for his efforts.
Chairman of the Conference of Arab Music held periodically the whole Arab world, senior Musiqii. [2]
Chosen chairman of Song Festival in the second session of the Libyan city of Tripoli during the year 2003.