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a visit to one of the snake charmers in the square |
Today is our last full day in Marrakech—and Morocco.
I fly home tomorrow at 535 a.m. and stop off in Paris to board my
flight home to Detroit. I had thought about staying Paris for four
or five days, but could not make my connections. That's OK. I'm
pretty tired of traveling and a two-night trip to Chicago and a
one-nighter in Detroit await me during Christmas week.
Jardin de Majorelle
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Place of the ashes of Yves Saint Laurent |
We began the day with a tour of the Jardin de Majorelle
and the Islamic Art Museum. The gardens were designed by French
painter, Jacques Majorelle, in the 1920s. He had contracted asthma
and chose Marrakech as a suitable place to live with it. He set up
his workshop there and conceived of this beautiful garden. Friends
in the French army gave him exotic plants, flowers, and cactus from
all over the world. After he died, the garden deteriorated. In
1980, Yves Saint Laurent assumed ownership of the villa with his
partner, Pierre Berge. Yves died in 2008 and his ashes are buried at
the villa.
This is an incredible garden envisioned and then built
by someone who made the best of his awful health situation. It still
amazes me how people can conceive and execute a project. Majorelle's
art studio is now a museum for Berber life, which includes their
dress, tools (including writing), and artifacts of their lifestyle.
The color scheme is a rich blue and green that contrasts the
carefully manicured and maintained gray ground and light green cacti.
Cactus are everywhere in different shapes and sizes.
It's like a dream land and walking through it, I found myself in a
very quiet and pensive mood where I could just enjoy wandering among
the plants. I was moved to take photos of the most unusual and most
complex cacti.
We hopped back on the bus and headed toward the northern
part of the Medina. Yesterday, we were in the southern part. Half a million people live in the Medina and 1 million
others live in the new town and suburbs of Marrakech. Yamni also told
us that the road through the mountains that we had taken two days ago
was snowed out yesterday. We would have had to go on another road
that was about 60 km longer had we not escaped the snow. Lucky us!
Maybe we were living under the Hand of Fatima already?
Ali Ben Youssef Medersa
Dar Menebhi Palace
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courtyard of the palace |
The Marrackech Museum is in the Dar Menebhi Palace,
which was built at the end of the 19th century by Mehdi
Menebhi. The palace was carefully restored by the Omar Benjelloun
Foundation and converted into a museum in 1997. The building and its
fountains were hooked up to the irrigation system built by the
Almohad dynasty in the 12th century and used until recently when the dam projects provided adequate water. The old irrigation system now feeds
the gardens around here. A vizier lived here (but not the same one
who lived in the Bhai Palace that we visited yesterday.) The
beautiful courtyard has been visited by royalty from around the world
and various art exhibitions are housed here.
According
to Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marrakech_Museum),
the house itself represents an example of classical Andalusian
architecture, with fountains in the central courtyard, traditional
seating areas, a hammam and intricate tile work and carvings. The
museum's large atrium (originally a courtyard, now covered in glass
and fabric) contains a very large centrally hung chandelier-esque
ceiling piece consisting of metal plates decorated with fine
geometric and epigraphic cuttings. Several features of the original
courtyard, including the floor-set basins and mosaics have been
retained. The museum holds exhibits of
both modern and traditional Moroccan art together with fine examples
of historical books, coins and pottery of Moroccan Jewish, Berber and
Arab cultures.
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close-up if the chandelier |
Northside of the Medina
We then visited the north side of the Medina (the older side) and walked
through 11th century streets where the "Skin Men"
(they make leather from animal skins) and metal artisans work. This part
of the Medina is as it was and so it is now a designated UNESCO World Heritage Site. The streets were
far more narrow in this section than in the south medina and moving around people who made
goods deliveries or who were passing through on their motorcycles was
an experience in itself. However, there was incredibly beautiful work going on in
this section.
One word about Morocco. The goods the people sell come
in many varieties, but they ARE definitely quality goods and not junk. Wholesalers come here to buy and then sell these goods all over Morocco and the world. I'm not a shopper or a collector but there were many
different things I would have liked to buy. If I ever return to Morocco, I will spend more time and money in
the souks. There are some very nice things there!!
It was lunch time and Yamni treated us to a Moroccan
style lunch in the upper dining room of a restaurant. The narrow
stairway (straight up and winding around what seemed to be about a
yard in width) led to a dining area with tables so close together,
you could smell the meal on the next table. Actually, it was here that I knew it was
time for me to return home; I was feeling a little claustrophobic from all
the jostling and jagging in the medina streets. We just don't live
that close together in the USA. On the other hand, our streets are not as exciting as Morocco's streets. There are always trade-offs in life.
I asked Yemni if he tired of the pace of life in the Medina with all the bargaining and jostling in the streets. He said he was used to it. After all, he (and 1.5 million other people) chose to live in Marrakech. While he doesn't usually partake of the Night Market for himself, he does drive his older son here so that he can meet with his friends. Young people love the square because this is where the action is. They also have more interest in mixing and mingling in all the excitement. And, one other important point. It is safe here. While there are police around for crowd control, it is totally safe, another feature we have largely lost in our American cities--at least the feeling of safety. Whether that is reality or not is another matter.
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Julie. Nancy and Sylvia with Gary in the background |
We had a meal of a slow roasted leg of lamb on a platter
with french fries (that came a little afterward) and bread. We
received no plate or silverware, so we ate Moroccan style, too.
(Fortunately, no one was looking to make sure we didn't eat with our
left hand, and I could tear the meat apart with my fingers instead of
the bread provided. So much simpler!) We were given a half sheet of
newsprint paper that served as both a place mat and a napkin. Julie
and I placed the bones of the meat and the pits of the olives we ate
under the platter, Nancy and Sylvia placed them on the platter. By
this time we have all been sick at least once and we have been
traveling together for two weeks (most of them for three weeks) that
we no longer cared about getting anyone else's germs.
The meat was excellent and it was spiced beautifully.
Yemni suggested we put a little cumin/salt mix that was on the
table, but I found the meat to be cooked perfectly, and it was
delicious. Then the crowning touch, a mint tea that used sage in the
green tea (with sugar) rather than the usual spearmint. This was
probably the best tea of the trip.
After our delicious meal we had the afternoon off to either go shopping once again
or go back to the hotel. We were to meet in the hotel lobby at 6:30 for a little meeting with dinner following. Our bus would be there to pick us up in a half hour in the western
part of the square if we chose to return to the hotel, which everyone did. The walk back is about 2 km and taxis cost 20 dh (50 dh at night).
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a traffic jam -- medina-style in Marrakech |
I began looking for the bus—our big green and white
vehicle—and finally saw it. Actually, Shafik spotted me and
signaled me to get on. Then we looked for the others, who came along
shortly afterward.
We returned to the hotel about 2 p.m., and most of us went to our rooms for a rest. We were to meet at
6:30 for a short meeting in the hotel lobby and then have our farewell
dinner at 7 p.m. at a restaurant outside the hotel. We are trying to
get there before the “hooligans” do. We will also pick up our
packages with our ceramic purchases that were boxed and stored for us
in the bus to take with us today. Just another OAT service that made
traveling from town to town a little easier.
I am trying to finish my blogs before I leave Marrakech.
I also need to pack tonight and figure out how to carry all the
stuff I bought. Fortunately, I was able to fit everything into my suitcase and my backpack.
The
Last Supper
We gathered in the hotel lobby for our little meeting, which consisted of a sharing of our e-mails and some last photos. Yemni also took this time to thank us for choosing OAT. He hoped we enjoyed the trip and found him a good representative of the country. In this sense, he is truly an ambassador not of political affairs, but of helping to bring people from different countries together so that they can understand each other. In this way, tourism and this tour specifically, did its job. That is also the mission of this blog, too.
I learned this lesson about tourism long ago when I first started traveling in 1984 through my fellowship with the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. It became especially clear to me when I visited the "Soviet Union" to meet our rivals. I had connected with our guide, Larissa, as a person. We shared stories about our family and our own aspirations and discovered our similarities. Our differences (language, culture, even politics) seemed minor and unimportant compared to our humanity--especially since we were in the midst of the Chernobyl situation.
Of course, nations strive to be strong, influential, rich, and dominant. With such an agenda, rivalries are bound to develop and they can grow into fierce hostilities and even result in war. I saw that clearly with the war against Iraq in 2003, which didn't have to happen. It was a choice--and it ended in death, destruction, maimed bodies, psychological trauma, and billions and billions of dollars wasted that could have been spent on the people's needs for education, health, and development. That's what governments do, unfortunately, as they think they are protecting the country.
After we thanked Yemni for being such a wonderful guide and host to his country, he led us outside the hotel to board our bus. He had arranged for our farewell dinner at a fancy French restaurant in the new section of the city, Gueliz. However, traffic was so jammed as sports fans headed toward the soccer stadium, that the bus could get no where near the hotel. To further complicate matters, the King was scheduled to attend the match, and extra security was exercised. Lines of soldiers covered the streets every 30 yards or so, and they would stand there before, during, and after the match as long as the King was there. Suddenly, we saw a motorcade with flashing blue lights. It was the King!! So, in this way, Yamni had also provided a special chance for us to see the King.
When it became clear that the bus could not drive in front of the hotel we walked about half a mile to get to it. (Here was another case of "thank God for cell phones." Yamni and the drivers were in constant contact through cell phones. It's the only way to travel.)
When we finally arrived at the restaurant, we learned that some of the wait staff was caught in soccer traffic, too. So service was slow and handled largely by one man. That didn't matter, however, because we had a chance to talk with each other for the last time--and to savor our wine (on the house), our food (vegetable soup with an entree of chicken in wine sauce with a side of thin spaghetti and vegetables), and each other. It turned out to be a perfect evening.
As we were passing through the hotel lobby, there was considerable noise coming from the bar. I went to see what was going on. People were watching the concluding half hour of the soccer match. The home team was behind by 2 points--and they missed a couple of good shots to even the score. The King was featured in his box with his attendants. He was scheduled to give a trophy to whichever team won. It would have been pandemonium in the stadium had the home team won. Nevertheless, he was dignified as one would expect a king to be.
We
collected our ceramic gifts that had been stored on the bus a week ago. Yemni had arranged this for us so that
we didn't have to carry them for a week. The packages all seemed so
much bigger than we thought. Of course, we were concerned about packing them in our suitcases and carrying them on the plane.
Then we all retired to our rooms for the night. It was 9:30 p.m. in Marrakech.