Tuesday, 5 February 2008

Sidi Kaouki



Thirty kilometers south of Essaouira sits a bizarre but increasingly typical surfing village called Sidi Kaouki. Camping cars (motor homes to Americans) fill a parking lot surrounded by open-air cafés and fish restaurants. Down the road sits a surf shop decorated in a psychedelic melange of Beach Boys throw-back and Moroccan kitsch. A few hundred meters further: 2 hectare stone-fenced estates with million dollar homes, waiting for their owners to arrive for a few weeks each year. Each empty lot bears the testimony of land moving equipment; many more mansions are being built. In late January the Europeans outnumber the Moroccans at least 2 to 1.

All along the Atlantic coast of Morocco communities like this are being built. Inhabited mostly by French retirees during the winter months and European surfers year round, with stone and concrete fences topped with broken glass bottles, these little Europes allow all the economies and beautiful weather Morocco offers without the hassle of engaging the locals too much. For the most part the locals seem pleased to have them and the money they bring, much the way scarabs are pleased with sheep and their manure, though this sentiment is not shared by all. The road along the coast until Agadir is filled with vieux campeurs in their wheeled, white houses. Some of them wave as they pass, a few wave both arms in front of their faces, in the universal sign language of No. None stop to pick up a hitchhiker.

I was dropped off at Sidi Kaouki by four young French people. They slept on the beach. Not knowing whether it was high or low tide and not wishing to find out, I climbed a couple of fences, built a small fire and slept in an empty lot under the stars. It was the first time in Morocco I slept neither in nor immediately outside a city and the stars reminded me of Montana. Recognizing all the constellations I thought forgotten, feeling each wave breathe onto the shore two hundred meters away, it occurred to me that atheists cannot exist outside the city.

Disbelief requires smog and traffic and money and advertising and buildings. Absent these things atheism dies a quick and painless death. I know many who profess atheism. Some are scientists, biologists, physicists and geologists who spend long hours in the wilderness and still maintain that there is no God. These are atheists the same way those who preach war claim to be Christians or Muslims: without exception each scientist I know regards the universe with awe. They marvel at the apparent genius of organisms' adaptations, the wonderful elegance of the physical forces that maintain the engine of creation, the shear force of the slow eternal movement of the earth's crust. They devote their lives to the study and comprehension of a universe they know they will never fully comprehend. These “atheists” worship as well as scholars who parse holy books or mystics who know the secret names of God.

Muhammed Abduh, an Egyptian educator and Islamic reformer and revivalist who died in 1905, critically compared the fundamental differences of Christianity and Islam. According to the first item of his framework, Christianity is fundamentally based on miracles. Islam maintains that God is evident in nature before and apart from the prophets or Quran. According to Abduh, the single miracle Muslims are required to believe in is the transmission of The Quran through the Angel Gabriel to Muhammed. And the Quran reaffirms reality rather than contradicts it as does the Bible.

He acknowledged that his principles of Islam were far from universally followed and I think many of his criticisms of Christianity are unfair. Later revivalists, including the Muslim Brotherhood which formed in Egypt a few decades after his death, criticized many of his ideas as unislamic. Still the comparative framework he developed is a predominate one in Muslims' conception Christianity vs. Islam.

Separated even from his larger criticism of Christianity, the point that God is evident before and outside any organized worship, that reason and observation alone are sufficient for belief seems important in understanding the differences between the post-Christian secular Occident and the Islamic Orient. Muslims often make the point that while they believe in Jesus and Moses and either 23 or more than 124,000 other prophets, each was sent by God for specific times, places and people; Muhammed is the last Prophet and passed Islam on for all people for all eternity. I never disagree with this assessment of Islam, only “J'ai le meme dieu”.

Unignorable is that Islam was born in the dessert of Arabia and spread quickly in the dry Middle East and Africa. Here still is where it is strongest and mostly deeply rooted. Even in the cities of Morocco it is impossible to ignore the presence of the desert and its frontier surrounding every oasis real and constructed. Here it is impossible not to consider the vastness of the universe and to conceive a single eternal presence permeating all. It cannot be a coincidence that each of the monotheistic religions was delivered from the dry desert womb of places like this. Is polytheism (in this I include The First Church of Liberal Capitalism and its technological talismans) born instead from the constant alternation of plenty and drought? I write this stuck in a remote restaurant in the Sahara where a storm outside blows sand at more than 100 km/h. Here I cannot separate the Islamic conception of God from the permanent drought of the desert and the inconceivable power and constancy of the natural forces at work here.

In the morning I woke and made friends with a timid young bitch, barely out of puppyhood herself but with heavy and scarred teets. It took awhile but she was hungry and my khobs, the flat, round bread ubiquitous here, proved too strong to resist. I gave her a few pieces and went to make my increasingly urgent toilet. I wasn't sick but the vast amounts of excellent olive oil everyone eats here keeps the alimentary canal healthy and active. Though my khobs was gone she was no longer afraid of me and found what I was getting rid of as appetizing as what I'd already given her. The position I was in is not especially stable and trying to parry the hungry advances of a young dog used every bit of my not-great balance. After finishing I built a small but effective pile of rocks, my puritanism winning over sympathy for her hunger.

I walked back to the parking lot and drank a couple B'rad ah thé sheeba and pieces of fresh khobs with a few Spanish surfers before again meeting the four who dropped me off. An old toothless Majorcan with named Jau who bummed a few cigarettes off me told me of waterfall about 12 km south. After the French bought breakfast we got in their rental car to search for it. After turning around a few times and asking the old shepherds sitting next to the road for directions we parked the car under the shepherds' guard and walked down the wide dry riverbed. Because of season or dams or both I don't know but the river here barely amounted to a stream; in the widest places it was easily hopped over. Arriving at the cascade we found just a few trickles falling off 3 meter tall stone steps. We rested awhile and headed back to Sidi Kaouki, stopping to give a few dirhams and a couple of cigarettes to the two old men who'd not moved in the hours we were away.

We took lunch and they insisted on paying the whole bill of almost 250 Dh (about 35 USD) saying “you are living a dream we all have and it is a pleasure to help you on your journey.” Though I had the money, I am living most days on about half what my share would have come to and have learned not to refuse blessings. I wish I could recount every instance of kindness bestowed upon me in Morocco. Due to the kindnesses of both Moroccans and other tourists I have rarely lacked a place to sleep or food in my belly. God protects the mad and the foolish with the hearts of his people. Most gently acknowledge that I am both. Returning to Essaouira they dropped me off on the main road to Agadir.

At the crossroads I waited for awhile and a young Moroccan arrived from the fields and sat on the rock across the road from me. I offered him a cigarette which he gratefully and carefully put in his shirt pocket. I returned to my pack and waited for nearly an hour with a 3 day old Guardian I'd pulled out of the trash. The Moroccan simply sat. The capacity Moroccans have for sitting, without apparent boredom or agenda is astounding. For hours at time, across the country, young men and old sit on rocks and chairs and their own heels thinking about I don't know what but the contemplation of God seems inevitable.

Sunday, 3 February 2008

Leaving Casablanca

After the last two months of having a computer (Thanks Dad) I have been trying to write and edit more than 2 years worth of blogs and though some progress is being made I am deciding just to write what is going o now and post the older stuff when I get it finished. Apologies to those who I have met on the way and are not yet acknowledged. Your time in coming.

I am leaving Casablanca today after eleven days. My copine Charlotte flew down from Paris for ten days and we spent the time traveling to Marrakesh, Fes and Chefchouen before coming back to Casa for her flight back to Paris. I have some photos posted on my facebook site and more will be coming soon. I'm trying to get a handle on this html thing but my Internet time is limited.

I intended to spend just a day or two here; long enough to get my Mauritanian Visa from the Consulate in Casablanca. I didn't anticipate that the Muslim New Year fell on Thursday and the Moroccan Independence Day on Friday. As everything official was closed I spent the long weekend absorbing Casablanca. I woke up early Monday morning but my inability to say 'no' to all the wonderful street food here caught up with me and I was occupied until after noon. I found out then that Visas are no longer being issued in Casablanca and I must go to Rabat.

After searching for awhile and eventually taking a taxi I arrived at the Embassy in Rabat about 13h30 and was told by a tall, impatient Mauritanian speaking very Applications are only taken in the morning. I came back the next day and on Thursday after only three trips to Rabat picked up my Visa valid until the end of February.

I might have stayed in Rabat to save the train fare but also I Tuesday finally got a hold of Brouazza, my CouchSurfing host in Casablanca. He and his family are wonderful and I enjoyed my time in their home immensely. With three brothers and 2 sisters Brouazza 26, is the youngest boy and as an English teacher plays the good son. I have reason to believe he is more of a devil than he lets on to his parents.

His brother Redwan 35, is currently looking for a job. With degrees in English literature and management he has experience and education and serves as a perfect example of the problems the economy has providing good jobs for a rapidly growing educated class. He wants to go to Europe or North America but the requirements for Visa are difficult to achieve. To get into Canada, easy compared to the States, requires a bank account of about $5000 USD. Bouazza also desires to go to Canada but receives a teachers salary of less than $400 USD.

Redwan and I brainstormed methods of getting out of Maroc and I promised to look into options. If anyone desires to meet an attractive educated Moroccan fluent in both classical Arabic and Moroccan as well as French and English let me know and I'll put you in touch.
Their mother is a saint among women and immediately adopted me as a son. She fed me, taught me more Arabic than I'd learned in the rest of my three weeks in Maroc, and fed me more. She has never worked outside the home and treats her sons like princes.

She cooked and cleaned and shooed me away any time I tried to do as little as take my dishes to the sink or wipe down the table. Each morning at breakfast she insisted I eat at least three portions of everything, “monge, monge, monge” At dinner it was the same and I didn't need to eat at all during the day.

The first night I arrived Bouazza and I went out for a walk and each took a bowl of beautiful snail soup at the stand near his home. I wasn't particularly hungry but he was and we stopped by the bucherie du cheval. Decorated with pictures of horses it resembled less a butcher shop than the bedroom of a ten year old girl and sold sold nothing but different cuts of horse. Bouazza purchased a kilo of ground meat and some eggs down the street before going back home where his mother prepared a prepared a delicious spiced tagine. Even in France I didn't eat horse and didn't know quite what to expect. The meat is flavorful and lean but not strong like venison or goat.


I'd been told that Casablanca is the Dallas of Maroc. I've never visited Dallas but haven't heard anything good about it either. The same cannot be said for Casa. The economic capital of the country and the largest port in Africa, 5 million people call it home and it teems with energy and traffic like any other world economic center. Breathing in the wet Atlantic wind it exhales black exhaust, the scent of thousands of fish stands and the smoke of millions of cigarettes. The prosperous center is filled with fancy hotels thousands of small shops. Cafes are everywhere and men smoke for hours, sipping coffee and mint tea, Gossipping and arguing politics. The streets are filled with cars and brightly painted delivery trucks; buses are sometimes so full that the doors can't close and young men hang from the steps. Mopeds are pedaled until they sputter blue smoke and purr away and everywhere pedestrians walk into traffic with confidence that sings of faith in Allah. Everywhere there is life and commerce and one can't help but be swept up in the rhythm and music of the city.

At the end of WWII only 700,000 lived here and before that only a few thousand until the French built an artificial harbor in the 1920s and the city began to attract the masses from around Maroc. Fancy nightclubs, Diesel and Dolce & Gabanna vie for the money of many rich residents in areas like the Marif filled with guarded residences and large banks. But poverty follows wealth and it is evident everywhere. Young women with babies beg for change and sell tissues. Children sleep on pieces of cardboard against buildings in the Medina and the outskirts are filled with shantytowns and grimy apartment buildings flying always the drapeaux of hand scrubbed laundry in the soft polluted wind. Here is where the vast majority of Casaouias live.

I'll continue this later but now must go to sleep.