Saturday, March 12, 2011

Najat Aatabou- ana jit j'en ai marre

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This is my favorite Moroccan singer, Najat Aatabou in this very beautiful video showing pictures of Morocco. This particular song was Khadija's favorite. Khadija was our housekeeper. She used to put this song on and dance a "zapateo" or a foot dance and stomp on top of a metal bucket. Everything I love about Morocco is encapsulated into this song.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Peace Corps Web Journals

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Peace Corps Morocco - Web Journals. Wow! I have just discovered a whole treasure trove of web journals that are being created by Peace Corps Volunteers in Morocco. I will be posting a whole bunch of them in the next couple of days. Enjoy!

Marrakech in the Media: A Music Video (Jimmy Page)

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Here is a treasure! Jimmy Page recorded his song "No Quarter" against the backdrop of Marrakech's medina. This was an incredible find. The mysterious chords of the music goes very well with these images, Enjoy!

Marrakech in the Media: Song

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The above is a song by Crosby, Stills, Nash, & Young called the "Marrakech Express". To my delight I found this video that was put together by an English teacher. I would not be surprised if the person who put this together was a Peace Corps TEFL teacher. I used this song to teach English to my students at the lycee. The song evokes the popularity of Marrakech during the Sixties.

Marrakech in the Media: Movie clip

Here is the Marrakech scene from the famous Alfred Hitchcock film "The Man Who Knew Too Much" with Jim Stewart and Doris Day. This is the only version I could find, dubbed in French. Despite Doris Day speaking in French and her sounding more like a Gallic marquise than the girl next door, the integrity of the sights and sounds are kept to the original, The only scene that looks "staged" is the bus coming out of Bab Al Ksour - giving the impression that they are going into Djemma El Fna. If you know Marrakech, this Bab or Gate (Bab Al-Kasbah) is actually quite a distance from the square. Amusingly the bus is actually going out of the medina, not in it as the film wants you to believe. What surprises me the most about this scene is that the shots of Marrakech show the side of Djemma El Fna that has not changed. It remains as animated today as it was depicted in this old movie!


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The story tellers and the music are still all there to enjoy in Marrakech's most exciting spot!

Portrait of Marrakech: Djemma El Fna

Djemaa el Fna

Next to the Koutoubia lies the great square of Jamaa el Fna This famous market place is located in the heart of the medina. It is that very pulsating heart. Where does that name "Djemma El Fna" come from?  The origin of its name remains unknown: it means Assembly of the dead in Arabic (جامع الفناء jâmiʻ al-fanâʼ) , but as the word Jemaa also means mosque in Arabic, it could also mean Place of the Vanished Mosque, in reference to a destroyed Almoravid mosque, or it could mean The Mosque of Eternity or The Mosque of Annihilation or perhaps The Mosque at the End of the World.[1] See the Wikipedia Article

The square

The place remains the main square of Marrakesh, used equally by locals and tourists. During the day it is predominantly occupied by orange juice stalls, youths with chained Barbary apes, water sellers in colourful costumes with traditional leather water-bags and brass cups, and snake charmers who will pose for photographs for tourists.[2] As the day progresses the entertainments on offer change: the snake charmers depart, and in the afternoon and evening the square becomes more crowded, with Chleuh dancing-boys (it would be against custom for girls to provide such an entertainment), story-tellers (telling their tales in Berber or Arabic, to an audience of appreciative locals), magicians, and peddlers of traditional medicines. As dark descends the square fills with dozens of food-stalls, and the crowds are at their height.

Picture from Wikipedia captioned "Steam rises from food stalls"

The square is edged along one side by the Marrakesh souk, the traditional North African markets which service both the common daily needs of the people of the city, and the tourist trade. On other sides are cafe terraces to escape from the noise and confusion down in the square, and on yet other sides are hotels and gardens. Narrow streets lead into the alleys of the medina quarter, the old city. The photograph illustrating this article shows the entrance to the souk at the left, cafes in the centre, and the entrance to the medina via the Street of the Olive (derb al zitoun) on the right
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Once a bus station, the place was closed to vehicle traffic in the early 2000s. The authorities are well aware of its importance to the tourist trade, and a strong but discreet police presence ensures the safety of visitors.

True what the Wikipedia says about the police. One of the major changes I have seen all over Morocco (especially in Fes) is the absence of faux guides or touts that used to meet you on the street to try to lure you to visit a carpet seller and get a commission if there is a sale. They were so notorious at the time (1980s) that during our Peace Corps stage in Larache, we actually got training on how to get rid of them and learned strategies to keep them at bay. Firstly, we avoided wearing shorts in the Medina: only tourists wore shorts. Secondly, we all learned how to get rid of the real pesky ones by saying that funny expression "Sir ferhalik" which means "Go to your pleasure" which was much nicer thing to say than "Go to h**l," Actually, at the end of my stay, I was surprised to feel a little sad they disappeared; they used to be such an integral part of the whole medina scene!


Masterpiece of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity

The idea for the UNESCO project Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity came from people concerned about the Jamaa el Fna. The locality is known for its active concentration of traditional activities by storytellers, musicians and performers, but it was threatened by economic development pressures. In fighting for the protection of traditions, the residents called for action on an international level to recognize the need for the protection of such places — termed "cultural spaces" — and other popular and traditional forms of cultural expression.[3] UNESCO encourages communities to identify, document, protect, promote and revitalize such heritage. The UNESCO label of Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity aims to raise awareness about the importance of oral and intangible heritage as an essential component of cultural diversity.
The spectacle of Jamaa el Fna is repeated daily and each day it is different. Everything changes – voices, sounds, gestures, the public which sees, listens, smells, tastes, touches. The oral tradition is framed by one much vaster – that we can call intangible. The Square, as a physical space, shelters a rich oral and intangible tradition.
Juan Goytisolo, in a speech delivered at the opening meeting for the First Proclamation, 15 May 2001[4

Trivia from Wikipedia:



A picture from a rooftop cafe. Djemma El Fna is more than local color. It is the pulsating heart of Marrakech. The continuous din on the square is at times deafening. A cacaphony of noises, The staccato of Gnawa hand cymbals clash with the loud radios all on different channels, the piercing cry of the Berber hornpipes, the ceaseless drumming, the cries of vendors, the gaggle of tourists speaking a babel of languages, the clop clop of the victorias, the polyphonic prayer calls from the many mosques of the medina and the honking bicycles. The square never sleeps. At night it turns into rows and rows of food stalls.

Silhouette of the Koutoubia tower at sunset, standing sentinel opposite the entrance to the square.

The horse-drawn victorias. When I lived in Marrakech, this was a common means of transport. I occasionally took a "cushi" or victoria to work at the lycee Yacoub El Mansour. I was disappointed to discover upon ,my return to Marrakech twenty-plus years later, that the victorias had ceased their regular service for the locals. They have become more of a tourist thing than a practical way to get around town, The moul-cushis or victoria drivers now charge a small fortune to tourists to take a horse and buggy ride. Well, I just had to pay the stiff price for just one more nostalgic ride!

The women of Marrakech. Same title of that must-read book by Leonora Peets
Another view of Djemma El Fna, with a victoria.




Djemma El Fna at night. The whole square turns into rows and rows of foodstalls