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Tag Archives: call to prayer

My house in Marrakech

12 Sunday Apr 2015

Posted by seejanesblog in Morocco

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Tags

bab doukkala, call to prayer, dar, derb, djemaa el fna, house, markets, marrakech, medina, mosque, old medina, riad, terrace

I bought a riad/house in Marrakech; in the old medina of Bab Doukkala! I’ll be listing it for rent, so stay tuned! Also, see my new neighborhood. I live on a dead-end ‘derb’ or street and it’s in a great area. Markets just around the corner, very few tourists, and friendly people! The Bab Doukkala Mosque is nearby so I’ll be well able to hear the call to prayer. It’s a 15-minute walk to djemaa el fna, the popular square in Marrakech.

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My neighborhood
My neighborhood
Walking from the parking
Walking from the parking
The main drag
The main drag
At the corner of my street
At the corner of my street
My street
My street
My street
My street
Neighborhood
Neighborhood
The meat market around the corner
The meat market around the corner
Around the corner
Around the corner
Market!
Market!
Market
Market
Market
Market
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My olive and olive oil purveyor
My olive and olive oil purveyor
My convenience store
My convenience store
Restaurant nearby
Restaurant nearby
Purveyor of grains and legumes
Purveyor of grains and legumes
View of my neighborhood through the terrace fencing
View of my neighborhood through the terrace fencing
Another view
Another view
The neighborhood fountain. "Turn at the fountain for parking."
The neighborhood fountain. “Turn at the fountain for parking.”
Driving down the street around the corner
Driving down the street around the corner
My street
My street
My door before painting
My door before painting
This is the view the Prince of Luxembourg sees when walking from his riad: my terrace!
This is the view the Prince of Luxembourg sees when walking from his riad: my terrace!
Walking to my street
Walking to my street
Walking to the main drag
Walking to the main drag
The shop around the corner
The shop around the corner
31.632783 -7.996074

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Why Morocco? Here’s why!

14 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by seejanesblog in Morocco, Observations

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

call to prayer, casablanca, grilled lamb, marrakech, Marrakesh, Morocco, muslim culture, photography, plainness, rich spices, vibrant cities

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People ask all the time what it is about Morocco that keeps me going back. The first time I visited I just wanted to see it. Just the sound of the names of the major cities intrigued me: Casablanca. Marrakech. Fes. All cities I had heard of and in the same breath as other faraway and romantic-seeming cities like Timbuktu, Constantinople (Istanbul), and Bombay. I wanted to see the Sahara, ride a camel, and photograph the colors.

But once there I realized Morocco is all of that: faraway, romantic, colorful. And it’s a lot more. It’s vast! It’s landscape goes on forever. Only a bit smaller geographically than California, Morocco has everything: mountains, desert, seaside, rich rural culture, and vibrant cities. And more. There’s a grandeur about it on one hand and a plainness on the other. A quietness and a calmness countered with a buzz of excitement and energy.

So what is it about the place that keeps me going back? The people, the food, and the Muslim culture!

I feel safe in Morocco, like I understand the people. I can hold my own there. I can walk through the medina and souk and manage to mostly thwart their efforts to flirt, sell, or cajole. It’s all a part of the experience. People are helpful and will go out of their way for you when they can. I’ve seen it over and over. They seem authentically happy to have a conversation with you and seem genuine when they say they just want to talk to you. And most everyone speaks a variety of languages. For sure French, Arabic, and most speak some English. So it’s easy to communicate for the most part, at least in the cities.

The food! It is among my favorite taste palettes of any place I’ve visited (Vietnam is right up there, too!). Tajine, brochette, dates and oranges, couscous, grilled lamb! And all with rich spices to add incredible flavor to the simplest of meals.

The Muslim culture. The call to prayer 5x each day is beautiful and calming. But it seems less stringent religiously than other countries seem to be. Now I can’t say that for sure but it seems more relaxed and easygoing than some of its Arab counterparts. I think that’s what makes it easy to travel there: it’s relaxed and easygoing. While it’s important to dress modestly in these Muslim countries out of respect for the culture, Moroccans are more easygoing about it in the cities.

I visit Morocco for all of these reasons. But there’s so much more. So much more that I cannot describe or photograph; there’s a feeling about the place. A calmness; a slowness. A tranquility. But mostly that’s off the beaten track.

If you visit, see all the hotspots in Marrakech and Casablanca, but then spend your time off the beaten track, discovering the hillsides, the riversides, the souks in small towns. Eat at roadside barbecue restaurants. Stay under the stars in the Sahara. Get away from it all and experience the tranquility of Morocco!

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Oh baby, baby it’s a wild world

31 Friday May 2013

Posted by seejanesblog in Morocco

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

adhan, artist, call to prayer, Cat Stevens, fes, morning has broken, muezzin, musician, songs, wild world, Yusuf Islam

Word has it that Yusuf Islam, a.k.a. Cat Stevens, lives in Fes. But the best part? He is the muezzin who recites the adhan! He’s the guy who’s voice is heard on the loudspeakers perched on the minaret! He’s the guy that calls the prayer! Suddenly I’m star struck. 

Of course I think of him singing his prayers like he might sing ‘Wild World’ or ‘Morning Has Broken’ and then I laugh…

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The freedom from religion

29 Wednesday May 2013

Posted by seejanesblog in Morocco

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

call to prayer, choice, country, freedom, minaret, Morocco, mosque, Muslim prayer, religion

A big realization for me whilst traveling through Morocco: here there is no freedom from religion. Or of religion. You’re a Muslim and that’s that. Religion is woven into the fabric of everyday life. It’s everywhere. In the phraseology used regularly, in the decisions for the future, in the dress of the people, and in the daily plan. Prayers blare and bellow from every minaret (tower of a mosque) in every village in every town all over the country at the same time each day. “It’s morning, get up and pray,” the prayer urges sometime around 4 a.m.

I find it beautiful and peaceful. And I look forward to it, even at 4 a.m. But while that’s one sort of endearing thing about Morocco (or any Muslim country), or at least a stable and sure thing, I can’t imagine dealing with this day in and day out with or without being Muslim. But religion keeps a society in check. It controls it when the government or its people cannot. So it is. This is a Muslim country and you’re going to live with it, gosh darn it.

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Couscous Friday

25 Saturday May 2013

Posted by seejanesblog in Morocco

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

call to prayer, casablanca, city sounds, coucous, food, hot peppers, moroccan city, Morocco, travel

Fridays are for couscous. And it seems every Moroccan follows this tradition. Mokhtar’s sister and her family were kind enough to invite me over to enjoy it with them! It was the best couscous I’ve ever had. Amazing! It had kind of a spice to it and she served fresh hot peppers with it besides. She will give me the recipe and allow me to make it with her next week when I return to their home.Image

It was great spending time with these family members! Four children aged 16, 12, 7, and 2. Lots of energy and joy in that home! And such love. It was really a great time. The home is beautiful, which is always fun to see, but it was comfortable and they are wonderful hosts.

I slept on the Moroccan sofas in the living room with the 12 year old daughter and it was an excellent nights’ sleep with donkey hooves sounding down the street in the night, cats fighting, birds singing, and all kinds of other Moroccan city sounds! And then the call to prayer which always first wakes me, then lulls me back to a deep sleep. Ah, Morocco!

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The recent past

  • Living above my means
  • The broken palm tree and a hug
  • The little old man of Bab Doukkala
  • The kindness of a stranger
  • Walk gently on this earth
  • Love everlasting
  • And suddenly it hits you…
  • It’s not what you’re given, it’s what you do with it

Stuff from my past

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Blogs worth reading

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  • My trips: Argentina, Falkland Islands, South Georgia, and Antarctica
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Food! Glorious food!

  • Street food in Marrakech

Stuff worth knowing

  • Barbara Robinson's Trip Report – Istanbul
  • Definition 'kasbah'
  • Definition 'riad'
  • Definition 'souq'
  • Morocco Travel Guide
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  • Volubilis, Morocco: about it

My traveling past in Flickr photos

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