Africa

Here we are on the edge of Rabat's Kasbah overlooking the Atlantic. The weather of late has been fabulous as you can see here.

Here we are on the edge of Rabat’s Kasbah overlooking the Atlantic. The weather of late has been fabulous as you can see here.

We spent three days in Rabat, but I really don’t have a lot to say about it. Only the seventh-largest city in Morocco, Rabat has been the capital since 1912 when the French moved the capital here from Fez. The French had invaded and set up a “protectorate,” but since the then-capital Fez was still a bit rebellious they moved the capital to somewhere safer. When Morocco regained independence in 1956, King Mohammad V decided to leave the capital where it was.

This was a great little restaurant we almost literally stumbled into in the medina. Those are samples of four Moroccan salads which were followed by some great tangines. Unfortunately we also had some pretty unexciting meals here, too.

This was a great little restaurant we almost literally stumbled into in the medina. Those are samples of four Moroccan salads which were followed by some great tangines. Unfortunately we also had some pretty unexciting meals here, too.

Like any middling-sized capital city – a capital not because it’s the cultural and economic center of the country, but a capital because it’s not the center – Rabat is kind of boring. We came here with a specific goal: to get a visa from the Ghanian embassy here. We wanted to go to Ghana and it’s one of those countries where you can’t get a visa on arrival. Knowing that we could be in Rabat if it made sense – and always having an interest in seeing a capital city – Mark found the embassy’s web site and emailed asking if, as Americans, we could get a visa there to visit Ghana. The answer came back short and unambiguous; “Yes, you can,” is all it said.

So we show up at the embassy when it opens, knowing that anything could go wrong. And of course it did. The woman at the front desk explained that no, they only take visa applications from Moroccan citizens; as Americans we would have to apply from the U.S. Mark showed her the email that said we could get a visa there and the woman said that no, the person who wrote that was just a secretary, she was new, and she was wrong. She didn’t quite blow us off; she agreed that she could take the application, along with our $100 application fees, and forward the documents to Accra (Ghana’s capital) to see what they would do. It would probably take about two weeks, by which time we would be long gone from Rabat and probably from Morocco.

Ergo, no go. Instead we’ll go to Marrakech as planned and then move directly to Senegal and The Gambia, spending more time there than we otherwise would. Who knows, we may even hop across the border into Guinea-Bissau just because we can. Either way, though, we’re not visiting Ghana during this pass through West Africa.

Mark posing in one of the tiny-but-beautiful streets in the Kasbah

Mark posing in one of the tiny-but-beautiful streets in the Kasbah

As for Rabat, meh. We found a little bit of good food. There is a great medina and beautiful Kasbah, both of which were worth wandering around in for a few hours. Definitely not worth the three-day stop we planned to get the visas.

One thing that is going to drive me crazy here in Morocco, generally I assume but it was certainly an issue in Rabat, is the smoking. There appears to be no concept of a No Smoking zone, whether in restaurants or hotels or anywhere except trains. You walk into a hotel lobby and people are smoking away; you can sit at a table in a restaurant and someone right next to you – not two feet away – will start smoking. And pretty soon everyone at their table will be smoking. I grew up in a world like that, but it’s been a long time since I’ve had to live in it again. I don’t like it, and I sure don’t like having to wash my clothes every night to get the damned smoke out.

From here it’s a quick one day stop in Casablanca, mostly just to break up the trip, and then six long days in Marrakech with Mark’s brother and sister-in-law to celebrate Thanksgiving. I know, we should have stayed in Turkey for Thanksgiving, but here we are instead.

More beauty from the Kasbah

More beauty from the Kasbah

And one more for good luck

And one more for good luck

A morning view of Tangier from the rooftop

A morning view of Tangier from the rooftop

What a difference a few miles can make. From Tarifa the ferry to Tangier takes an hour to go perhaps 14 miles. By any standards, that’s a short commute. Yet suddenly there we were in North Africa, Moorish country, with all the bustle and flavors and smells and sounds you might expect.

The Kasbah and medina are a warren of these little colorful streets

The Kasbah and medina are a warren of these little colorful streets

Street markets selling produce

Street markets selling produce

And pretty much anything else you might want

And pretty much anything else you might want

A couple quick impressions. Our hotel was in the Kasbah, the old royal enclave of the medina or old city. Narrow, winding lanes that, I assume, I would have figured out in just a year or two if I stayed there. Kids running around everywhere since, while to us it’s this atmospheric throwback to an ancient time, to them it’s home. Every few steps for the first couple of days young men would ask where we were going, trying to take us to their restaurant or shop or just to guide us for a small tip. Little sidewalk markets everywhere, piled one on top of another, selling everything you might want and even more that you don’t want. A lot poorer than what we’d seen just a few miles away in Spain and obviously a lot more Islamic.

I had the sense, though, that Tangier at least – we’ll see about Morocco more generally – was a notably optimistic place. You have the sense that people believe that there is a bright future for the city. There’s a huge new port under construction, an enormous investment with spaces for huge cruise ships along with all the freight that they expect. Across from the train station – itself looking quite new – is a big new mall going up with a huge Hilton as its anchor. The main street along the waterfront – Mohammed VI Avenue – is torn up and being rebuilt, while the city beach itself is being cleaned up. As we took a taxi out to the train station as we were moving on to Rabat, you could see more new construction, lots of glass buildings heralding a bright future.

We hope. This all begs the question of why Morocco seems so stable and optimistic and healthy while across the rest of North Africa, from Algeria and Libya to Egypt and into the Middle East, there is so much disruption. Obviously some of that is the result of the American decision to roll the dice on regime change in Iraq and the enormous problems that caused. But there’s got to be more to it than that. Why does Morocco seem to be immune to the radicalization and instead so optimistic about the future? Assuming that says something about the lack of alienation here relative to everything to the east, what are they doing right?

Questions, but certainly no answers just yet.

The streets here can be a riot of color

The streets here can be a riot of color

Meanwhile, we had a lovely little stop here. One of the differences compared to all the great cities we went to in Spain is that there’s typically just a lot less to do here. No great art museums, no spectacular parks to roam in, far fewer attractive restaurants to explore. So instead we spent time just wandering around the Kasbah and medina, fully expecting to – and fully succeeding in – getting lost. We found a couple very nice places to sample tagines.

The Kasbah Museum was closed for renovation so we were spared that obligation, but we did tour the old American Legation – essentially the embassy – from the time when Morocco was the first country to recognize the new United States and when that building was the first property outside the U.S. owned by the new country. Today it is the only National Historic Landmark outside the U.S. (how’s that for a trivia question some day?). The museum has a copy of a 1789 letter from George Washington thanking the Sultan for something or other, and explaining that it had taken so long to respond because the country had recently changed its form of government (the Constitutional Convention and all that) and it just took a while before he had authority as president to respond. Very cute, especially as I was just finishing a biography of Alexander Hamilton, Washington’s closest aide over decades.

I love this copy of a letter from George Washington to the Sultan. It reads in part, "The United States have thought proper [note the verb - they were united states, not the United States] to change their Government and to institute a new one… The time necessarily employed in this arduous task, and the arrangements occasioned by so great, though peaceable revolution …" explains why it took him so long to write. Very cool.

I love this copy of a letter from George Washington to the Sultan. It reads in part, “The United States have thought proper [note the verb – they were united states, not the United States] to change their Government and to institute a new one… The time necessarily employed in this arduous task, and the arrangements occasioned by so great, though peaceable revolution …” explains why it took him so long to write. Very cool.

Our hotel, La Maison Blanche, is a beautifully restored 18th century building in the Kasbah that had a couple great spaces for reading (I finished the huge Hamilton biography and started Alex Haley’s Roots in anticipation of going to The Gambia in a couple of weeks). Certainly one of the highlights was breakfast on the building’s roof deck with stunning views across Tangier and the port. The first morning they brought us a beautiful and practically sinful collection of pastries, crepes, Moroccan pancakes, breads, and jams, probably more carbs than I’ve had in one meal in five years. After that we convinced them to tone it down a notch or two so we could enjoy the meal without paying for it for weeks afterwards.

Did we mention the kitties? They were everywhere and, contrary to Spanish kitties, very friendly.

Did we mention the kitties? They were everywhere and, contrary to Spanish kitties, very friendly.

So that was our first stop in Morocco. The mid-November weather was wonderful, typically in the low-70s which is just about perfect for wandering around. From here we’re heading to Rabat where we’re headed strait to the Ghana embassy to try to get a visa. If we’re successful we’ll go to Ghana before heading to Senegal and The Gambia. If they say it takes a week or something to get the visa, well, we’ll do something else with our time. The luxury of time and the ability to be flexible.

One of my reading spaces, this one up on the roof deck

One of my reading spaces, this one up on the roof deck

Another morning view of Tangier

Another morning view of Tangier

The breakfast spread, showing but a fraction of the carbs they would normally serve. We shared lots of time in Tangier with Henry, an engineer from Winnipeg taking a year off to travel, so he's getting the juice and pastries on the table. Oddly, though we spent lots of time with him, we didn't get any pictures. Just his plate there.

The breakfast spread, showing but a fraction of the carbs they would normally serve. We shared lots of time in Tangier with Henry, an engineer from Winnipeg taking a year off to travel, so he’s getting the juice and pastries on the table. Oddly, though we spent lots of time with him, we didn’t get any pictures. Just his plate there.

Lunch one day. Pretty damned good!

Lunch one day. Pretty damned good!

The new port under construction. The cruise ship docks also under construction are further off to the right. It's an enormous investment; I just can't think of anywhere I've seen a city building an entire new port.

The new port under construction. The cruise ship docks also under construction are further off to the right. It’s an enormous investment; I just can’t think of anywhere I’ve seen a city building an entire new port.

More market scenes

More market scenes

Random beauty on the walls of the medina

Random beauty on the walls of the medina

Part of the cemetery at the Anglican Church of St. Andrew. It's a quirky place, with the Lord's Prayer written in Arabic, quotes from the Quran, Stars of David - just a real mishmash of faiths, with a young guy who's apparently there all the time ready to let you in and poke around.

Part of the cemetery at the Anglican Church of St. Andrew. It’s a quirky place, with the Lord’s Prayer written in Arabic, quotes from the Quran, Stars of David – just a real mishmash of faiths, with a young guy who’s apparently there all the time ready to let you in and poke around.

It’s crazy how quickly six days go by; I had no idea it had been that long since we’d posted anything. And pretty eventful days they were: from Nefta out in the dessert we made two different stops in Djerba, an island in southeast Tunisia, another night in Tunis, and then off to Malta, the 26th country of our adventure and my 81st country ever. Here are some highlights.

The small, dusty town of Er-Riadh. Not a lot to do there except the synagogue and our nice hotel. I'm intrigued by the business decision to build what Lonely Planet calls perhaps the nicest hotel (not fanciest, but most interesting) in Tunisia in this town. It was pretty empty during our brief stay...

The small, dusty town of Er-Riadh. Not a lot to do there except the synagogue and our nice hotel. I’m intrigued by the business decision to build what Lonely Planet calls perhaps the nicest hotel (not fanciest, but most interesting) in Tunisia in this town. It was pretty empty during our brief stay…

Our first stop after our time in the dessert was the tiny town of Er-Riadh on the island of Djerba. There’s really not much there except two draws: the oldest synagogue in Tunisia and perhaps all of North Africa, and a very cool hotel and restaurant. Now, by “oldest” synagogue they don’t mean the building itself is old; in fact it’s pretty modern (more on that in a second). But the site dates back a couple thousand years and it’s still the site of an annual pilgrimage for Tunisian Jews that was just starting when we were there.

Security in the area was pretty phenomenal; lots of heavily armed police and military personnel, and lots of traffic stops. While I was out for a morning run one day I saw a local pickup truck that apparently didn’t know there was a traffic stop on his regular route: I heard him slam on the brakes and could smell the burned rubber and, as I ran past, saw his tire on top of the bed of spikes meant to stop people from running the stop. Obviously it worked.

Entrance to the synagogue. This armed guard was after we'd gone through security and all that.

Entrance to the synagogue. This armed guard was after we’d gone through security and all that.

The need for security is an awful story. In 2002 someone bombed the synagogue during the annual pilgrimage, killing somewhere around 20 people. Maybe they thought that would prove whose religion rocks the most or something. At any rate, now there’s a lot of security.

One of the highlights of Tunisia was the food. Some of the local salads were phenomenal, and always plenty of olives and harissa when you sit down. Even the local wine was good!

One of the highlights of Tunisia was the food. Some of the local salads were phenomenal, and always plenty of olives and harissa when you sit down. Even the local wine was good!

Next stop was down to the beach. Not much to say and no pictures to post. Tunisian beaches are for big, big hotels and they’re just not the kind of places Mark & I like to stay in. It was beautiful but still pre-season, meaning it was empty. Cavernous and empty. And too cold to go in the water. A nice little break, but ultimately not very interesting.

Then two days ago we flew into Malta. We’d originally wanted to take a boat, and Lonely Planet said it was possible, but Lonely Planet is apparently out of date. So we flew in and have pretty quickly fallen in love. It’s a tiny country – it’s one-tenth the size of Rhode Island – but packs a bunch of great sites. So far we’ve explored Valletta, the smallest national capital in the EU, and took a bus around part of the island today. Tomorrow we’ll do another bus to see more of the island and then we’re headed to Gozo, the second island in the country – the really small island – and then off to Sicily. Hard to imagine that in eight days we can cover an entire country but like I said it’s small.

In our two days here we've fallen in love with Malta. Gorgeous bays and inlets, beautiful architecture, even interesting history.

In our two days here we’ve fallen in love with Malta. Gorgeous bays and inlets, beautiful architecture, even interesting history.

The buildings are all made of stone this color, but they add great color in the window bays!

The buildings are all made of stone this color, but they add great color in the window bays!

Our adventure today included a tour of Malta's Inquisitor's Palace, where the Inquisition was centered here. We learned that they were really just missionaries trying to help the locals live more Christian lives. Torture was rare and they really cared about the health and comfort of people. Really. That's what we learned.

Our adventure today included a tour of Malta’s Inquisitor’s Palace, where the Inquisition was centered here. We learned that they were really just missionaries trying to help the locals live more Christian lives. Torture was rare and they really cared about the health and comfort of people. Really. That’s what we learned.

Lunch was in this too-perfect-to-believe fishing village. Fish soup, octopus, swordfish carpaccio, and sea bass between the two of us. All spectacular, with good, local, and cheap wine. It doesn't get much better!

Lunch was in this too-perfect-to-believe fishing village. Fish soup, octopus, swordfish carpaccio, and sea bass between the two of us. All spectacular, with good, local, and cheap wine. It doesn’t get much better!

Our bus ride today took us to the Hagar Qim Temple, a nearly 6,000 year old pile of rocks that may be the oldest human structure on earth. Big rocks!

Our bus ride today took us to the Hagar Qim Temple, a nearly 6,000 year old pile of rocks that may be the oldest human structure on earth. Big rocks!

More of the ancient ruins

More of the ancient ruins

And finally, this. Everything that could be wrong with a Martini. Either shaken or on the rocks, not both. No citrus - not on the glass, in the glass, or on the stick with the olives. And definitely not all three. And no straw. Ever.

And finally, this. Everything that could be wrong with a Martini. Either shaken or on the rocks, not both. No citrus – not on the glass, in the glass, or on the stick with the olives. And definitely not all three. And no straw. Ever.

Next to the old ruins, this was the view. I should be down there reading but we ran out of time. Here we are, traveling the world for the rest of our lives, and we still don't have enough time!!

Next to the old ruins, this was the view. I should be down there reading but we ran out of time. Here we are, traveling the world for the rest of our lives, and we still don’t have enough time!!