I had been looking forward to
this day for years and the idea of finally making it across the Straits of
Gibraltar (the Pillars of Hercules to the ancients) had me giddy with
excitement. The modern Kingdom of Morocco was created in August 1956, but its roots
go far deeper. To me it was one of those fabled countries, a place of mystery
and enchantment where men in their djeelabas and and women in their hijabs
walked the clamoring markets; where descendants of Neanderthals had migrated
from Africa into Europe and Hannibal had massed his armies for an assault on
the Roman Empire; where the Moors and Celts, Phoenicians, Portuguese and
Spanish had changed and exchanged the fortunes of millions again and again
whether it was the caliphates of Islam pouring into Andalusian Spain or Franco
raising his fascist army before cutting that nation in two and auguring the
slaughter of World War II. Indeed Spain and Morocco were in many ways kindred,
if uneasy, cousins despite living on separate continents and being separated by
two religions long at one another’s throats. To me that only made Morocco’s
imminent arrival more intriguing. We were ready … except now there was a
problem.
Heading south from London through the vineyards and farmlands of France and Spain.
It was at breakfast the morning
we were to depart Algeciras that we got word that cash, and cash only, must be
used to buy the local bus ticket to Tarifa.
I was carrying a single Euro in my pocket. Now I had a half an hour to
solve the problem and began madly combing the town in search of an ATM, or some
bank or a Bureau of Exchange. Nothing. I returned to the hotel lobby, dejected
and Euro-less, when a young lady we had spoken to earlier at the front desk
said she had arranged special permission at the bus station (right next door)
allowing us to pay for our tickets with a credit card. I wanted to kiss the
woman (inappropriate) so instead I spat out a, “Muchas gracias” way too loudly
and way too many times before (much to her relief, I’m sure) we heaved up our
bags and walked to the bus station next door. In two minutes we had the tickets
in hand.
Tarifa
The ride to Tarifa swung us at a
leisurely pace through the suburbs of Algeciras and over a mountain pass, down
twisting roads and then to a ridge where I beheld the Straits of Gibraltar, and
beyond, the vast continent of Africa – home to humanity.
As the bus swung onto a ridge
above Tarifa, I could make out the Straits of Gibraltar and the coast of the
African continent.
The grandness of this vision
disappeared when our bus pulled into a little parking lot and we were all
unceremoniously instructed to depart. It turned out that we were not to be
dropped at the ferry station, but simply deposited somewhere in the middle of
the town to be hopelessly lost the moment we stepped off the bus. I blundered
through some bad Spanish and asked the driver, “Donde esta ferry??”
More than once this bus driver
had surely heard some clueless tourist ask this question, and his response was to vaguely wave his hands in the general
direction of the Mediterranean, then, suddenly say in perfect English, “You may
get a taxi."
Well yeah, I thought, if I knew where to find one and I spoke fluent Spanish.
We stood in the Andalusian heat
and looked around. A young woman, Norwegian I think, tried to help us find a
taxi. She pulled out her phone and in her best, but not great, Spanish failed
to get help. And then suddenly she departed because her our own taxi showed up.
(She was heading INTO Spain, not out.) Cyn and I snatched at our phones and
jabbed at Apple Maps. Maybe we could walk. How far away could the ferry be?
After much tapping and swiping, we finally located the ferry office, and ourselves in relation to it. We were a
mile apart.
We began walking into winds
gusting 40 miles an hour. This did not help our progress. Tarifa is a classic
beach town with small shops festooned inside and out with caps, towels, fast
food and beach paraphernalia of every kind, all of which would have been
perfectly at home along Mission Beach in San Diego or a Jersey Shore boardwalk.
In the brilliant sun the buildings looked as bright and colorful as Edward
Hopper paintings. We dragged ourselves over cobble-stoned backstreets and
followed Apple Maps down a long hill to the town’s ancient castle and then into
the docks where with amazing speed we filled out our paperwork, showed our
tickets and made it through security to await the ferry.
We boarded the ferry to Tangier. Across the street sat the Castle of Tarifa, built in 960 by Abd-ar-Rahman III, Caliph of Córdoba, a sign that for 500 years the Moors once ruled much of Spain.
At last, I thought, we’ll make
it. The plan was to spend the next three weeks there, where, I hoped, we’d get
a proper dose of the place. Our explorations of North America — Newfoundland,
the American
West, El
Chepe, the Baja
1000, Vancouver and Victoria had all been wonderful, but I was looking
forward to getting outside our element, exploring a culture and world that
wasn’t as rooted in the Western European/North American zeitgeist we had been
experiencing the previous six months.
Suddenly for reasons I still
can’t precisely explain, I became concerned about passing through Moroccan
security. Irrational fears that our bags would be upended and everything in
them thoroughly scoured arose. There was no reason for this except that anytime
I pass from one country to another my guts get to rumbling. We had nothing to fear except the world’s
bureaucrats, often determined to prove their importance by fussing with some
senseless detail or other designed to ruin your day. I knew they could do
plenty of damage in any language when they wanted to. But once we boarded and
the ship pulled into the Straits, I reminded myself to focus on the sleek,
clean ferry and enjoy an hour of quiet as we churned toward the minarets and
ancient walls of Tangier.
Arriving in the fabled city of Tangier, founded as a Phoenician trading post 3000 years ago.
All of my concerns were
meritless. We passed through customs with ‘nary a raised eyebrow. All of the
work with passports was taken care of on the ship - efficiently handled by three Moroccan customs
agents who sat in their neat uniforms behind plexiglass counters. On
debarkation we strolled into and out of the ferry building with nothing more
than a desultory wave from security, and passed into the broad parking lot to
find the driver we had arranged (with Frontiers
Travel in Pittsburgh), holding a sign with the name WALTER on it.
You may call me wimp for
arranging a driver in Morocco, but there were good reasons for it. Not only was
my high school French abysmal (French is one of Morocco’s official languages),
but my Arabic, together with its Semitic alphabet (اَلْعَرَبِيَّةُ), which I knew would be plastered on every road
sign throughout the country, was non-existent. Without someone who spoke some
English, we’d be as lost as orphans. So I was grateful for Jabriel, our driver,
as he stood in the stiff breeze like a sentry. I immediately sensed we were in
good hands. As we walked toward him, as if on cue, I heard the adhān (Muslim
call to prayer) echo across the docks from a nearby mosque. The words rung out
in Arabic …
Tangier - a Muslim call to prayer
“Allah is Great! I bear witness
that there is no diety worthy of worship but Allah. I bear witness that
Muhammad is the messenger of Allah. Hasten to prayer. Hasten to success. Prayer
is better than sleep. Allah is the greatest. There is no diety worthy of
worship but Allah.”
Yes,
we had arrived in Morocco.
Jabriel, a delightful but
reserved man, long of frame and silver-haired, preferred speaking French or
Spanish or Arabic, but was passable enough in English to chat a bit and get us
to our hotel, the El Minzah. The El
Minzah is one of Tangier’s most famous accommodations, home at various
times to the likes of Omar Sharif, Aristotle Onassis, Yves Saint Laurent, Rita
Hayworth, Richard Harris, Oscar Wilde, Roger Moore, Allen Ginsberg, Paul
Bowles, Ralph Fiennes, Henri Matisse and Andre Guide. Maybe the El Minzah’s
best days were behind it now, but it was hardly a dump. I loved it’s style. It
reminded me a bit of an aging movie star. Still handsome and graceful with
great bones. A concierge paraded us around the grounds in stately fashion, and
I walked with my head on a swivel taking in the pool outside with its great
sweeping palms and olive trees below a carpet of emerald green grass, the
terrace where you could have fruit and mint tea or a handcrafted cocktail
brought to you by hushed waiters dressed in short dark suits, and beyond that a
restaurant with broad French doors that opened to a spectacular view of the
Straits that ancient humans had somehow navigated 400,000 years earlier.
Views of the El Minzah Hotel,
Tangier - The entrance, our bellman, the room and gardens
I felt as though we had stepped
back into the 1930s and wondered if Humphrey Bogart or Lauren Bacall might walk
by. Soon our bellman, decked out in his
kandresse and fez was leading us along its corridors where we quickly settled into
our generous room, and prepared to prowl the streets to see what trouble we
might get into.
Stone stairs make up a sidewalk climbing among Moroccan shops
The trouble we found was the Diblu
Restaurant near Tangier’s docks. We had walked the city’s steep steps past
small eateries and shops wreathed with colorful scarves, sunglasses, djellabas,
takchitas, qandrissi trousers, pipes, slippers, shirts, you name it. Moroccans
are an entrepreneurial lot and I quickly
learned stores and markets are everywhere. The Diblu was the right place for a
couple of famished Americans. The restaurant was a local hangout, and our
proprietor/waiter greeted us with a
gleaming smile, coaxing us in excellent English to relax and sit down. He was a
tidy, small young man with piercing black eyes.
He moved so quickly I thought there might be cloned versions of him as
he laid down a menu, bottled water and mint tea. Soon he deposited a huge,
uncooked white fish on a broad platter in front of us. "Very fresh! You
eat this,” he said, his teeth sparkling against the black sandpaper of his
beard, “and I promise you'll be back tomorrow."
We gave it a thumbs up and the
meal was absolutely delicious. Spectacular food is common in Morocco. We would
learn that soon enough. Meanwhile, as we
wolfed down the meal, our host taught us a couple of Arabic phrases which we
slipped into our back pockets: Inshallah - a greeting or way of saying be well;
literally “God is good or may God be with you.” Salaam - “hello.” And Shukrann
with a touch of an “ah” at the end for “thank you.” They would, I hoped, come
in handy for our upcoming explorations of Tangier the next day.
If you’ve enjoyed this adventure,
please take a look at Chip’s other adventures (and misadventures), that you can
read through Dispatches
like this one … and don’t forget to check the Vagabond Journal for
summaries and recommendations of our journey as we move day-by-day through the
planet.
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Resource: https://vagabond-adventure.com/library/the-mysteries-of-morocco
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