Sunday, December 12, 2010

Marrakech, Day 2 (cross-posted from Howie's "Around the World" blog)

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[Posted yesterday on aroundtheworldblog.blogspot.com]

It's nearly 11 AM now, the middle of our second day in Marrakech. Fatima came at 9 and made breakfast, and we're just relaxing before going out for another arduous day of exploring the souks and hidden gardens of Marrakech.

The riad is superb. Officially there are 4 bedrooms, but actually there are 4 bedrooms plus 2 children's bedrooms. When you enter, you come to a central courtyard, which is covered by a retractable roof three stories up. The kitchen is there, and it's kind of a sitting room/dinner room. Off that is Lisa's suite, the only bedroom on the first floor. The riad has been lovingly restored to a really incredible degree, combining modern expectations with traditional North African fantasies. Beautiful tile work, beautiful iron work, incredible fixtures, doorways to die for... Every detail is just wonderful.

The neighborhood, Sidi Mimoun, is pretty cool too. Our next-door neighbor is Mohammed V (the king). We were warned by the property manager to refrain from pointing cameras at the palace from our rooftop terrace. On the other side of our riad is Yves St Laurent's riad. To get to our riad off the main street of the neighborhood, you have to go down a couple of alleys where there are no cars. So it's pretty quiet here, other than when the neighborhood children get going with a drum circle.

Anyway, upstairs are the rest of the bedrooms plus a large living room, which I'm using as an office as well. It has a beautiful Moroccan-style tiled-and-brick fireplace-- as well as a more traditional-- actual modern-- heater. It gets up into the 80s in the daytime but down to around 50 at night. The third flight up is the rooftop terrace, although halfway to the top is one of the children's' bedrooms, the same as any of the other bedrooms except without an en suite bathroom.

Yesterday I took Lisa around to get a feel for the Medina. She loved it and basked in the foreignness and exotic feel. I told her Fes is 10 times more foreign and exotic, but she probably thinks I'm exaggerating. I'm not. Marrakech may seem otherworldly, but it's very cosmopolitan, with thousands of Europeans living here... and tourists everywhere, and very much being catered to in terms of restaurants and shops. There's even a vegetarian restaurant, Earth Cafe, just off the Jemaa el F'na on Riad Zitoun el Kedim. We had a yummy-- albeit salty-- lunch there.

One thing we saw last night that really knocked me for a loop was a first. Morocco was formerly overrun with aggressive touts-- not just persistent pests insisting on being your guide; they still have some of that-- but threatening unemployed young men who made it more than unpleasant for tourists. Eventually, by the 80s, the bazaaris, who really run this country, "got rid" of them. The very aggressive ones ceased to exist in city after city. It's even safe to walk around Fes now. Roland says it reminds him of Disneyland. Now that's an exaggeration. But last night in the Jemaa el F'na, the main square, we weren't just accosted by the regular assortment of young male touts but, for the first time (for me), two separate female touts! They weren't shy, and it just isn't something you would ever expect to see in a Muslim country. You've come a long way, baby! A shopkeeper we met told us the government is even discouraging polygamy, probably more than the Morman cults do.
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