Discipline in Death

Discipline in Death
Delhi War Cemetery at Dhaula Kuan

Known Yet Unknown

Known Yet Unknown
Gravestone of Fusilier E.C.S. Dix from the Delhi War Cemetery

Thursday, March 29, 2018

SUPPORT MOROCCO'S BID FOR SOCCER WORLD CUP


FES - PANORAMIC VIEW
Morocco has made a bid for the 2026 football world cup. A rival bid has been made by the United States. The country’s strong point that the Moroccans have cited in support of its bid is that it is one of the safest countries in the world. If I were on the committee that decides upon such matters I would strongly recommend the case of this sun-drenched North African country surrounded by the Atlantic Ocean, the Mediterranean Sea and the Sahara Desert. Most importantly, it is within easy access of football fans from Asia, Europe and of course Africa. The USA, on the other hand is far away from anywhere even within itself – just imagine it has three time zones. Travelling to that country and within it is expensive and is certainly well beyond the reach of most not-so-rich people of what wealthy countries like to talk of “the Third World”.  
FRENCH CAFE MARRAKESH

The talk of Morocco, which rarely finds its way into news reports of any kind, rekindled memories of my visit to the country sometime back. It left a pleasant mark on my mind and if there is one country that I would like to visit again it is Morocco. And no, I have not been engaged by the Moroccan tourism department to say nice things about the country to help them win the world cup bid!! As an Indian I can say without hesitation that I found the culture of that country most comfortable. I should mention here that I also visited a few European cities too during the trip. The roads, the alleyways, the people, the shops and the bargaining were new yet at the same time familiar. We don’t know Arabic or French, the two languages commonly spoken in Morocco, but there were still no barriers to communication.
STREET IN OLD TOWN MARRAKESH

Though there are not too many, in the streets there are beggars and like in India they are part of the background landscape and are not jarring. There are beggars in Spain who sleep in cardboard boxes but they arouse pity as one sees stark poverty right next to great opulence. In Moroccan cities, except for Casablanca perhaps, the West lives cheek by jowl with the orient. One will thus find a planned town with grid-like wide streets and an old town called Medina in the local language, where on display are the layer upon layer of hundreds of years of culture much like the layers of different ages in archaeological excavations. The towns are by and large clean though by no means as spic and span as European cities. But to me that is natural and provides an ambience in which I can relax. Marrakesh, Fez and Tangier, the three Moroccan cities I visited, are all like this. Of course they are tuned for tourism as is evident in the crowded markets. The people of Fez look down on the medinas and markets of Marrakesh which they say caters to tourists. Not that the Fez medinas are  any different.  
ALLEYWAY IN FEZ

There are many tourist guides who of course also nudge you to do some shopping of course to push up their commissions. One of these guides tried to impress us in Fez by boasting about its 9000 alleys. Had I been from West with its grid street plans this would have awed me and I would go around in fear of losing myself in them. But being an Indian I know how to successfully negotiate alleyways, lanes and by-lanes without using the gps. I also know how hard it is to find an address in such mazes which is why I asked Azzedine, my host, to pick me up from the train station at Fez where we had arrived from Marrakesh. Finding taxis is a difficult task since there aren’t too many. In Tangiers they have Mercedes-Benz taxis but these are ramshackle models dating back half a century. But the one thing that stands out is that Morocco is very colourful place – bright colours wherever you look.
COUNTRY SIDE IN MOROCCO FROM  TRAIN

All in all an agreeable experience.


Church at Gol Dak Khana

Church at Gol Dak Khana
serenity amid change