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May 2009

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May 04, 2009

Jebel Burah, Yemen

“Yemen is the most magnificent country I have ever seen”, announced one of my two traveling companions as we hiked the Harraz mountains south-west of Sana’a.  This most veracious observation was in reference to the spectacular countryside and the stunning architecture and quite before we were set upon by a riotous legion of school children who were in the yard for recess.  There may be security issues in Yemen but I am usually more concerned about being assailed by alarming hordes of ragged, if amiable, urchins collectively bellowing, “soorah, soorah, soorah”, (photo) at the top of their lungs. If this does not produce the desired result, then “bonbon, gullum, money” - French, Arabic and English, they have learned to speak a few words of any number of languages.

Ibn Battuta did not quite venture up Jebel Burah although he passed by its foothills, so this post is, like Socotra, rather outwith the writ of my journey. Having said this, Ibn Battuta himself had boundless curiosity and often went off on a non-sequential tangent, so he would have understood this side-trip perfectly. In Yemen one can easily escape many of the vexing inconveniences of 21st century life by venturing into the Harraz mountains, barely a couple of hours from Sana'a.   

Nr ahidhaib Panoramic view in the Harraz mountains

We had just visited the Ismaili village of Hudhaib. Perched atop a volcanic plug, up 193 uneven stone steps, is a tiny white mosque, or rather it looks like a mosque but the Ismailis do not have mosques in the same way most other Islamic rites do. Above the lushly green panorama, eagles hovered on thermals, a flock of iridescent blue Somali starlings with orange-tipped wings fluttered wildly, and white doves circled gracefully above steep hillside terraces.  In the mountains of Yemen, the Zaidi sect prevails but the handful of Ismailis dates back to the 11th century when the Fatimid influence reached Yemen from its base in Cairo through the Sulayhids. In the 12th century Saladin, who ousted the Fatimids and replaced it with his Ayyubid dynasty in Cairo, sent his brother Turanshah to govern Yemen, and gradually the Fatimid influence waned but the Ismailis prevailed in remote mountain fastnesses. 

Hidhaib-mosque Ismaili mosque

The sun was hot on the rocky overhang where we sat and drank in the drama of stone houses with white gypsum window decoration, rising vertically from the rock. Most of the villages are the fief of one family consisting of several households; for defense purposes there is usually only one gate in and out of the village while the defensive walls consist of the lower windowless storeys of the houses themselves, which stored animals, fodder and grain supplies.  The Ottomans conquered Yemen twice but not without a fight, in the early 17th century they were pushed out of the highland areas and relegated to the Red Sea coast but they came back in 1849 until the Ottoman Empire disintegrated in the wake of WWI and Yemen declared its independence in 1918. Many Turks lost their lives here and it does not require much imagination to see why.

Driving back through the dramatic scenery to Manakha, we had a splendid repast of saltah, the Yemeni national lunchtime dish, spiced with frothy green fenugreek, fasooliyah, beans, a spicy chicken stew, rice, bread and bamiya or okra, followed by the local honey pastry called Bint as-Sahn, and sweet tea. Thus fortified we set to doing absolutely nothing because everyone was chewing qat. Ahmed our driver/guide, had stopped on a hairpin bend shortly after leaving Sana'a to buy qat from some men who had set up shop in a row of what looked like elevated open-front kennels. Now he and the hotel staff were busy separating choice leaves from what looked like an indoor shrubbery, and were blissfully chewing away. Late afternoon we drove to nearby al-Hajjara, an iconic village where children charged out to greet us shouting, ‘what’s your name?” and “where are you from?” Yemen has one of the highest birth rates in the world and no matter where you go throngs of children follow you as if you were some latter-day Pied Piper of Hamelin. 

Hajjara Village of al-Hajjara

 

We walked back to Manakha where at the guesthouse an evening’s entertainment of live music and dancing awaited; the gun dance and the jambiya dance both of which look deceptively simple as the feet seem to be doing nothing at all until you get up to try, as try you must. This was followed by a local game which consisted of three men standing side-by-side legs apart, feet touching the neighbor’s feet. The two on the outside stood, upper body facing the man in the middle, the left palm upright facing him, the right hand back ready to strike.  The man in the middle buzzed around trying to avoid being slapped by the other two - silly but hilariously funny.

 

Gun-dance

The 'Gun Dance'

The next day we hiked between some nearby villages. In one, we climbed some steps through a narrow doorway where 12 families were living. An old woman took us through the village and into her house which was four storeys high; outside on the flat roof she was drying sorghum grain to make bread while against the parapet, stacks of the tall stems were drying in the sun to be used as animal fodder.  She led us to the top of her house where a tannour (clay oven) was stoked with dry twigs and bushes. It was a basic house with mud floors where several people lived although there was nobody there, there was nobody in the entire village until we rounded the corner and came upon the school. After extricating ourselves from the children’s frenzied clutches we continued down to Beit al-Amir, a small village in the valley surrounded by terraces of sorghum and wheat. It was one of the rare villages we saw that was built on low ground. The afternoon drive to Burah was uneventful except Ahmed bought twice as much qat as the day before as he said there was nothing to do on top of the mountain except chew qat. None of us had planned to chew but he was right - there was nothing to do except admire the jaw-dropping scenery; villages clinging to mountain ridges were transformed into vertical dots of light like a dangling necklace of lustrous pearls, matched only by the stars and Venus glittering in the cold night sky. We had a nighttime picnic in the light of kerosene lamps, while our host who had lost all his teeth, assiduously mashed his qat leaves with a mortar and pestle eventually to lean back contentedly as the mild amphetamine took effect. We slept in a simple stone hut on top of the mountain, snug in our blankets when the wind began to howl and moan in the early hours of the morning.  The mountain aerie was set amid finely crafted dry stone terraces with tiers of coffee trees spilling down the hillsides. Yemen is the home of coffee – Mocha being named for the Red Sea port whence it was shipped to Europe. Connoisseurs of the bean know that Yemen still grows some of the finest, most expensive coffee in the world.

Coffee bura' Coffee terraces

We met another Ahmed our mountain guide in the village of Markaz where it should go without saying we attracted the attention of a gaggle of schoolboys waiting to start class at 0800.  We drove through the village and up the asphalt mountain road leaving Ahmed our driver to drive back down the valley where he was to meet us. We then proceeded to walk up the asphalt road which I firmly believe was at a impossible 90 degree gradient –  forgotten muscles seized up in shock and my feet would barely go one in front of the other. Ahmed walked up this unmanageable slope disconcertingly as if it was a flat stretch of plains highway.  Eventually we came to a village where mercifully it was all down hill, on stone steps cut into the mountain presumably for the women who have to walk up and down every day to collect water. In many villages all over Yemen women still have to walk a round trip often of more than 5 hours every day to get a plastic can of water which they carry on their head or their back. Other women we passed carried huge loads of animal fodder on their back. They wear a style of dress curiously similar to the Hmong of Vietnam, with straight black pants tight at the ankle in horizontal colored bands, a long black embroidered shirt tied at the waist with a wide cummerbund meant to support their spines for the back-breaking work they do every day. On their heads they wear extravagant colored turbans. The only difference is that the Hmong are not veiled. None of the women would allow us to photograph them although they were friendly and some were quite chatty. We walked down the mountain for 5 and a half hours passing donkeys laden with fodder and gypsum, boys carrying bags of gypsum on their backs skipping and running down the hill agile as mountain goats, toothless, stooped old men with sticks, children chanting and yelling “khwaja, khwaja” – a word of Turkish origin meaning foreigner, and women who if they were not carrying water and fodder were working in the yards hanging out washing or baking bread. 

Qat-harraz

Qat terraces in the Harraz Mountains 

Handsome chestnut-colored cows lowed and munched in their plots, and fat-tailed sheep and pretty goats nibbled on nothing. We ate delicious freshly-baked bread, gratefully received from a woman who was baking it in her yard, and stopped at another house for qishr, a delicious local drink made from dried coffee husks, ginger and sugar. The hillsides were speckled with euphorbia, and colorful wild flowers; alpine rock plants, blue gentian, pink asphodel, white dwarf bouvardia, little blue bells of something and red dwarf geranium. 

As we descended to the valley floor lush tropical vegetation appeared; shiny dark green banana trees, umbrella-like papayas, date palms and green in all its shades appeared in spikes, folds, patches, splashes and splodges as far as the eye could see. By the time we reached the bottom, we each were whimpering pathetically about our wobbly legs, our strained calf and thigh muscles unused to the steep terrain quivering like jelly.

We had reached the Tihama meaning hot lands, and nowhere was ever more aptly-named. Coming down from the cool mountain air, it is like opening the door of a blast furnace. After some much-needed sustenance of mutton stew, rice and hot sweet milky tea we set off towards Beit al-Faqih and Zabid. If there was an award for the worst micro-climate in the world, Zabid would win hands down.  But I dearly love Zabid because in a country liberally bestowed with superlative architecture, Zabid is in a league of its own. Along the coast there were several towns with a similar architecture but they are mostly all gone, victim of nature and neglect. Zabid almost went the same way until UNESCO stepped in. To avoid becoming a victim of heatstroke, one must take oneself off to the Zabid Resthouse for lunch and then do nothing until late afternoon. 

Ladies mosque2 'Ladies Mosque', Zabid

A walking tour is then in order followed by more far niente and perhaps a local water pipe to jolly things along. No sissy shisha with its light, fruit-flavored tobacco, the Yemeni mada'ah is a manly piece of work. It is a suitably exotic 'Oriental' looking contraption but in reality is a most fearsome thing. Real tobacco is used and the pipe is much longer and thicker than the shisha pipe. If your lungs are not used to it they will seize up at once in great heaving gasps and spasms of uncontrolled hacking. It is as if you had decided to smoke an entire packet of unfiltered Old-House-Sana'aGauloises all at once. I wanted to prove myself 'tough enough' to smoke it but the effect was lost as after each inhalation I was somewhere to be found under the charpoy. Soundly defeated, I gave up.  

As we drove back to Sana'a the next day arriving in the cool of the evening I reflected that if Zabid has the worst climate in the world, the Old City of Sana’a might just have the best.  

 

House in the Old City

October 16, 2008

Al Saleh Mosque, Sana'a

Sana'a, Yemen

I visited the brand new Presidential “Al Saleh Mosque” in Sana’a before it opened to the public this past Ramadan.

Grand_mosque_ext_2
Exterior view of the new mosque.

For all that there have been rumblings among the populace about how the money could better have been spent building hospitals and schools - the mosque is said to have cost $60 million - it is really quite stunning. Most of the building materials were local; the frame is concrete with pale golden blocks of dressed limestone on the external walls, and polished speckled granite for the massive indoor piers. Red limestone is used to to accent design features. An exception was made for the colored marble flooring of the courtyard which came from India, Italy and Oman.

Grand_mosque_ext1
Exquisitely rendered courtyard in imported marble.

The mosque combines traditional Islamic elements of domes, minarets, arches, carved mihrab, and bands of incised and gold-leaf calligraphy, and blends it with uniquely Yemeni architectural aspects; the distinctive minarets, of which 4 of the 6 are 100 meters high, feature red brick and are banded and criss-crossed in white gypsum plaster, the drums of the five domes are pierced with qamariyya-windows of colored glass and Yemeni-style merlons decorate the exterior roof edging.

Inside the main hall which can hold up to 13000 worshippers, a mammoth Bohemian glass chandelier is suspended from the central dome, the carved doors are of Burmese teak, the coffered inlaid ceiling is American oak, and the carpet which was woven in Turkey is made of New Zealand lambswool. An additional 31,000 worshippers can be accommodated outside, while a large women’s prayer hall is located upstairs.

Gm_chandelier
The Bohemian glass central chandelier

Grand_mosque_2

Grand_mosque_dome

Grand_mosque1


Gm_ext_paneling

The exterior walls with bands of incised carving of Koranic verses in pale golden limestone are stunning.

August 05, 2008

Weddings, funerals and a controversial Soap opera.

Sana'a, Yemen 2008

Weddings are a daily occurrence in the months leading up to Ramadan when weddings do not take place. In the Islamic world, the time frame between the official marriage contract signing and the wedding may be a few days, or it may be months.  But although the contract signing is the official one, the couple do not live together until the actual celebration of it, married or not. There may be many reasons for the delay; financial, waiting for distant family members to be there at the same time, a death in the family etc.  Weddings in the Islamic world are extremely expensive affairs and Yemen is no exception;  hospitality is expected to be lavish and the whole neighborhood or community is invited, everyone must be fed and a meal is nothing without meat, qat must be procured at the very least for the males of the families involved and in the case of wealthier families, for everyone, women need clothes and the bride needs a dowry including jewelry, and everything has gone up in price including gold, qat and lamb!

Women celebrate at home and/or in special halls rented for the occasion with fancy food, shishas and qat, as well as loud music live or taped, while for the men, huge tents are erected throughout the city where they wander in and out as and when they can, gathering to chat, smoke, chew qat and dance. There is almost always an oud player. (An oud being a fretless, 11-stringed instrument shaped like an old-fashioned lute – the word lute itself coming from the Arabic – 'al-oud'.) 

Fortunately the oud player and singer who sings at weddings in my area is excellent and I am treated to a free concert every second or third week. I say fortunate, because he plays until 0315 and then the Imam takes over. 

Continue reading "Weddings, funerals and a controversial Soap opera. " »

March 30, 2008

Musings and news from the Republic

Sana'a, Yemen

In the last month having spent a great deal of time in airplanes and untold hours in airports, I have reached the conclusion that despite hardship it must have been immeasurably more satisfying to have traveled by boat and camel caravan like Ibn Battuta. Flying and the whole associated business of getting on a plane is now perfectly loathsome unless you are in the rarefied atmosphere of First Class, and I never am.

And just to start on a controversial note - can I possibly be the only person on the planet who would like to see the occasional ‘child-free’ flight? I suspect nobody dares admit it and the marketing and PR departments of airlines would probably turn an alarming shade of puce at the thought of having to dream up politically correct ways to sell the concept, but I believe nonetheless that an anonymous poll would reveal that most passengers (including parents traveling without their offspring) would delight in the prospect of a flight where there was no possibility of sitting in the vicinity of a tantrum-addled small person for 10 hours. I do not in truth blame the child – traveling in steerage is enough to induce anyone to wail, but as every parent knows it is useless to remonstrate with a two year-old on the ground let alone in a pressurized chicken coop at 35,000 feet……

In the meantime air travel in the Middle East grows exponentially – the Arabian peninsula economies, or at least most of them, are booming despite creeping inflation rates. New low-fare airlines such as Air Arabia are springing up like mushrooms, and the larger carriers are giving the more established European and Asian carriers a major run for their money. Meanwhile I dream that the governments will give some of their oil revenues to the French so they can criss-cross the entire peninsula with a high-speed rail network……

Birks_o_aberfeldy
A sunny, wintry day in my native land. The Birks o' Aberfeldy in Perthshire, Scotland

Kampala

A rather different vista - the hills of Kampala, Uganda, taken the same week. Neither has anything to do with Ibn Battuta but it does reference my airline tales of woe.....

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February 10, 2008

Life in the Medina Qadima (Old City)

Sana'a, Yemen

Sana’a is a very dusty place and the tower house I had rented had not been lived in for three months. The house is about 350 years old and few of the windows fit their frames, so dust and sand had seeped in through every crack, with the result that several millimeters of the stuff coated the entire abode. From the outside, the house clearly lists at one corner, and as I conducted my “walk through” I came upon one tiny room at the top of the house which is at some point going to disengage from the rest of the building. Knowing my luck it will happen at the first hint of the summer monsoon when I am on the roof with no other way of getting down. The owner is remarkably sanguine about the imminent destruction of his property, as when I suggested he should fix the large crack that runs across the ceiling and down the wall, as well as the roof beam that is split in two, before it fell to bits he said not to worry.......

Neighbors_2 Garden near my house

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May 25, 2007

Leaving Yemen

Social Impact; Yemen at a crossroads? The news as I leave Yemen is that UNESCO has threatened to take Zabid off the World Heritage List unless the government comes up with an acceptable plan for its renovation and upkeep. I have always thought Zabid one of the most interesting cities in the country with a unique patrimony that is in danger of disappearing for ever. Yemen has a wealth of monuments but many of them are already in such an advanced state of dilapidation that it is probably impossible to restore what is left; the Turkish architecture of al-Luhayya, Beit al-Faqih, Hodeidah, Mokha - almost all gone. Perhaps the threat will jump-start a rescue plan for Zabid before it is to late. Mokhaface
The face of an old woman of Mokha in front of a quietly decaying Turkish building.

The other news is that the government is planning to close the gun villages - I tried to visit one of them al-Jahana, not far from Sana'a but could not. I could not get past the security check points, and even had I succeeded my presence would not have been welcome. In addition to this radical measure, the government is trying to come up with a plan to persuade farmers to grow crops other than qat by offering a subsidy to offset initial revenue loss. This will be very difficult to implement for social reasons, but it surely must be inevitable. With 50% of the population under the age of 16 and a still unacceptably high rate of illiteracy, especially among women, which negates their ability to get work, Yemen cannot afford to maintain huge tracts of its agricultural land for the growing of qat which contributes nothing towards the GDP, and where the supply of qat per person per day costs in the region of 1000-1500 Yemeni rials per day - about $5-7.50. Some qat chewers spend upwards of $50-75 per week on qat - this in a country where $300 per month is not a bad salary.

A new wireless internet cafe called Coffee Traders has recently opened in Sana'a, it saved my life, or at least my website, as I could not get my laptop connected to the internet in Yemen for some reason. They happen to serve excellent coffee - it is perhaps odd but in the land which practically invented the stuff, it is quite difficult to get any good coffee because they export all of it. The people of Coffee Traders roast their own beans and thus I could be found quite frequently in their charming courtyard in front of a large double-shot latte bashing away to my heart's content, it is the little things that count....
Meandtheveil Dressed to kill - I did not wear this to the cafe.....

Yemen is a land of contrasts; it is without a doubt one of the most spectacularly beautiful countries in the world but the countryside near qat markets is disfigured by millions of discarded pink plastic qat bags, while trash middens are piled up outside towns and villages across the country. It has an undeservedly dodgy reputation - the US State Dept. still has a Travel Warning in place for it - yet its people are among the most hospitable and friendliest you could hope to meet. They are colorful too, both literally and figuratively - everyone who visits falls under the spell of Yemen and its people..... Tihamavillage
    Typical African-style village on the Tihama on the Red Sea coast. Taizzwalls

Part of the old city walls of Taizz

May 17, 2007

The Lost Colony of Aden, and the Sufi

Mockha to Aden, Yemen

“I travelled from there next to the city of Aden, the port of the land of al-Yaman, on the coast of the great sea. It is surrounded by mountains and there is no way into it except from one side only. It is a large city but has no crops, trees or water, and has reservoirs in which water is collected during the rainy season.”

The 277 kilometer drive from Mokha to Aden is not especially memorable; Bab al-Mandeb, or “Gate of Tears”, located at the south-western tip of the Arabian peninsula where the Red Sea meets the Arabian Sea, is the graveyard of many an ill-starred ship, hence its sorrowful name.  Today it is nothing more than a collection of tumbledown wooden shacks. The excellent asphalt road peters out before it reaches town which remains unpaved.

Babelmandab The little port of Bab al-Mandeb.

Continue reading "The Lost Colony of Aden, and the Sufi" »

May 12, 2007

Lost Villages of the Tihama and Mokha; A Destiny Foretold

Zabid to Mokha, Yemen

Ibn Battuta had followed a different path - from Zabid he had gone to Jibla, then Taizz and from there to Sana’a and back to Aden whence he took a boat to Zeila in Somalia. There was an element of criss-crossing that I wished to avoid, and in addition I had no intention of visting the war-torn, anarchic place that has been Somalia for the last three decades, by boat or otherwise. It made more sense to visit Aden first then drive back north to Sana’a. 
Meinzabid_2Me in Zabid with only two children in tow.

It was thus that I found myself in Mokha for the second time in two months. I wish I knew why we did not camp out on the beach again but we did not, and instead ended up in a hotel in Mokha, quite possibly one of the filthiest places I have had the misfortune of overnighting in. Ants, cockroaches and other unmentionables flew, leapt and crawled around the room and the bathroom, tiled in a particularly lurid shade of green, was beyond contemplation. I slept fully clothed on top of the sheet on my silk liner. We left the following morning practically at first light. At night we had driven past quietly disintegrating buildings to the garbage-ridden and fetid port for our nightly shisha ritual. As has been mentioned, Mokha (Mocha) has a rich trading past (in coffee) of which nothing remains.  I am given to historic nostalgia and places such as Mokha always strike me as harbingers of the doom that awaits some of the world’s great cities of today;  the ineluctable combination of globalization and climate change will make of them what has befallen places like Mokha or Ugarit, Byblos, al-Ola and Qana - great and powerful names of antiquity now obscure, forgotten and haunted by bats........

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May 08, 2007

Yemen’s Red Sea Coast and the Ottoman Legacy

Al-Luhhaya to al-Jah, Yemen

“I embarked on a ship....and reached the township of al-Sarja, a small town inhabited by a body of the Awlad al-Hiba.”

Alluhayya_2 The remains of the once-thriving port of al-Luhayya

In the English translation of the Travels of Ibn Battuta, the footnotes simply say Sharja is a “township of grass huts with an anchorage in the vicinity of al-Luyyaha.” So, arriving in al-Luhayya we looked for it, asking all the old men we could find - nobody had heard of it. The English translation completed over 50 years ago, could refer to half the coastline. Al-Luyyaha itself is almost in the sea - this stretch of the Red Sea which was so important under the Ottomans is disappearing, victim of the natural effects of tide and climate, as well as the man-made contribution of lack of attention and money. (I believe Sharja is a memory a little further north than we ventured.)

Almostgone_2 The remains of an Ottoman building in al-Luhayya

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April 27, 2007

SIM cards and history in Sana'a

Sana'a, Yemen

Buying a SIM card for your phone in Yemen entails giving a copy of the picture page and visa stamp of your passport to the store-owner which he presumably passes along to the appropriate authorities, and filling out an application form which must be stamped with your left thumbprint.  A phone call is then made to some mysterious entity and only then do you get your cellphone number. One assumes in these disturbing times, that the Yemeni government wants to keep tabs on who’s who. (It is interesting to note which countries keep close tabs on such things. In Algeria, Egypt, Palestine, Lebanon and Syria you pay cash and trundle off with the new SIM and phone number, nary a piece of paperwork in sight. In Tunisia, Libya and Yemen your passport is required and recorded. I cannot quite find the common thread there.....)  The good news is that the SIM card and a charge card costs the grand total of $12.  Email is also very cheap here at 50 cents an hour (100 Yemeni Riyals) for relatively fast connection, with internet cafes everywhere in the major cities.

Sanashills

A view of Old Sana'a from the rooftop of one of the city's many samsarahs.

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