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Morocco: Marriage of Old and New
Author:
Vivian Gilbert Zabel
Anyone
desiring an adventure in a foreign land should consider Morocco in
northwest Africa. The marriage of old and new gives depth and
interest to a visit.
The vista from the water appears as if from the Arabian Nights with
sand dunes casting shadows in the moonlight as the ocean laps on the
white beaches. Ancient towns drowse in the African sun as robed men
and women travel by foot, by donkey, or by car. Europeans and
Americans pass by in late model vehicles. Morocco's combination of
the most modern life with the most ancient of entities fascinates,
interests, and excites me as I travel.
The sun causes the city to shine like a pearl nestled by the
Atlantic. Casablanca (which means white house), the gateway to
Morocco, meets the eyes first in this place of adventure and beauty.
From the contemporary, busy harbor to the center of the city, swarm
multicolored, diversely dressed people. A flock of bright-hued,
short-skirted girls with long hair flying clack by in their chunky
heels. Behind glides a somber group of burnoosed Fatima faces veiled
and mysterious. A young Frenchman, in the latest style, saunters by
a beggar in robe and dirt. A half-naked toddler, all dark eyes and
watery sores, stares at another child dressed in clean clothes
riding in a stroller.
In the midst of the metropolis, I visit moderately tall high-rise
buildings and many of the latest stores. Then after a short walk or
ride in any direction, I discover lovely old villas arrayed in
yellows, reds, blues, greens -- all flowers and plants. Tucked in
here and pushed in there, dirty and cramped stores attract my
attention. A little farther away stand shacks of straw, cardboard,
mud, or tin, where misery, filth, and poverty of unbelievable depth
live. The contrast between the rich being so rich and the poor being
so poor shocks me.
When I leave the city, a modern ribbon of asphalt runs into
fog-wrapped foothills. Along the roadside, a native man upon his
donkey rides before the less-than-animal woman trudging behind. A
dark-faced man with a smile-flash of white tries to take all the
road with one small bicycle. A European whizzes by in a bug-like
car; a limousine, chauffeur driven, majestically rolls past bearing
a powerful sheik.
In towns or cities, such as Marrakech, easily accessed commercial
areas provide for business needs. Behind low walls, villas or modest
homes line wide boulevards. Along narrow winding streets that cars
cannot maneuver, doors from windowless houses open directly onto the
roadway. The dwellings abut each other, closely packed side by side.
Children run chasing and kicking a ball, as veiled women return from
market carrying the day's needs in net bags or in bundles upon their
heads.
Beyond the town boundaries, a donkey and a camel yoked together plow
a field. The camel will not cooperate; the donkey has to turn him.
In the field next door, an American-made tractor does the work in
much less time.
Here and there small settlements break the skyline with most of the
huts made of wood, mud, or tin; the out-buildings, of straw.
Occasionally a more affluent home of stone, built around an open
courtyard, appears. Little beauty such as flowers or trees brighten
the outside of the drab humble "home."
In Morocco exist the wealthy and the indigent; but even more evident
are the modern and the ancient ways. The rich, the poor, the old,
and the new bring a flavor of enchantment to a country of Arabian
Night mystery.
About the
Author:
Vivian
Gilbert Zabel taught English, composition, and creative writing for
twenty-five years, honing her skills as she studied and taught. She
is an author on
http://www.Writing.Com/, a site for
Writers, and her portfolio is
http://www.Writing.Com/authors/vzabel.
Her books, Hidden Lies and Other Storied and Walking the Earth, can
be found through
Amazon
or
Barnes & Noble.
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GUIDE BOOKS |
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Dorling Kindersley's
Eyewitness
Travel
Guide
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DK EYEWITNESS
BOOKS

Morocco Travel
Guide Books
View All Morocco Books
(Top Travel Guide Books)
EYEWITNESS GUIDES
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Recommended Books
(Morocco HandBooks)
Hover your mouse over
to
view prices & click for details
 
Morocco
(DK Eyewitness Travel Guides)
(Paperback - Aug 26, 2004)
 
Morocco Travel Map (Globetrotter Travel Map)
by
Ltd. New Holland Publishers
(Map - Nov 1, 2002)
Folded Map
 
Morocco Map
by
International Travel Maps
(Map - Jan 1, 2000)
 
DK Eyewitness
Travel Guides: Morocco
(Eyewitness Travel Guides)
(Paperback - Nov 7, 2002)
 
Morocco
(Eyewitness Travel Guides)
by
DK Publishing
(Turtleback - Sep 6, 2004)
 
Morocco Travel Pack, 2nd
(Globetrotter Travel Packs)
(Paperback - Jul 1, 2006)
 
Lonely Planet Morocco
(Paperback - Feb 2005)
 
Lonely Planet
Moroccan Arabic
Phrasebook
(Paperback - Feb 1999)
 
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