Meknes Day Trip

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The two week mark has come and passed, and we were all ready to explore beyond the city. ALIF took eleven of us by bus to Volubilis, Moulay Idriss, and Meknesโ€”about an hour south of Fes. The weather was refreshingly cool and overcast. Such a welcome respite! We wound through phenomenal mountain ranges, leaving the craze that is Fes far behind in place of this serenity (see photo) and were left at Volubilis with a flamboyant Moroccan tour guide. Centrally and strategically positioned under the protection of fertile, towering mountains, Volibulis was the Roman empireโ€™s farthest flung capital something like 2,000 years ago. We explored Moroccoโ€™s best preserved and most impressive roman ruins and tried to wrap our minds around the archeological treasures under our feetโ€”from beautiful, expansive mosaic flooring depicting mythological scenes to remnants of the public bath, basilica and forum. Appreciating the sensibility of Roman urban planning was very cool.

Next stop: Moulay Idriss. This gem of a town nestled in the side of a mountain is considered โ€œthe poor manโ€™s Mecca.โ€ Home of Moroccoโ€™s most sacred shrine (the tomb of founding father Moulay Idriss), five pilgrimages there are the spiritual equivalent of one to Mecca. Non-Muslims arenโ€™t allowed in the tomb (and until recently werenโ€™t even allowed to spend the night in the town!). Our guide pointed out Moroccoโ€™s only cylindrical minaret hidden in the steep twisting streets. Itโ€™s decorated with green ceramic tiles readings parts of the Quran. The pace of life in Moulay Idriss was much slower than in Fes, but donkeys, trash, stray cats, and colorful narrow streets were ubiquitous.

Final destination: the โ€œVersailles of North Africa,โ€ Meknes. Like Moulay Idriss, Meknes was a smaller, calmer, more provincial, and more manageable version of Fes, but it is also a UNESCO world heritage site. It was founded in the 11th century and is a beautifully intact medieval city full of palaces, gardens, fortresses, gates, squares and mosques by Sultan Moulay Ismail. We wolfed down a colorful salad (so satisfying) and chicken tagine on the roof of a cafe before having some time to wander around Bab Mansour and Place el-Hedime. We meandered through the shops, artisan studios, and food stalls. Just like in Fes, the ephemeral meticulously-stacked olive displays always impress me. I bought this crazy green lipstick (like yours, Cheryl!) that turns pink on your lips as well as a pumice stone for scrubbing my feet in the hammam! We then saw Moulay Ismailโ€™s mausoleum and the haunting Prison of the Christian Slaves.

Overall, the day was exhausting but the geometrically enthralling designsโ€”from the Roman mosaics to the colossal gates in Meknes and the fountains in Moulay Idrissโ€”made it all worthwhile. Hereโ€™s to much more exploring of al-magrib!

En route to Volubilis

Volubilis

Moulay Idriss

Moulay Idriss

Moulay Idriss

Lindsay Lebel

Hi! My name is Lindsay. I grew up as an only child in Maine before enrolling at Tufts University, where I will double major in Community Health and Arabic. At Tufts I am involved in the Peer Health Exchange, teaching pregnancy prevention workshops to ninth-graders in Boston public high schools. I also work in the Office of the President and as an Arabic tutor. This past summer I studied Globalization and Health and Childhood Across Cultures in Talloires, France while living with a wonderful host family! Upon my return to Maine, I used Arabic to teach English to African and Iraqi middle school students. I plan to spend my junior year participating in two programs that will help prepare me for an international career working with public health issues in the Middle East. I will spend my fall semester traveling to Switzerland, India, China and South Africa with the International Honors Program, focusing on Health and Communities. This is to deepen my understanding of the health impacts of globalization, policy-making, and community level interventions. I hope to spend my spring semester in Alexandria, Egypt studying Arabic intensively through Middleburyโ€™s language immersion program. FEAโ€™s scholarship will enable the combination of these programs to challenge my own beliefs, expose me to a broad range of cultural differences, and help me develop a deeper awareness of the world around me and my role in it.