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Puritans of the Desert
| Article
# : |
14522 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
3 / 1988 |
4,576 Words |
| Author
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Gert Mueller Gert Mueller, a resident of Innsbruck, Austria, is a
journalist and freelance author. For many years he has been a
lecturer at the Volkshochschule and an editor of cultural-
political magazines. Translated from the German by Sally
Robertson. |
Broken cliffs appear amid the desert, forming small gorges and canyons, bathed in unimaginable heat. There is no hint that life forms could survive here for more than a day. Flints and yellow pebbles, sparkling mischievously in the sun, cover the seemingly infinite surface on both sides of the road.
Then comes the surprise, one of the greatest the Sahara has to offer. With no warning, the land drops away. Below, in a valley framed by karstic-caverned cliffs, lie five picturesque towns surrounded by palm forests and flowering gardens: Ghardaïa, Melika, Beni Isguene, Bou Nouara, and el-Ateuf.
This is an area known as the M'zab, the land of the Mozabites. These cities are not like other desert cities, and the people who inhabit them cannot be compared with any other people. The white, yellow, brown, and blue cubic houses along the Oued Mzab river spread into pyramidal hills, on the peaks of which the minarets reign like obelisks. The cities of the M'zab attract and repel simultaneously--attract by their delightful symmetry and repel by their fortresslike inapproachability. Outside of the cities are the oases, zones unto themselves, with villas and gardens surrounded by high walls and palm groves.
As exceptional as the land are the people, whose origins are lost in the fog of history. Already ancient by the time they appeared in the Sahara over a thousand years ago and established their desert cities, their customs and clothing styles have changed little in centuries. It is difficult to categorize these light-skinned, mostly short-statured people.
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