Thursday, March 29, 2018

Merzouga Festival 2018 -5th to 8th April


The Merzouga Festival is the place to be for great music in a stunning environment - four days of food, music and nomadic culture

"The nomadic life is more human, and takes into account its environment in a global way. Still today, the nomad puts his life in the hands of nature and considers wandering, traveling, mobility as the only way to establish a link between oneself, the group and the Universe. The nomad is a part of the natural environment, the environment … It goes with the stars, knows the rhythm of the different seasons thanks to all kinds of natural indications …"
Nomadism is above all a link between peoples and species, through the cultures, manners and customs existing on this earth. Nomads are good connoisseurs of nature. They moved according to the seasons, from one stage to another, from one people to another. Over time, they are enriched by different cultures, mystical beliefs, from the perception of heaven and earth, the visible and the invisible.


Merzouga is the default name used to refer to the whole region lying between the city of Rissani and the Algerian border. It includes the villages of Hassi Labiad, Taouz, Khamlia and Merzouga. At the side of the black and rocky desert, red sand rises as far as the eye can see, offering a decoration that keeps changing with the winds and sunlight. It is the Erg Chebbi, an immense set of dunes that are higher than 150 metres. You are at the gateway to the Sahara, the largest hot desert in the world. Welcome to the neighbours of heaven, those whose silence is the greatest wisdom. It is the empire of blue men where smile and hospitality will always prevail. These desert dwellers have a heart as vast as the horizons around them. This place has stopped in time to blend in with the absolute of true beauty, unchangeable, and inexhaustible. His wind seems to tell the origin of Creation. You will find all the simplicity of the world at your feet, and the most distant constellations within reach of your hands.

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Wednesday, March 28, 2018

New Moroccan Novel - Available to Pre-order


Sandy McCutcheon's latest novel, Through the Peacock Gate, is "a rare example of contemporary English fiction drawing on traditional Moroccan folklore." Set in contemporary times in the Medina of Fez, it plunges the reader into the fabric of Moroccan society. The book will be launched in Fez in April and is now available to pre-order

What the publisher says...

Through the Peacock Gate
takes you on the journey of a foreigner in Morocco, whose unexpected infatuation leads him into the very heart of the Sufi mystical experience. His descent into madness is exacerbated by his guilt over a tragedy in his past. As he recovers, he is forced to confront a female djinn during a Sufi ceremony in an encounter that could once again tip him back into insanity.

The novel is a rare example of contemporary English fiction drawing on traditional Moroccan folklore. Written in gripping English prose fused with Arabic words, the novel gives an authentic insight into a Westerner’s experience of modern Moroccan society, whilst simultaneously exposing the reader to the country’s rich cultural history by weaving classic Moroccan folk takes and the mysteries of Sufism into its fabric. The book not only explores the point where East and West merge, but the collision of the human world with the world of the djinns – mysterious shape-shifting creatures of an unseen realm.

“Sandy McCutcheon’s latest novel Through the Peacock Gate is the kind of book those of us who live between Occident and Orient have waited an entire lifetime to read. The interweaving layers, the quality of the prose and, most of all, the raw bedrock of cultural knowledge on which it is founded, makes this an invaluable handbook to the mysteries and complexities of Eastern lore. Its pages conjure the mesmerising, magical heart of secret Morocco.” - Tahir Shah, author of The Caliph’s House

SANDY McCUTCHEON is a New Zealander but lived most of his adult life in Australia as an author, playwright, actor, broadcaster and journalist. He has written twenty plays and a number of novels, including Black Widow (2006) which won the Christina Stead Award for Literature, and The Magician’s Son (2005), an autobiographical work on the true nature of his ancestry. He lives in Morocco where he has close ties with a Sufi brotherhood.

Pre order Through the Peacock Gate - http://tinyurl.com/y99ggenx
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Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Marathon des Sable 2018

Nearly 1,300 international runners will arrive in the Moroccan Sahara to participate in the 33rd annual Marathon des Sable, which will take place from April 6 to 16


The Sahara race will be organized by the Atlantide Organization Internationale. The event will take place under the auspices of the Moroccan Ministry of Tourism, according to a statement by the Marathon Des Sables.

The race features several stages open to walkers and runners over a distance of about 250 kilometers. Each runner or walker “must carry his/her own backpack containing food, sleeping gear and other material.”

“The 33rd Marathon des Sables will be administered according to the general race regulations to which all participants agree when they register,” added the statement.

In order to participate in the race, candidates need to be over 18 and must hold a medical certificate issued by the organization stating their ability to participate.

The 32nd edition of the event convened 1,300 runners from 52 countries. The race was marked by the participation of thirty Moroccan runners. The 2016 edition was won by Morocco’s Rachid El Morabiti.

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Saturday, March 24, 2018

Windsurfing World Cup in Morocco


Moulay Bouzerktoune, located in the province of Essaouira, will host from March 27 to April 7, the Windsurf World Cup PWA (Professional Windsurfers Association), a first in Africa and Morocco.

For those who do not yet know Moulay, it is THE Moroccan wave spot. A small sandy beach with flat rocks form up a line up breaking waves in 'right'. Side starboard shore wind blowing stronger than in the bay of Essaouira.

From March to June, the swell shape beautiful waves from 1.5 to 3 meters for the delight of the passionate of wave riding. In summer the wind strength increases up to 30/35 knots and wave size gradually decreases. In autumn the beautiful swell is back with a slower wind regime which allows to alternate windsurfing sessions and stand up paddle.


Initiated under the High Patronage of HM King Mohammed VI, organized by the Moulay Bouzerktoune Association for Development and Water Sports and the Essaouira Mogador Association, this sports competition is supported by the Ministry of Youth and Sport, Ministry of Tourism, OCP, Masen and the Royal Moroccan Federation of Sailing (FRMV).

This competition promises to experience great moments as it hosts host a triple competition, namely: the Women's World Cup Windsurf - Wave Category (PWA), the men's qualifications for the World Cup - Wave Category ( PWA), and the 1st stage of the International Windsurfing Championship (IWT).

This event will see the participation of some 100 riders coming from Morocco, the United States, Australia, France, Sweden, Japan, Germany, Canada, Italy and Norway.


The organization of this event for the first time on African soil is of crucial importance, since it will allow Morocco to shine on the international scene concerning this sport, and to encourage young people to fully engage in this sport, confided Boujmaa Guilloul, founder and organizer of the event.

On the sidelines of this competition, several other activities are planned, including social, cultural and environmental actions, initiations to windsurfing, dedicated to young orphanage boarders, as well as paddle surfing, surfing and windsurfing lessons for children and women. The menu also includes a day of wind energy awareness, as well as cleaning days at the beaches of Essaouira and Moulay Bouzerktoune.

Moroccan surfer, Boujmaa Guilloul, holds the world record for the highest jump in the history of windsurfing - 20m in height in 2012 -  and he is the only Moroccan and African windsurfer to have won the International Windsurf Tour (IWT) in 2016 and was vice-champion in 2017.

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Daylight Saving Reminder !


Daylight saving time 2018 in Morocco will begin at 2:00 am on Sunday, March 25 and ends at 3:00 am on Sunday, October 28


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Monday, March 19, 2018

Morocco's Cold Weather Continues


Cold weather and strong gusts of wind are expected from Tuesday to Thursday in several provinces of the kingdom, says the Directorate of National Meteorology (DMN) in a special bulletin

The DMN specifies that strong gusts of wind ranging from 65 to 95 km/h will continue Tuesday and Wednesday in the provinces of Boulemane, Midelt, Taza, Driouch, Nador, Al-Hoceima, Guercif, Berkane, Taourirt, Oujda, Jerada, Figuig , Ifrane, Ouarzazate, Tinghir, Guelmim, Essaouira, Errachidia, Zagora, Tan-Tan, Tarfaya, Laayoune, Essmara, Assa-Zag, Boujdour, Oued-Eddahab and the reliefs of Tiznit, Chichaoua, Sidi-Ifni and Azilal.

In addition, low minimum temperatures oscillating between -08 and -01 ° C will be recorded Wednesday and Thursday in Ifrane, El Hajeb, Sefrou, Boulemane, Midelt, Khenifra, Beni-Mellal, Azilal, Chichaoua, Al-Haouz, Taza and reliefs of Tinghir, Errachidia, Ouarzazate and Taroudant.

Cold weather will also prevail in Figuig, Jerada, Oujda, Taroudant, Berkane, Driouch, Guercif, Taounat, Fez, Meknes, Moulay-Yaakoub, Chefchaouen, Khemisset, Khouribga and the reliefs of Al-Hoceima, Tetouan, Larache and Ouazane, with low minimum temperatures ranging from 00 to 03 ° C.

The DMN said that this drop in temperature will be felt from the evening of Tuesday and persist slightly until Friday, adding that from the afternoon of Tuesday, sometimes moderate snowfall will interest the reliefs of the High and Middle Atlas, the Rif and the eastern highlands to heights greater than 1200 m.

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In Fez - Dar El Hana Changes Hands

A gathering held in the Fez Medina on Sunday evening marked a celebration of the transfer of the popular guest house, Dar El Hana, from Josephine Kwan to Suzanna Clarke and Sandy McCutcheon
"It has been a dream business" - Josephine Kwan

For Josephine it was an emotional event as she had poured so much energy into the enterprise over more than a decade.

When she first discovered the dar in February 2005 it looked to be in good condition. But, she explained, "when repairs started on the walls we discovered twenty-six major cracks that needed attention, and balconies were bowed from water damage."

"Features such as window shutters were painted blue and had to be stripped,' Josephine says. "All the wrought iron had been painted silver which had to be burned off".

Guests included Dr Gigi Kay (American Fonduk) and Rose Button (Dar Zerhoune)

Much of the zelige tile work had to be pulled up and restored.  There were no internal doors but, fortunately, she discovered the doors for sale in the back of a local carpet shop.

Josephine also had remodelling to do as the original kitchen was no bigger than a cupboard, and the dining room floor was close to collapse.

Restoration took one year - non-stop - with up to 10 people working every day.

Josephine recalls that at the time of the restoration there were a lot of others projects happening and there was a great camaraderie between the renovators.

Guests enjoying Dar El Hana hospitality

Originally Josephine had no intention of running the property as a guest house - but having spent her money she saw that hosting paying guests was a positive way forward. Despite having no business experience, Josephine discovered she had a talent for it and the enterprise flourished.

For Josephine the strongest and fondest memories are of friendships forged with guests and the warm relationships with the local Moroccans.

Dar El Hana - a classic restoration

"It has been a dream business," Josephine says, "with wonderful happenings along the way. Including four couples getting married after meeting in the house, including my son Anthony, who married the Moroccan girl next door!"

She says it's hard to let Dar El Hana go, but happy that she still has a small house in the Medina, so will be able to visit from her new base in Australia. So it is not goodbye.

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Friday, March 16, 2018

Morocco Sees Increase in Spanish Tourists


Morocco is the number one destination for Spanish tourists when it comes to travel outside Europe, according to the delegate of the Moroccan National Office of Tourism (ONMT) in Madrid, Mohamed Sofi

"For the previous year, there are more than 2,350,000 Spanish tourists who visited Morocco, an increase of 8% compared to 2016," Mohamed Sofi said in a statement on the sidelines of the Technical Days of the Spanish Confederation of Travel Agencies (CEAV), which was held in Marrakech from March 15 to 18 with the participation of representatives of more than 86 travel agencies from Spain.

The Spanish market is the 2nd largest tourist market for Morocco just after France.

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Morocco Installs Charging Stations for Electric Vehicles


Morocco's Institute for Research in Solar Energy and New Energies (IRESEN) has announced the start of the installation of the first charging stations for electric vehicles in Morocco's highway rest areas.

As part of the Green Miles project, initiated by IRESEN in partnership with Schneider Electric, Autoroutes du Maroc are working on the establishment of the first pilot network of charging stations at rest areas every 60 km along the Tanger-Agadir motorway.

"In total, there are 37 terminals, with 74 charging points of different powers that are being installed on the highway rest areas to cover the 800 km route," said the statement, adding that the establishment is part of a global approach that integrates coupling with solar power, intelligent communication between terminals and the development of innovative solutions that take into account all the specificities of the Moroccan socio-economic context.

Initiated in 2017, these facilities are the result of numerous research and development projects on sustainable mobility that the Institute has conducted since 2014 at its research platform Green Energy Park in Benguerir.

Studies have demonstrated the importance of charging infrastructure as a driver for the development of electric mobility in Morocco. Thus urban areas are in full expansion, and a significant source of solar energy, electric cars, which can be adopted to renew the current fleet, while saving more than 15 million tons of CO2 equivalent per year.

The charging stations were co-financed by the IRESEN and the Schneider-Electric group, while the engineering, the studies and the installation of the charging stations are done jointly by the fuel distributors, IRESEN and ADM.

The first stations of the Afriquia group are in the process of being equipped and will be followed in the next three weeks by the installation of the charging stations in the other rest areas of the fuel dispensers present on the Tanger-Agadir motorway.


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Thursday, March 15, 2018

THE TRUTH ABOUT MOROCCAN SABRA


Search online for Moroccan cactus silk and you will find many sites extolling its virtues. But is it all true? 


"Cactus silk is (almost) exactly what it sounds like: silk made from a cactus! Sometimes called Vegetable or Sabra Silk, it is a luxurious fabric made from the Saharan Aloe Vera Cactus (part of the Agave family). If you’ve ever been on holiday to Morocco you may already be familiar with it. The cactus is grown in the Saharan Desert and the fabric is hand-loomed in Morocco. Markets in Marrakech are often adorned with the beautiful metallic skeins and products." - The Swatch Book 

Recently the Anou Blog published an interesting investigative story about Morocco's so-called "cactus silk" industry. We are reposting it with permission.

THE TRUTH ABOUT MOROCCAN SABRA: EVERYTHING YOU EVER WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT THE MYTHICAL CACTUS SILK AGAVE FIBRE

The new big thing in Morocco is Sabra, or more often referred to as cactus silk. You can’t scroll for too long on an a social media hashtag for Morocco before seeing a pillow or rug made out of sabra. From small shops all the way up to massive companies like Restoration Hardware, everyone is scrambling to pull together their product lines.

Sabra products are incredibly popular because they embody the imagination of what people perceive Morocco to be. Simply look up descriptions of sabra product and foreign sellers via their Instagram account who dote wistfully about divorced or widowed nomadic Berber women who search the expanse of the Saharan desert for the finest cactus. And then when the perfect cactus is found under a hot Moroccan sun, the Instagrammers continue, the women undertake the painstaking work of extracting vegan fibre thread by thread only before dyeing it using hand crushed natural dyes via Indigo mud cloth techniques. Beautiful.

At a certain point though when it starts to seem that not only is such a popular product the embodiment of Morocco but also every artisan technique ever known to humankind all available in pillow form for less than $50 USD including shipping on Etsy, you gotta wonder: is any of this even true?

Finding Sabra

About a year and half ago we started getting a spike in requests for sabra product. The first clue that something might be amiss was that even though we worked with hundreds of weavers across the country none of them had ever posted a standard sabra product online. Nor were there any pictures of this process anywhere online. Many cooperatives said they could easily make the product if asked, but did not have a desire to make it on their own. Association Nahda volunteered to create some samples but first we had to find sabra.

To get started, we first visited the plentiful shops that sell sabra across the country. You’ll instantly recognise the shops with stacks upon stacks of small spindles of sabra thread. But every shop we went to in the Middle Atlas purchased their sabra in bulk from a supplier in a major city and when we met with the supplier, they told us their sabra was imported from India. When we asked to see the packaging, it was all clearly labeled as a cheap rayon. The distributor just said he supplies to small village shops and that real sabra, the sabra for weaving, was found elsewhere.

Stacks and stacks of…cheap rayon

Shocking as that was we reached out to some of the more well known artisans who work with sabra. All of them, who have worked with sabra for many years, claimed that it was fibre from cacti that grew on farms, much like the stories people tell online. We worked with these artisans to trace the full supply chain of their material to the source, hoping it would lead us to these all female farms, but we found ourselves in Spain instead. Much of the high end sabra sold in major cities is sourced through a manufacturing company located on the outskirts of Barcelona. Spanish sabra? Sure, why not? We eagerly got in touch and the company responded by saying that they were rather incredulous anyone could extract a useable fiber from a sabra cactus, but that they wouldn’t know because they exclusively sell acetate filament threads. We brought this information back to the artists who use this product and they said it wasn’t true.

Through our research that led us to Spain, we had also found the supposed source of the actual sabra in Morocco that is most commonly used for pillows and rugs. The location is in a small, wind swept town just outside of Marrakech. We found the largest cluster of sabra cactus we had seen after months of looking that could have resembled a farm, so we assumed we were getting close. We found the owner of the land, and when we asked if we could take some sabra cactus stems, he said no because that cluster was on the land of a grave site. He had some sabra cactus in front of his house and bemusedly let us take as much as we wanted curious as to why anyone thought they could do anything with it.

While in the town, we met with nearly 100 weavers of sabra product and distributors of sabra. The distributors, primarily the most well known, were all incredibly frank in that sabra had never been produced in Morocco and that their businesses started importing rayon fibers because it was shiny, relatively cheap and sold well. We were surprised that they spoke so honestly, but they said it was the first time someone had asked them such specific questions.

We have since tested the fibre and have confirmed that it is in fact rayon. Further, we’ve extensively tested contemporary and traditional techniques to extract the fibre learning from techniques used on similar fibers in Algeria, Mexico and the Philippines. So far all have failed. It’s not even clear if sabra fibre could even be used for basic rope. As a result, we can definitively conclude that sabra as of today is not real, and it’s story just as manufactured as the rayon that it is.

The Economics and Abuse of Sabra

We’ve written extensively on the economics of a lot of products in Morocco and as always the result is the same: artisans are paid next to little while middlemen take extensive mark ups. But in a land where exploited artisans is the norm, the scale of exploitation with sabra was unmatched.

The sabra product made in those windswept towns are places where middlemen in Marrakech set up their workshops and where most products you find on Instagram or in the Marrakech medina are made. The areas are out of the eye of tourists as well as the clients of middlemen and much too inconvenient for buyers to visit for themselves. The artisans are simply too far away to know what is actually happening in the market and are largely unaware. It’s a perfect environment for a made up story to thrive.

In one of the most well known towns where sabra product is made there isn’t one single official cooperative. All the women work as individuals, who middlemen pit against each other to extract the cheapest price and turn around times. When we talked to the women, they laughed at the thought that they could sell their sabra pillows, which take them 5 days to make, for more than 50 MAD ($5 USD). That is 10 MAD a day ($1 USD per day) in a country where the minimum agricultural wage is 70 MAD per day. Oftentimes, the women are expected to pay for the material which comes out of the 50 MAD price they are paid. A middleman likely tells their buyers the artisans are happy with what they pay, and the women may very well be because they do not know any better.

One of the more expensive parts of this process is dyeing the fibre. Sabra rayon comes in large tangled hanks and it is incredibly difficult for the dye to absorb quickly and evenly. We did extensive testing on best ways to properly dye sabra rayon, and because of the physical state of the fiber, it takes about two hours of manual work and extensive amounts of dye and water to complete one kilogram. To reduce the overall amount work, traditional dyers cut down the dye process from 2 hours of manual labor to 20 minutes using formaldehyde based mordants. So instead of 200 MAD ($20 USD) for 1 kg of sabra rayon, you can get away with paying as little as 20 MAD per kg ($2 USD) while pushing any adverse health effects on to the dyers and artisans. When the product is woven by the women, the product is passed on to another person, often times the middleman, who applies a bleach wash to fade and turn the product ‘vintage’. Bleach is key because there are no vintage sabra products since they only showed up on the market within the past 15 years. All in all the final material cost of imported rayon and dyed with formaldehyde comes to about 50 MAD ($5 USD) for a standard size sabra pillow.

Collectivco (and we can list many other similar companies) just recently launched their new line of Sabra pillows for just $50 USD each. You can assume that they’re at least working with a margin of at least 50%, so they paid at most $25 USD for a pillow in the Marrakech medina, which falls in place with the break down above. To any ethical seller, you’d know that something isn’t quite right with a handmade product of such detail price at just $25. At that price either artisans are getting exploited or the material isn’t what the customer thinks it is. In the case of sabra rayon products it is both. While people in Morocco may just not know any better, that excuse does not extend to many foreign companies who benefit most from the deception and often drive such trends. And let’s be real: if a company like Collectivco is selling you sabra is anything else they say legitimate?

An Alternative?

We’ve heavily debated over the past year what exactly we should do about sabra rayon as we figured out that nothing about it is real. Calling it out likely won’t stop people like Collectivo from marketing a fake product — there’s too much money to be made. It’s also not clear if customers care. When we reached out to a customer of a sabra product their response was, “Don’t bother me about it, bother the seller. I think it looks pretty”. Further, by outing the material, we eliminate the ability for artisans within the Anou community to sell it and we may harm genuine cooperatives and artisans that do use sabra rayon in one way or another but are simply not aware or afford to believe in its actual origins.

We decided we wouldn’t make this information public until we could research and develop a better alternative to sabra rayon. And with our partners at Stitch (www.stitch.ma), who have led our research into better, more sustainable fibres, and bamboo has heavily emerged as the best replacement so far. Bamboo is ideal because it’s more environmentally sustainable, it’s less complex to dye nor does it require as much water or dye, and it is much much softer and stronger. Bamboo can be used for both warp and weft, where sabra can only be used for the weft (and is why it is most often paired with a cotton warp) because it is just too weak. Ultimately, bamboo yarns feel and act as you would expect from something called vegetable silk. We’ve spent the last several months working closely with Stitch to develop the dye systems to consistently dye bamboo fibre in a wide range of colours all in an environmentally sustainable way while ensuring good wages for artisans who take on the dye work at Atlas Wool Supply Co.

Several shades of blue and brown bamboo, drip drying in the sun

Once we perfected the dye system, we brought out several cooperatives to Anou’s HQ to run side by side tests of Bamboo and Sabra and the results were stunning. Bamboo proved much easier to weave with, dropping the weaving time by about 20%. Further, the bamboo is luxuriously soft unlike the coarse, rough cotton sabra mix of most sabra products that you find on the market. From a purely aesthetic perspective, bamboo is just better.


Cooperative Tiglmamin, Cooperative Tithrite and Cooperative Nahda will begin taking orders on bamboo sabra. And while we predict in a couple of months middlemen will start to say they have bamboo, it won’t be true, because Stitch and Anou are exclusively importing it.

Batul of Coop Tiglmamin, Fatima of Coop Tithrite and  Aicha of Coop Nahda

An Artisan Centred Craft Economy in Morocco

After researching this for one and a half years, we can certainly conclude that sabra does not accurately represent Morocco nor the hype in everyone’s imagination. What rayon sabra does embody, however, is how artisans are harmed when sellers and buyers don’t do their due diligence and devalue the worth of artisans. What is most striking about rayon sabra is that it just goes to show what happens in a middleman centered economy. Only when every last cent is squeezed from artisans’ actual traditional products would everyone open their arms to entirely made up story about a product to extract even more from artisans.

Bamboo yarn isn’t a cure all solution to the sabra rayon problem. It’s not made domestically, if it isn’t made mechanically or in a closed loop system it can have more environmental cons than pluses, and Morocco has no real history with bamboo yarns. But it is now a known product, with room to improve immensely. And when you buy bamboo sabra products via artisans within the Anou community, you’ll know exactly what is in the product you bought and you’ll know exactly how much is going to the artisans who made it. And as more artisans earn more than just a fair wage for their work, it will enable artisans through the Anou Cooperative to do the real work of much needed research, experimentation and sourcing of new materials, of which we aim to be rooted in Morocco’s culture and environment. And perhaps artisans may just find a way after all to incorporate actual Moroccan sabra into beautiful products in the future. This is what an artisan centred economy in Morocco looks like.


Realising this future starts with you, the customer. Ensure that you or your friends do their due diligence whenever they’re buying their next artisan product. Encourage people to buy direct from authentic artisans and not from just middlemen who say they’re helping. With your support, artisans can create the future of craft in Morocco and ensure that all Moroccan products resemble the best of what the country and people of Morocco have to offer.

Anou is a community of artisans working together to establish equal access to the free market.“Anou is an artisan owned and managed marketplace that enables all Moroccan artisans, regardless of literacy, to sell their products directly to customers world wide. Through the Anou marketplace, artisans are working to build an artisan centred economy that enables them to build the future of Moroccan craft.” - Anou founder Dan Driscoll
Find out more about the Anou Blog here

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Theatre and Folklore Festivals in Morocco

The 13th edition of the International Theatre Festival of Casablanca will be held from March 20 to April 1, with the participation of troops from Europe, Africa and the United States - and Marrakech to have new folklore festival

"Some 13 theatrical productions from all walks of life are scheduled in the main Casablanca theatres for the enjoyment of all audiences," said Noureddine Ayouch, president of the Living Arts Foundation, which is organising this cultural event.

Masterpieces that lend themselves to reflection and artistic beauty will thrill the Casablanca nights, including the masterpiece "Anais, A dance opera", directed by Janet Roston, and the play "Birth of a chef d 'oeuvre', staged by Stéphanie Chévara, will take place at the Studio des arts vivants, said the president of the Foundation.

The play "Proudhon Model Courbet", designed and directed by Jean Petrement, and "The day I met Franz Liszt", directed by Christian Tandem, are also on the program, he noted, adding that the event will be marked by parallel activities, workshops, conferences, as well as training sessions.

Moroccan shows are also on the menu, including Mohamed Lhor's "Moulat Lhit", which will feature Moroccan theatre stars such as Meryem Zaimi, Saida Ladib, Adil Abatourab, and "Saken", directed by Hassan Hammouche, among others.

According to the organisers, this cultural event aims to raise awareness of the importance of theatrical art and to promote this activity, but also to develop the talents of young professionals while highlighting the latest artistic works.

MARCH 20: Anaïs, A Dance Opera
MARCH 21: Birth of a masterpiece
22 MARCH: Proudhon Model Courbet at F.O.L. Federation of laic works of Casablanca
MARCH 23: The day I met Franz Liszt at the Casablanca Mechouar
MARCH 24th: Impromptu 1663
25 MARCH: Sleeping Rose at the French Institute of Casablanca
MARCH 26: Moulat Lhit at the theater of the F.O.L. Federation of laic works of Casablanca
MARCH 27: Notebook with notes to uzine
MARCH 28: Under the Bridge at the French Institute of Casablanca
MARCH 29th: Eloge de l'Amour show at the French Institute of Casablanca
MARCH 30: Saken at the Ritz Cinema
MARCH 31: Allah Islah at the Ritz Cinema
APRIL 1: Antigone I Ma Kou at The Studio of Living Arts

"Marrakech Folklore Days", a festival dedicated to popular arts

The biggest festival of folklore "Marrakech Folklore Days" will be held for the first time in Morocco, from March 30 to April 1 in Marrakech.

Organised by the Association of Heritage and Folklore (APF), this Festival aims to create an intercultural sharing environment where any country in the world will have the opportunity to be represented by artists whose mission is to highlight their national and ethnic roots , says a statement from the organising committee. This event aims to exchange culture, heritage and tradition between different countries while having fun on open-air stages in Marrakech.

"Morocco will not only be the host country but will also participate in the event with folk troupes from different regions," said the source. This meeting will be attended by several countries including Morocco to present their folklore, will bring together about 500 artists all seeking to discover and value their nation and heritage to local tourists and those from elsewhere. The program of this festival, include the organization of a photography contest where young participants will trace the best moments with their pictures, shows and a parade of groups in the old medina of Marrakech, in addition to the exchange of gifts and distribution of diplomas.

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Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Night Photography in Fez - March 18th

Click in image to enlarge


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Tangier to Algeciras by Helicopter

A new project of the Spanish airline Helity aims to provide flights between Tangier and Algeciras, or Sebta and Melilla, by helicopter. The news was announced by the Spanish news agency EFE


This will be done thanks to the acquisition of a new helicopter, which like those already owned by the company, will carry between 11 and 15 passengers. The line that will link Tangier to Algeciras will be operational from June.

Since June 2017, the company has linked Sebta to Algeciras and Melilla, carrying more than 18,000 people that year.

The company based in Sebta, which aims to promote an image of autonomous city as "being a tourist destination connected by air".


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Monday, March 12, 2018

Daylight Saving Dates Announced in Morocco


Morocco's Ministry of Administration and Civil Service Reform has announced that Morocco will switch to daylight saving time on Sunday, March 25 at 2:00 a.m.


The measure is expected to increase the competitiveness of the national economy through a reduction in energy consumption. It will also reduce the time difference between Morocco and its regional and international trading partners.

In late February, several member countries urged the EU to consider abolishing daylight saving. The energy-saving practice is under review by the European Parliament, which backed a possible plan to end daylight saving time across the 28 member states after 384 deputies out of 549 voted in favor of the resolution. The growing international debate over the seasonal practice has created a debate within Morocco as to whether the North African country will follow its European business partners in this decision.

Daylight saving time was first adopted during the First World War in the UK to give factories more daylight hours to operate in, thereby aiding the war.

The issue has divided MEPs within the European assembly. An October 2017 EU Parliament study stated that, “while daylight-saving time benefits the transport industry, helps outdoor leisure activities and reduces energy consumption, it is associated with disruptions to the human biorhythm.”

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Saturday, March 10, 2018

Morocco to Subsidise Organic Produce


Morocco is to grant a subsidy for the certification of organic agricultural products. A draft decree has been adopted in the Council of Government promising financial support paid directly to producers as support for the cost of certification

This measure aims to boost productivity and reduce the cost of production while improving the quality and competitiveness of the products concerned, said government spokesman Mustapha El Khalfi.

It is also about achieving the objectives of a program-contract signed between the State and the professionals of the sector in 2011 to promote the organic production sector.

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Tuesday, March 06, 2018

Morocco's Rough Weather Continues


WEATHER - The National Meteorological Directorate (MND) has issued a new special warning bulletin, announcing heavy rains on Tuesday in several provinces of the kingdom 


The rain is expected from today from 9:00 to 18:00 in the provinces of Kenitra, Tangier, Chefchaouen, Ouazzane, Sidi Kacem, Larache, Al Hoceima (relief) and Taounate.

The provinces of El Jadida, Sidi Bennour, Casablanca, Nouaceur, Médiouna, Mohammedia, Benslimane, Berrechid, Settat, Skhirate-Témara, Rabat-Salé, Khemisset, Kenitra, Sidi Slimane, Khenifra, Ifrane, El Hajeb, Sefrou, Meknes Fez, Moulay Yaâcoub, Taza, Béni Mellal, Azilal, Fquih Ben Saleh and Khouribga will experience heavy rains from Tuesday 9:00 to Wednesday at 6:00.

Strong gusts of wind, ranging from 60 to 80 km / h, will also be experienced on Tuesday from 06:00 to midnight in Safi, El Jadida, Berrechid, Nouaceur, Casablanca, Mediouna, Mohammedia, Rabat-Salé, Skhirate-Témara, Kenitra , Ifrane, Boulemane, Khenifra, Taza, Al Haouz, Midelt, Ouarzazate and Figuig.

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Monday, March 05, 2018

Moroccan Artist Laila Benhalima

Mention Moroccan contemporary art and the names that come to mind are people such as Achraf Touloub, Younès Rahmoun, Fathiya Tahiri and Mahi Binebine. Now add the name Laila Benhalima to that list. Laila currently has an exhibition on in Rabat. It is certainly worth a visit
She dances around "those colourful stars that cannot shine without darkness"

Laila Benhalima is a Moroccan artist born in Rabat. She has been recognised for a many years as having a prestigious talent which this exhibition certainly displays.


Since a very young age, Laila has been living in her own world and found a way to communicate through her art. The natural world - especially the lush, fertile landscape and energy originating from her North African culture - evokes for her a personal response that is full of so much energy showcasing with her African abstract paintings, the vibrant colours, history, and imagery of one of the world's most alluring continents.


While Laila is in action painting some her most complex and beautiful pieces, she dances around "those colourful stars that cannot shine without darkness".

 Laila is a woman of high energy, passion and she is always eager to share her deep thoughts with the world through her painting. She examines how complex our universe is and how she can turn sadness, loneliness and darkness into unconditional love - something that the world needs today more than ever before.


Laila is Pharmacist by profession and Artist and Coach at heart.  One of her goals has been not only promoting peace and love through Art, but also to encourage students to become involved in art in the hope that they can achieve their own recognition as promising artists.


Her influence as an Artist-woman has been widely felt, and had a positive impact throughout her community around her native country Morocco. This exhibition adds to her stature. It is hoped the exhibition can travel to Fez sometime in the future, inshallah.

The exhibition at the Nadira Gallery (11 rue Soussa, Centre Ville, Rabat) continues until March 15.


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Saturday, March 03, 2018

Philippe Laleu Exhibition Opening Night


Traces of a Journey, an exhibition by French artist Philippe Lauleu, opened last night at the French Institute in Fez's Ville Nouvelle.


The body of work was created in Japan more than 20 years ago, but remains contemporary and relevant.  The theme, explained Laleu, is about the Japanese relationship with landscape and the nearness of death. "They know they are trying to stay on a shaking fish; that any moment could be their last."



The intriguing works are executed either on fragments of old kimonos, or canvas, and feature anatomy, maps and features of the landscape. "I was working in Kobe during the big earthquake they had there, and more than 6,500 people disappeared." The poignancy of people searching for their loved ones, who had been literally lost in the landscape, stayed with him and became the theme of this exhibition.


Laleu has had a long record as an artist, and was also the Director of the French Institute between 2005 and 2015. He now lives in Fez, and finds constant inspiration in the ancient medina.

It will be intriguing to see his future works about Fez.

Traces of a Journey exhibition runs until the end of March at the French Institute Gallery, 33 Rue Ahmed Loukili, Ville Nouvelle, Fez. For further info CLICK HERE. 

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Morocco's Heavy Rains Cause Problems


The wet weather is is forecast to continue. There is expected to be local flooding as the rain increases on Saturday


Fourteen passengers of a transport vehicle are lucky to be alive thanks to the quick work of the Royal Gendarmerie. The accident took place when Oued Tarka was in flood, because of the torrential rains which fell in the area of ​​Imouzzer Ida Outanane, in the north of the city of Agadir when the driver lost the control of his vehicle which ended in the river.


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Photography Documentary - Sunday March 4



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Friday, March 02, 2018

Can Citizens Save The Henna Souk Fountain?


The Henna Souk is one of the gems at the heart of the Fez Medina. This oasis of tranquility is the place for henna, ceramics and a variety of smaller goods such as herbs, cosmetic soaps and oils. It is also the location for the famous maristan and its fountain
The Henna Souk, with its two giant trees, is an oasis of tranquility in the busy Fez Medina

The word “maristan” is a contraction of a Persian word (bimarstan) meaning “the locus of sick people.” Maristans were medical institutions with four specialties: internal medicine, ophthalmology, traumatology, and psychiatry.

In Fez, during the Merinid dynasty a maristan, called Sidi Fredj, was built in the 13th century by the sultan Abu Yaqub (1286–1307). Leo Africanus (his original name was Hassan Al Wazzan) worked in this maristan for two years as a secretary at the end of the 15th century. Adjacent to the Sidi Fredj maristan, herb shops allowed the preparation of many kinds of medications for centuries. These small shops still exist today and add much to the charm of the Henna Souk.


Still in existence, but under threat is the beautiful fountain.

Built at the same time as the maristan, the fountain has survived the centuries but in a deteriorating condition. The proclamation of Fez as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO saw an increased appreciation of the cultural and architectural heritage of the Medina.  In 1986 the fountain was restored.


Problems began two years ago when someone began using the fountain for dumping rubbish (see photographs below). They are asked to desist by the stallholders in the Souk, but refused to do so.

Rubbish in the fountain

The stallholders recently cleaned up the fountain and the local water authority RADEEF generously undertook to assist by putting in a temporary water circulating pump and for the first time in years the sound of tinkling water was heard in the Henna Souk. RADEEF explained it was only a temporary fix and undertook to provide the plumbing to connect the fountain to a constant supply of water. It is hoped that RADEEF will quickly move to fully restore the fountain.

Cleaned and flowing with fresh water

Sadly, the abuse of the fountain has continued and the people involved have removed the water pump and returned to dumping into the fountain.

The local shopkeepers all signed a petition and delivered it to their local city official, who unfortunately dismissed it as being "in the wrong format" and declined to address the problem.

There is much discussion about what the next step should be. Please visit the Henna Souk to show your support.

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