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About Ramblings of a Hopeless Khowaga

Welcome to my Web site. My name is Chris, and I’ll be your host. I live in Austin, Texas, with my partner, Ray, and our child dog, Mocha. You can read more about me, learn 100 random things about me, and if you’re wondering what the heck a khowaga is, click here. Feel free to browse, read, and leave comments!

Tag: ‘churches’



Day 11: Clinging

Monday, June 20th, 2011

Two very different experiences this morning, and the only word I could think of to link them is “clinging.”

First thing this morning, we checked out of the hotel, as for the next week we’re staying with local families to add a bit of local flavor to our in country experience.

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Meet Maria. Maria is Jewish, and one of the local representatives of the Association Israelite du Maroc, whose offices are located adjacent to the synagogue in downtown Rabat. You can’t find it anywhere on the map because it’s not listed. There are also no signs announcing its existence on the street. It maintains an unassuming position in an office block that could best be described as neo-Soviet in its architecture. The locals are extremely protective of it. After the bombing of a synagogue in Djerba several years ago, and also in Marrakesh, you don’t get to know where the synagogue is if you don’t have business there. Whether this is characteristic of what we are told repeatedly is the national attitude of protection toward its Jewish population or because the locals don’t want to deal with the resultant mess and crackdown should terrorists execute a plot in their midst is hard to determine … and probably irrelevant.

Maria looks to be in her sixties, and she bosses around the caretaker, Saieed, with an air that is pretty common to women in the Mediterranean, even on its southern shores. Saieed is Muslim, and wears a skullcap so that he doesn’t have to keep donning and doffing a kippeh every time he enters the room on the first floor where the synagogue is located.

The synagogue is small and, although the visit is scheduled to last over an hour, it’s clear that we’ve seen everything there is to see within moments of entering the single room synagogue. It used to be the school, you see, but they don’t need it any more. There are no children in the Jewish community here. All of the families left – mostly to Canada and France. Israel, interestingly, comes up only as an afterthought. Yes, of course there are some in Israel … but mostly Canada and France. Apparently in Rabat they hung on long enough to get reports back from Israel that the new Zionist entity wasn’t quite as welcoming to Morocco’s Jews as was promised and they decided to seek out better opportunities elsewhere.

Oh, the tourists come, Maria says. They do, and just last week we had a wedding. We are shown the Mikvah, the purification bath where Jewish women are cleansed before their wedding. The grooms get married upstairs, and we are shown where the wedding feast is felt … and, indeed, it’s a room capable of holding a feast and not much else.

There are questions we want to ask, of course, but we know we’ll only get the party line. The Jewish community is, quite literally, dying out here. Without young people the future of what used to be the largest community of Jews anywhere in the Arab world is pretty much written on the wall. And what will become of Maria and her ilk? Who will sit shiva for them when they pass?

The visit reaches an obvious end, even though, as mentioned, our time is supposed to be much longer. We’ve seen what there is to say, and Maria has nothing left to say. It’s a room where perhaps a hundred still gather on Shabbat and high holidays. What more is there to say?

We head down to the street and board the bus, and look up to see Maria and Saieed waving at us as we leave. Soon the block housing the Israelite Association of Morocco is lost among so many other identical ones, and it’s likely that none of us could find the place again if we were asked to do so.

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Our next destination is the Cathedral Saint-Pierre in Rabat, the main Catholic church in the Moroccan capital. We arrive early, having been warned that the 11 o’clock mass is usually full (well, that and there wasn’t much else to do at the synagogue).

We enter the sanctuary to the sounds of an African choir practicing for the mass. Several of us take seats in the last pew – most of us aren’t Catholic, only two or three speak French, the language the mass will be conducted in, and there is an unspoken agreement among several of us that if the mass goes on for too long we’ll leave.

We don’t. At a signal I miss entirely, the congregation rises and the service begins. The pews are full – nearly all of the faces are from black Africa. Many of the women are in colorful garments that are clearly from francophone West Africa. There are more people who appear to be Vietnamese or Laotian than I would have expected to see at this, the far corner of the former French Empire. And there are a couple of very old ladies who appear to be remnants of the French protectorate: they were born here, and they’re going to die here, even though this is no longer their country.

The service is entirely in French, save for an Agnes Dieu prayer in Latin and a hymn sung in what we later identify as Langali, a diminutive language from the Democratic Republic of Congo. A couple of the French speakers consult their neighbors in the pew, and we discover that each week, a hymn from a different sub-Saharan language is introduced. Last week, it was one of the Togolese languages. Who can say what it will be next week?

Outside, after the service, a few enterprising Muslim charity cases hawk the crowd for coin. This is also one of the few places that you can see the sub-Saharan congregate amongst themselves. The ladies who are the wives of ambassadors zip off in cars with their chauffeurs, clearly marked by the orange Corps Diplomatique plates.  The others chat for a long while, and many are still there after we head off to lunch at a nearby Italian restaurant. They’ll spend the rest of the week trying to blend in to Morocco and trying to pretend that the locals don’t resent their presence here.

You see, most of these people don’t particularly want to be here in Morocco. They’ve set their sights a little farther north, and Morocco is just a way point. They’re aiming for Europe.  Many of them may eventually wind up in the notorious Spanish refugee camp in the Ceuta enclave, and its entirely likely that some of them will attempt to cross into Europe … and some will die in the attempt to cross the strait of Gibraltar. Stories are harsh about the traffickers who ply the Strait, almost as bad as those who traffic along the U.S./Mexican border.

And so, I’m left with the thought of clinging hanging in my mind. Two disparate groups of people, barely clinging to existence here in this corner of Africa, waiting for fate to intervene. It’s no wonder they seek solace in religion as often as they can.

12 of 12: July 2009 / ١٢ من ١٢: يوليو ٢٠٠٩

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

It’s time once again for 12 of 12!  This 12th of July, I’m in Cairo, capitol of the Arab Republic of Egypt.  I’ve been out of the US since June 29 — I was in Turkey for 10 days and flew down here on the 9th.  (For the record, and if you’re interested, there are photos from Turkey here).

I’ve been in Cairo many times — I studied here for a year in university — and it’s one of my favorite places in the world.  This is my first visit since 2006. I’m here on a combined business / vacation trip.  Although today is a business day (the work week in Egypt is Sunday through Thursday, since Friday is the communal day of prayer in Islam), I didn’t have any meetings scheduled, so it was kind of a fun day.

7:52 am: Skyping with Ray

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I’ve been waking up kind of early since I got here, and I caught Ray up late at home so we talked by Skype for a bit.  Mocha was in the picture for a bit, but she never quite looked at the camera.  Sorry, Mocha fans, there are no photos of her this month :(

10:00 am: Errands

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After pretending to go back to sleep for a bit, I finally wandered out around 10 o’clock to go pick up my laundry from the place down the street.  The laundry is in the same complex as the supermarket, so I stopped in to pick up some water and soda first, and then carried it all back to the hotel.  It was warm in Cairo today (102 F/41 C), and unusually humid.  This is, lamentably, still cooler than it is at home in Austin.  Tomorrow it’s going to be cooler – by Tuesday, it’ll be 91 (36).

1:56 pm: Christian Cairo

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I met up today with Tarek, our junior professor in modern Arabic literature, and we went down to the so-called Christian quarter.  It’s in the oldest part of the city, which actually predates the city of Cairo by 300 years.  A little-known fact: around 10 per cent of Egypt’s population is Christian, belonging to the native Coptic Church.  In an area of town called Mar Girgis, there are a number of churches and one of the few synagogues remaining in the country, all clumped together.

Tarek and I first hit the Coptic Museum (no photography allowed), and then wandered through the rest of the complex.  Although it’s a tourist draw, most of the people there were Egyptian, which was OK by us.

2:11 pm: St George’s Cemetery

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That’s Tarek taking a photo of the mausoleums in the Greek Orthodox cemetery behind St. George’s Church.  There are a bunch of mausoleums and family plots back there.  I was a bit surprised to find the tomb of someone with the same name as my grandfather — how many Neoklis Triantafillides’s could there have been in the Greek speaking world?

2:16 pm: Water from the Holy Well

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Although it’s not spelled out in the Gospels, the Egyptians have an entire itinerary set out for exactly where the Holy Family (Mary, Joseph, and the infant Jesus) traveled during their flight into Egypt.  In the cemetery is a crypt built over a cave where the Holy Family is said to have sheltered and drawn water from the well above.  As Mary (as Meryem) and Jesus (as ‘Issa) are both revered as prophets in Islam as well as Christianity, you can see adherents of both faiths making pilgrimages at these shrines.

2:51 pm: … you crazy, adorable fool

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The oldest known synagogue in Egypt still in existence, the Ben Ezra Synagogue, is in Mar Girgis as well, although, once again, no photography allowed.  Tarek and I got the royal tour, and were shown to the ‘Ayn Musa, the spring of Moses, located behind the synagogue.  This is said to be the spring where Pharaoh’s daughter drew the baby Moses from the Nile (the synagogue is said to be on the place where Moses pleaded with God to stop the plagues inflicted on Egypt).

3:12 pm: Off to Lunch

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OK, by this point in the day it was really hot in the sun and time for lunch.  Tarek and I had made plans to meet up with some students who are here for the summer, so we set back off for the area where I’m staying and several of the students live.

I am routinely asked by people if I feel unsafe traveling to Egypt as often as I do.  The answer is no – I have been coming to Egypt for 15 years, and I’ve never hidden the fact that I’m American, nor that I’m Christian (I don’t mention the part about being gay, however — that’s one barrier I’m not willing to cross here).  I’ve never been greeted with anything but kindness by people here.

The one place I do feel unsafe is on the road, however.  Egyptian taxis are built like tanks, but it doesn’t stop me from flinching often when riding in them.  Cairo is horrifically congested (by most unofficial estimates there are 20 million people in the Cairo/Giza/Shubra el Khayma metropolitan area) and it can take ages to get anywhere.  The Metro, wisely, is more for local use than tourists (it’s also not air conditioned), so we decided to cab it.

3:44 pm: Decisions, Decisions

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We met up for lunch at Abu Sid, a local upscale Egyptian restaurant.  You can get just about everything they serve on the street, but without the nasty side effects afterwards :)

5:38 pm: Towel Art

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Back on my own, I headed back to the hotel — a small, unassuming place run by a lady who governs with an iron fist.  I had forgotten that I’d hung my socks on the towel rack to dry after handwashing them in the sink this morning.  Hence, the guy who cleans the rooms at the hotel got a little creative with towel placement and left me a duck!

8:05 pm: Sunset

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In my food coma haze, I checked e-mail quickly and read while half watching episodes of the less successful Law and Order franchises (Trial by Jury; Trial by Fire; and Parks and Recreational Petty Crimes Division).  I lose track of the time until I hear the call to prayer wafting in through the window, meaning that it’s sunset.

8:45 pm: Evening Traffic in Zamalek

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I wander out, mostly from sheer boredom, and it’s traffic as usual in Zamalek on a weeknight.  Cars and pedestrians going every which way.

10:06 pm: Dessert before dinner

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One of the students calls to see what I’m up to and invite me to tag along to dinner (they eat late here).  I’m not that hungry, but first we stop in at a local bakery/sweet shop that I’ve frequented since my student days.  They churn out really nice baked goods–baklava, basboussa, kinaffeh–and ice cream as well.

For the record, we didn’t actually eat this stuff until after dinner (the shop was on the way to where we were going).  That would have been totally crazy … *innocent look*

And that was my 12.  How was yours?

Albuquerque in the Rain

Sunday, April 15th, 2007

So, turns out the place in Santa Fe has free wifi after all. I have stories, but for now I’ll just let the images do the talking.

National Hispanic Cultural Center
The National Hispanic Cultural Center. Well worth a visit if you find yourself in Albuquerque.

Adobe Door, Old Town, Albuquerque
Adobe Door, Old Town, Albuquerque

New Mexico’s Finest
New Mexico’s finest — the only question at restaurants here is: red or green?

Door, San Felipe de Neri Church
Door, San Felipe de Neri Church, built 1706, on the Plaza in Old Town Albuquerque.

San Felipe de Neri Church
San Felipe de Neri Church.

Fountain, Old Town
There’s interesting stuff all over Old Town, if you look in the nooks and crannies and all the little alleyways.

Random Round Up

Tuesday, September 19th, 2006

 

It’s a Tuesday, and I don’t have a car, so I’m reduced to sitting here trolling the Internet and flipping channels. (OK, the thing about me not having a car is probably just an excuse cuz I don’t have money anyway, but let’s pretend that’s not the case).

The next hot destination?

The New York Times Travel Section did a piece on Ethopia this weekend — ironic, given that the piece of hooey that I’m watching on the National Geographic Channel right now is about the Ark of the Covenant and they’re in Ethiopia looking for the Ark. It might be plausible, except that they’re using Graham Hancock (one of the world’s most pre-eminent pseudo-scientists) as their resident expert.

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Above: One of the churches of Lalibela, carved by hand out of solid rock

The country has a sad recent history, which belies its status as one of the longest-lived countries in Africa. It traces its origins back to Biblical times — the Ethiopians themselves claim the Queen of Sheba as one of their own, although Yemen (across the Red Sea) has an equally strong claim on that. They claim that Judaism came to Ethiopia from a starry-eyed legendary encounter between the Queen of Sheba and no less a personage than King Solomon. The Coptic Church of Ethiopia is one of the oldest in the world. There are even some theories that the Knights Templar had a hand in the construction of the rock-hewn churches of Lalibela. Of course, those might be fueled by some of those racist theories that suggest that any wonder in Africa must have been undertaken by white folks because black Africans couldn’t have thought of them all by themselves. (Gotta love revisionist history).

I think that Ethiopia looks beautiful in all of the photos I’ve seen, and I haven’t met anyone who’s been there who had anything bad to say about it. I’d love the chance to go there, especially before it becomes the new ‘it’ destination (Dubai or Cambodia, anyone?) and suddenly every schmoe with dreads who works in a coffeebar has an opinion on where to get the best doro wat in Addis Ababa.

Of course, I don’t quite have the money for that Abercrombie and Kent tour of Ethiopia, so unless we manage to squeeze Ethiopia into the Middle East and I can wheedle some compelling reason for a business trip, it looks like I’m going to have to content myself with National Geographic specials and Graham Hancock books and the occasional visit to Ethiopian restaurants whenever I find myself in a town that has them…

It Might Be Time to Say Goodbye

From mystical Ethiopia to my penchant for bad Swedish pop music, my ever-embarrassing guilty pleasure (for the record, I’m far less self-conscious about telling people that I’m gay than I am about telling them that I like Swedish power-pop bands).

Anyway, Roxette premiered their new music video One Wish on TV4 this morning (I don’t get Swedish television in Texas, natch). The single hit radio a few days ago in Sweden, but I’m not such a big devotee that I listen to Sveriges Webb-Radio nonstop on the off chance that they’ll play the single while I’m tuned in.

My love affair with Roxette has been waning for a while. They haven’t released a decent album since Have a Nice Day! in the late 1990s. Their 2001 release Room Service was a bit of a disappointment.

This is a band whose lyrical quality has always left something to be desired — who else could pull off lyrics like:

No changing in the weather
No Elvis in the leather
I got a crush, got a crush on you

– but they usually made up for it with guitar hooks so sharp you could cut through a tin can with them, harmonious vocals, and melodies that could get stuck in your head for days.

Room Service lacked something – real instruments, perhaps? Aside from the lyrically inane hit single The Centre of the Heart (is a suburb to the brain) [see what I mean?], most of the album’s songs sounded like they were written because the band was under contract and had to come up with something.

It’s not that Per and Marie have lost their touch. Per’s 2004 solo album Mazarin was light and catchy and poppy and stayed in my car for months – and it’s in Swedish, for heaven’s sake. His Son of a Plumber project from earlier this year is a retro-playground. Granted, it’s not all lyrically deep (let’s be honest: Double Headed Elvis?), but Per’s never been about being deep: he’s all about having fun. Similarly, Marie’s Min bäste vän, released earlier this year, covers everything from jazz to soul.

So what, pray tell, is the impetus for One Wish? See for yourself:

In the meantime, maybe Per and Marie should agree to call it a day… Their hearts clearly aren’t in it anymore — and my money sure ain’t, either.

Back in Upper Egypt

Monday, June 20th, 2005

Esna, 90 degrees, hazy

We arrived this morning at an ungodly hour at the Luxor train station, having spent the night in the Egyptian National Railways Corporation’s premier service, the Acela sleeper train from Cairo to Luxor and Aswan. Not sure it was worth the money. I didn’t sleep a wink, although I did get to see several parts of Egypt I’ve never seen before – Minya, Assyut, Qena – by looking out the window at appropriate intervals. It all kinda looks the same at night, but who can really tell out of a dirty train window anyway?

Yesterday – God, was it yesterday? – we went to Old Cairo and toured a couple of the churches and the synagogue. The group really enjoyed it, although the heat and what I’ll tactfully call ‘adjustment difficulties’ have started to wear thin on everyone. Shirin – habibi – has started to become the running joke amongst us. She was doing so well, but she made a few slips that sent eyes rolling. For example, she asserted at one point – after lecturing on the history of the Egyptian Coptic Church and how important it is in Egypt – that Egypt’s population is 85% Muslim and 15% Catholic. Also, the Church of Abu Sergia is the oldest church – you guessed it – of the world. We’ve started making up our own stuff to go along with that. “This is the first railway of the world,” “This is the first ballpoint pen of the world,” and so on. It’s kind of lame, but who can blame us?

Anyway. The hotel staff in Cairo was only too happy to let people into my room to store their luggage while we’re in Upper Egypt – when I wasn’t there, when I was in the shower, when I was trying to deal with the unexpected beef in my lunch and its effects on my system. We somehow got everyone into the bus in one piece and off to Doqqi for their Arabic lecture. Again, I was pleased both with the lecture that Fulbright set up and the way the group responded. Dear God, they actually wantto learn how to say things in Arabic. Where have these people been for the duration of my professional career?? For the first hour, I went with Barbara back to the hospital in Mohandeseen to have her sutures checked (looks good), and Kamran went to the bank to retrieve our Visa debit cards. They look like the kind of I.D. cards that get spit out of a machine when you buy an annual pass to Six Flags or get your Costco membership renewed, but as long as they work I’m not complaining.

The train. I suppose it was worth the price, but we arrived exhausted at 5 AM. We were met, escorted on the bus and taken to a Nile Cruise boat. Not our Nile Cruise boat, mind you. We were supposed to be docked in Luxor for two nights and then sail upriver to Esna, Kom Ombo, and Aswan. However, over the course of the next two hours the story emerged in full: the locks at Esna are shut for maintenance, and the boats can’t get past. So, we’re actually based in Esna and have to drive back and forth to Luxor. Yay.

We then went off to Karnak and Luxor temples. Our new guide, Mohammad, is great. Very informative. Although, poor guy, there were some giggles when he made a “This was the first….” statement. It was a true statement, but we’re all so conditioned to react to that phrase…

Much sleeping this afternoon. This evening, some of us ventured forth into the wilds of Esna. It’s a sleepy place, having a field day with all the boats moored along the Corniche, and the people are friendly. It’s actually kind of nice – Luxor can be a bit wild with the tourist sharks, and they’re not so bad here.

At any rate. We’re off to the Valley of the Kings at a ridiculously early hour – it’s hot down here. But it should be fun, especially with enough sleep for once…

 

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