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The last leg of our trip was spent in Fes, a city I consider my home away from home. It was quite gloomy and rainy most of the time we were there, and then I got violently sick on my last day. But until that point, it was lovely to be back in Fez, despite it all.
The view on the way to Fez. Very dry; I think they were having a drought?
After settling in our Airbnb, and enjoying nearby cafes and restaurants, we went to the Old City, one of my favourite places in the world, to visit a few maqams (mausoleums of saints) and to explore.
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After Umrah, we went to Morocco for about a week, where my mom joined us. Our first stop was Casablanca and Hassan II Mosque, as per usual.
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Our roadtrip around Morocco continued with a stop in Salé (to visit the mausoleum of Sidi Bin Achir) and a sleepover in Tangier in a riad, a traditional Moroccan home.
Salé
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My experience in Tanger was extraordinarily beautiful but also fairly private. Unfortunately, I was also really exhausted and busy throughout and so don't have many photos of the place itself. We drove through the night, climbing higher and higher through the mountains, the stars growing brighter the farther we drove from civilization.
We were then greeted at a humble home which always housed the visitors of the saint Abdus'Salam ibn Mashish, and after a huge dinner, we slept. At dawn we rose to visit the mausoleum itself.
We were then greeted at a humble home which always housed the visitors of the saint Abdus'Salam ibn Mashish, and after a huge dinner, we slept. At dawn we rose to visit the mausoleum itself.
And then I bid Morocco a (hopefully) impermanent goodbye. All in all, this trip was overwhelming in good and bad ways, from the heat to the vistas to the people to the food. I'll never forget it, and I don't want to. Here's a little video I made to commemorate the three months.
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It was to be my very last road-trip in Morocco, and it took place as a caravan of a huge group of friends and fellow students of my Sheikh. We were going to Chefchaouen and then to Tanger to visit the mausoleum of Abd as-Salam ibn Mashish.
From there I would be heading to Casablanca airport, and then home, alone of all my family for about a week, so that I could prepare for my third year at University.
We left at dawn for our first destination: Ouazzane, a city home to many Sufi saints, as well as a holy site of pilgrimage for many Moroccan Jews.
From there I would be heading to Casablanca airport, and then home, alone of all my family for about a week, so that I could prepare for my third year at University.
We left at dawn for our first destination: Ouazzane, a city home to many Sufi saints, as well as a holy site of pilgrimage for many Moroccan Jews.
We were invited firstly to the Zaouia Ouazania, a place wherein gatherings of worship take place (almost like a monastery) built within a traditional Moroccan home undergoing partial renovations.
The next phase of our trip took hours. Our bus was, at first, quite comfortable. It carried about twenty of us. But as time wore on and the sun rose higher, it began to get hotter. The AC had broken. Every rest-stop saw us emerge like a flood to buy drinks. By the time we arrived in Chefchaouen, we had sweated through most of our clothing. The climate inside the bus was something like a sauna. Arriving at the blue city was, as a result, incredibly refreshing to us, in a way we might not have appreciated otherwise.
The city is just...incredible. I knew how blue it would be, but seeing it was a different matter entirely. It's so...cooling to the eyes! It feels too as though one has stepped backwards in time somehow. We wandered the streets until we came to a vertical strip of vibrant green. A stream had carved its way down the mountain, and burbling ice cold water pooled and trickled and offered itself to any person or creature willing to splash in it.
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By this time, towards the last month of our trip, the Rujulah Retreat attendees and some friends from Canada had arrived in Fez. One day, my mother and I took our friend to visit some of the graves and mausoleums of the saints at the Bab al-Futuh graveyard, overlooking Fez. We had already been, but she needed a guide and we were always up for an outing.
The climb was much harder than it looked. There isn't a walkway, just footpaths visitors had created over the years, and the terrain was rocky and treacherous. Though we began our trip early, the sun was still hot, and soon we were sweating and thinking longingly of water.
The trek was well worth it for the view alone though.
The trek was well worth it for the view alone though.
our guide
Our first visit was to the grave of Abdul Wahid ibn 'Ashir, a premier scholar of law. I memorized part of his famous poem on Islamic creed as a little girl. We would not have found his burial grounds were it not for our guide (one of many who work the graveyards as guides).
Then we were off, climbing higher and slightly eastwards, when suddenly my mom cried out, squinting into the sun's glare. She had spotted someone she later swore she had been wondering if she would meet. It was a little old lady who, on my mother's most recent previous visit to Fez, had guided her directly to many of the greatest mausoleums.
They greeted each other cheerily, and the lady led us on, now going on a slight descent, for which we were grateful for. At last we came to a building with the characteristic dome designating it the final resting place of someone of high importance.
It was the gravesite of the brother-saints, Yusuf and Abdulrahman Al-Fasi. It was a beautiful place serene and cool under a cloud of jasmine and a towering tree, and completely empty.
They greeted each other cheerily, and the lady led us on, now going on a slight descent, for which we were grateful for. At last we came to a building with the characteristic dome designating it the final resting place of someone of high importance.
It was the gravesite of the brother-saints, Yusuf and Abdulrahman Al-Fasi. It was a beautiful place serene and cool under a cloud of jasmine and a towering tree, and completely empty.
The descent down was very quick and quite fun. We refreshed ourselves with fresh lemonade from a rolling cart swarming with fairly harmless though quite terrifying looking bees.
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One evening, I took my mom up to a place I had visited before with friends, and would later return to with the Rujulah Retreat attendees: the Merinides Tombs. They overlook Fez from the opposite side of the Bab al-Futuh cemetery, and are the ruined tombs of the Merinides dynasty royal family.
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I, my parents, my sister, and two of the daughters of my Sheikh went on a spur-of-the-moment road-trip to Al Hoceima, a city in the north of Morocco on the coast of the Mediterranean. The route we chose was on snakelike roads, winding and twining and clinging to the edge of the mountains, roads upon which drivers roared down and around corners like there was no such thing as oncoming traffic. It was both a terrifying and absolutely brilliant drive.
The last time I saw clouds like this was in Istanbul, Turkey. It's a double cloud shadow, which i think means that the highest part of the cloud is casting a shadow on its lower part.
And then we crested one final hill, and below us was Al-Hoceima, a city like pearls strung along an azure coast. It was really pretty, is what I'm saying.
our hotel room right on the beach
purple mountains at sunset!
a sky so clear you can photograph the stars while in the city!
We arrived in the evening, got our hotel rooms, broke our fasts, and went to sleep. My sister and I spent the night on the balcony, listening to the sea. At dawn, the daughters of my Sheikh and I went down to the beach for a little morning meditation and recitation of the Quran, and then waded in the water.
There were jellyfish!
There were jellyfish!
The water was crystal clear and warm...
via Instagram
By midmorning we had packed up and left. This time, we took a route along the coast back to Fez, passing through some of the most incredible terrain. The earth was red as Mars in places, and the hills looked like they belonged in an alien world.
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Around the middle of Ramadan, my family and I and a group of international students we'd befriended went to pray tarawih (supererogatory prayers done in Ramadan) in the Kairaouine. Praying under the stars, surrounded by hundreds of people, was an incredible, mindful experience.
Afterwards we headed out to do some mausoleum visits. Some, but not all, would be open late on Ramadan nights.
The doors to the Kairaouine
We went first to the mausoleum of the Muslim saint Ahmed Tijani. We begged entry as they were just then locking the doors and we were graciously welcomed in. It was empty save for its caretakers and the disciples of the saint. Every inch of it was resplendent with intricate design, but it was not at all overwhelming, almost organic instead.
Finally, we came upon innocuous if pretty doors of what seemed to be a shop. In fact, it used to be a store when one night the owner dreamed of the Prophet (ﷺ) entering his shop. This inspired the owner to turn his shop into a zawiyah; a place dedicated to the remembrance of God and his Prophet (ﷺ). It is only open for mawlids; a celebration specifically for the Prophet's birth (ﷺ). In the Muslim tradition, all dreams of the Prophet (ﷺ) are visions of his actual presence.
I'll leave you with a short, inexpertly shot and edited video I took after praying...