Right now, I’m writing from the salon of my host family’s
apartment. My two younger host sisters and I have been sitting on the couch
watching television with our older host brother as the food from our ftour settles.
When you enter the front door of their apartment on the
fourth story of the building, the small kitchen is on your left. There is a
space in the back with a laundry machine and a narrow grated window overlooking
an empty lot full of concrete pilings. The lot is surrounded on all four sides
by unpainted apartment high-rises, forming a desolate unused courtyard between
the buildings. When I look across, I can see laundry hanging from the rows of
windows surrounding me. The colorful hijabs, towels, skirts, and shirts
fluttering in the wind are a sharp contrast to the bare concrete and barred
windows of the apartment buildings. Inside, the corridor opens into the normal
salon. Two black and white couches and a table fit into the corner, and a TV
takes up the majority of the wall. The room that I share with the three
Cherkaoui girls – Chaimae, Latifa, and Rihab – is next to the bathroom at the
end of the salon. Tucked behind the bathroom, two heavily curtained windows
illuminate the fancy salon where the Cherkaouis pray.
My two younger host sisters Latifa and Rehab are 15 and 10,
respectively. They are very cute and always giggling. Their family is very
conservative, so although they are young, they both wear the hijab already. Anas, their older
brother, is 26. He works as a classroom monitor in a school near their house.
Anas sleeps in the salon and keeps his clothes under the television, since
there is not enough room for all four children in the house to have a bed and
closet space. My arrival has tightened the squeeze – now, Rehab and Latifa
share a bed. Their older sister Chaimae is 24. Although her English is at a
beginner level, she works as an administrative assistant at Bridges, an English
language school in Rabat. Bridges is the sister school of my old school in
Marrakesh, the Center for Language in Culture. The director of the school helped
me find the Cherkaouis to live with for the summer. The mother works as a
secretary and is very nice, while the father works in the traditional market making
sandals. I am still figuring out the Cherkaoui’s family dynamic, but I hope
with time I will be able to bond with them more. My darija (Moroccan dialectal
Arabic) will also doubtlessly improve, since none of them speak more than the
most basic English.
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| View from the roof of the Cherkaoui's house in Quartier l'Ocean, Rabat |
When I first came to Rabat last Sunday, the Cherkaoui
sisters immediately took me to the roof. The flat concrete looks out over
another row of high rises, and then opens up to a view of the ocean and the
glimmering coastline of Rabat. They live in the Quartier de l’Ocean, a section
of the city that spreads south down the coast from the walls of the old city. Although
Rabat is not home the same way that Marrakesh is, I already feel lucky to live
so close to such a beautiful coastline.
I arrived in Morocco about three weeks ago, flying into
Marrakesh after a layover in Amsterdam. In the ten hours that I was able to
spend in the Netherlands, I toured the canals on a wooden boat, drank coffee
inside the oldest church in the city, and explored the winding, bright streets
of the city.
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| Amsterdam's canals in the early morning |
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| Oumaima and I in Djemma al-Fna Square |
I flew into Marrakesh and was greeted by Yassir, Oumaima,
and my old host parents at the airport. I lived with them for eight
months last year when I studied in Morocco and became very close with them. If you’re
interested in my experience last year, feel free to check out my old blog here.
Zineb, Oumaima’s older sister, was waiting for us at home, and we all sat and
drank tea together. It was wonderful being back in their house where I had so
many good memories from last year. Life with the Ibarkis is caring and warm and
wonderful, and I missed them so much. In the five days that I was there, Zineb
and I spent hours sitting over tea and catching up. Oumaima and I went out on
Saturday night to Djemma al Fna, the big square in Marrakesh, and ate street
food and wandered with some of her friends.
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| The view of the Koutoubia Mosque from the side of Djemma al-Fna Square. The mosque is the height of a football field! |
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| Yassir on the way to the pool |
Yassir and I spent the day at the
pool on Saturday. We played in the water for hours, and I tried to get him to
focus enough to continue the swim lessons we started last year. By the end of
the day, he was more confident in the water than I had ever seen him. He’s
gotten so much bigger than he was last year. He’s 10 now, and it seems like he
sprouted a foot and 30 pounds since I left. Last year, since we spent hours
together every day, his English got really good. He’s forgotten so much of his
English since I left, but even in the few days I was there I could see the
words coming back to him. Saying goodbye to Yassir last year was probably the hardest, partially since we spent so much time together and partially since I
knew he would be so much bigger when I came back. However, I was happy and
unsurprised to see that he’s still the hilarious, gregarious little kid he was
last year. It was lovely to spend time sitting with my host parents talking
with my host dad about his work and learning a few new recipes from my host
mom. Although I speak English with Zineb, Oumaima, and Yassir, I speak only Arabic
with my host parents and when we are all together. At this point, I really feel
like I can have conversations with them, something that definitely was not the
case when I got to their house knowing zero Arabic last year.
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| Hiba and I post-bike ride |
I also was able to catch up with two of my friends in Marrakesh
while I was there, which was lovely. My friend Hiba and I went to a café and
then hung out at her house talking for hours on Friday night, and we woke up
before the heat set in on Sunday to bike around the outskirts of the city. She’s
studying social work in the northern city of Tangier now, so I was lucky that
our times in Marrakesh. She invited me to come to her aunt’s house in Kenitra,
a town near Rabat, a few weekends from now, and I’m excited to see her again. I was also able to visit my old school and teachers.
My time in Marrakesh was a relaxing and wonderful beginning
to my trip. Oumaima and Zineb are two of my best friends, and I had missed them
and their whole family so much. I’m planning on heading back to Marrakesh most
weekends that I’m here to stay with them.
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| My friend Miriam and I on my second night in Rabat |
I got a ride with my friend Miriam from Marrakesh to Rabat that Sunday
and met the Cherkaouis. To welcome me, they took me to eat dinner at a
delicious Syrian food restaurant down the street from their house.
Work started Monday morning, and Chaimae helped me figure
out the Rabat tramway system. The tram here is prompt, clean, and not crowded.
My point of comparison for public transportation is Marrakesh, where there is a
very different situation. The ALSA Bus
11 route that went by my house would get clogged up early in the day, and often
the bus wouldn’t come for an hour. Then, four buses would come one after the
other. There was good chance you’d find yourself sandwiched by people --or
chickens, sometimes --with little breathing room. The 11 bus was cheap, but I
generally just preferred to walk. The Rabat tramway, on the otherhand, runs
every ten minutes and is sleek and modern.
My office is close to the center of the modern district of
the city, Hassan. The district contains Rabat’s most famous monument, a plaza overlooking
the river basin that contains the ornate mausoleum of Hassan II and the
unfinished minaret of a mosque. Morocco World News is located in an
apartment-style complex on one of the narrow streets bordering the tram stop.
My boss Adnane is currently attempting to fix up the space – he’s installing a
TV/Radio studio in the back room, plans to hang paintings, and add an air
conditioning unit. Currently, three rooms of the space are largely unused. The
workroom has a large window overlooking the street. A large table covered in
French and Arabic newspapers, outlets, and paper fills most of the floor space,
and a large flat-screen television is mounted on the wall that plays al-Jazeera
constantly on low volume throughout the day.
Morocco World News has an office in New York and an office
in Rabat, but the majority of their writers do not come into Rabat to work.
They write as correspondents from their home regions to more easily cover
events there. Adnane is constantly on the phone, Facebook messaging, or
emailing his various writers based in the other Moroccan cities. In the
mornings, he brings daily newspapers in French and Arabic for us to read. I
always find an article in Arabic in the print newspaper or one of the multiple
online news outlets in Arabic to report on first. Much of the coverage of
events in Morocco – specific bills being passed, protests, and initiatives –
are only really covered in Arabic (sometimes French, as well), so there are not
many resources for English speakers who want to know certain specific
information. I think it’s valuable to provide an English source, and this approach
has also helped me work on my Arabic a fair bit. Having to read, research, and
dig deeper all in Arabic, while still accurately and thoroughly reporting, has
been one of the biggest and most rewarding challenges of my time here so far.
After I finish this article, I usually write about topics that Adnane assigns me
by sending me links to pre-existing articles, press releases, governmental
documents, and other sources. In addition, I’ve been working on several more
in-depth pieces of my choice about various subjects, including aspects of
Moroccan culture and American politics. My three favorite in-depth pieces that I’ve
written so far have been a recent article about Donald Trump and McCarthyism, a piece about Morocco's push to ban plastic bags, and an article that drew upon research I did about girls’ education ProfessorTaw’s Intro to International Relations class to set context for Michelle Obama’s upcoming visit to Morocco. In addition to these longer pieces, I’ve learned and
written about many topics, including penalties for kissing during Ramadan and Moroccan immigration statistics.
My other and most important job at the office is to edit the
articles that Moroccans write. Although many incredibly intelligent Moroccan
people write for the newspaper, their English skills are often not quite up to
par for a professional newspaper. My job is to go through and edit for
organization, syntax, content, and grammar to ensure that the paper is
producing quality work in English. I usually edit about four articles a day,
and this task has helped me identify mistakes I make in my own writing and
definitely improved my editing skills. Through researching, writing, and
editing at Morocco World News, I’ve already learned so much about topics I
probably never would have explored on my own.
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| Downtown Ifrane in the evening |
Currently, there are two American graduate students, two
American college students, and three Moroccan college students working at the
office. All the college students are incredibly nice and friendly, and we’ve
all gotten pretty close in the last few weeks. The first weekend I was in
Rabat, one of the girls invited all of us to go to her university’s graduation
ceremony with her in the mountain town of Ifrane. The other American college
students and I went with her to the town, explored the campus and the hiking
nearby, and relaxed in the countryside for a weekend.
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| Peaceful place for a break during our hike |
Ifrane is the perfect
destination for a peaceful weekend away from the hustle of Morocco’s cities.
Located just three hours from Rabat and one hour from Meknes, Ifrane’s sloping
alpine roofs are nestled into the rolling hills of the countryside. Ifrane
largely relies on the business of the students and faculty of Al-Akhaween
University, a prestigious four-year college based on the American liberal arts
model. The town is heavily forested, and there are various hiking spots where
visitors and locals alike enjoy the natural beauty of the region.
As an American working in Morocco, I often feel stressed or
limited by the harassment that I experience here. Although the harassment
itself is rarely frightening, it has precluded me from feeling comfortable and
fully enjoying my time in many locations in Rabat and Marrakesh. I am a runner,
and I experience a lot of harassment on my runs down the coastline in Rabat.
Although the path is packed with male runners, few girls come to exercise. I am
constantly bombarded with stares and shouts as I run, and I keep my eyes glued
to the ground or the horizon at all times.
My first morning in Ifrane, I went on a run by myself.
Expecting the usual harassment, I armed myself with a pair of headphones and
blasted music. A few minutes into my run, I realized that no one that that I
passed had even given me a second glance. I took out my headphones and
continued running, enjoying the rustle of the wind in the trees and the
birdsong. I ran through the beautiful campus of Al-Akhaween University, under
the hanging green foliage of the trees in the park, and up through the sunny
central square. Although I was alone in many of these locations, I felt
completely safe. When I ran by groups of boys or taxi drivers sitting on the
curb, they did not acknowledge my presence with anything other than a friendly
nod. That night, I walked around with my friend who attends al-Akhaween. Unlike
in Rabat and Marrakesh, we received no unwanted attention from the other people
in the street. It was incredibly liberating and relaxing to be in a town where
I felt completely comfortable walking around at night and running alone in the
daylight.
After a wonderful weekend of hiking, sleeping, and bonding
in Ifrane, we came back to Rabat. That evening, my host family and I went to
the beach to eat the ftour, the
Ramadan breakfast. Ramadan began the first Tuesday that I was in Rabat, and I’ve
been fasting every day that I am at the Cherkaoui’s house. Ramadan is the
Muslim holy month; it lasts 30 days. From dawn to dusk, Muslims must abstain
from food, drink, smoking, and sex. In Morocco, it is illegal to publicly break
the fast. During the day, restaurants and cafes are closed. Although it is not
mandatory for non-Muslims to fast, I noticed last year that I was the most successful
and happy when doing what my host family did. Furthermore, the Cherkaouis seem
to appreciate my show of solidarity in fasting with them, and it’s really not
that bad once you get used to it. Although I am not fasting on the days when I
travel, I’ve fasted for seven days so far and enjoyed seven wonderful ftours with the Cherkaouis.
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| Full beach of people waiting for the sunset |
We normally eat the ftour in the salon at home, but on
weekend nights the Cherkaouis like to take a picnic to the beach. Many people
in Rabat do so, and there are chairs and tables for rent where you can lay out
your spread. We unpacked our harira (vegetable
soup), dates, Moroccan sweets, paella, milk, water, and mini chawarma sandwiches and waited for the
sun to sink below the horizon over the ocean. The lighthouse down the coast was
silhouetted against the sunset. After the magreb
(sunset) call to prayer rang out over the city, everybody began eating and
socializing. The table next to us had brought instruments, and they sang traditional
folk music. Down the beach, a crowd of young men had brought ghanawa (a type of music from the
Sahara) instruments and were dancing. The atmosphere was jovial and festive. After
we finished eating, we sat and talked and relaxed for about three hours at the
beach. My host parents are far friendlier when they are relaxed and full, so it
was really nice to have the opportunity to get to know them a little bit better
This week passed by quickly as I began to develop my daily
routine here. In the mornings, I take the tram to work. I work from 10:30 to
5:30 (shortened Ramadan hours), but I usually stay until around 6:00. I walk
the mile and a half home after that through the bustling pre-ftour streets filled with people buying their breakfast foods and commuting
home. When I get back to l’Ocean, I quickly change clothes and go for a
20-minute run along the coast before the ftour.
Although it may seem strange to run while fasting, I’ve found that it clears my
head and gives me more energy in the final hour before the breakfast. The path
by the coast at sunset is beautiful and packed with runners. Although I am one
of the only female runners and do get heckled a fair bit, I just focus on the
crashing waves glimmering gold in the last rays of the sunlight, the vibrant
clouds, and the rewarding view I get when I climb the path away from the beach
up towards the old fortified section of Rabat.
From the top of the hill, the
ocean stretches out in front of you. To your right, the walls of the old
fortress slope down to the banks of the Bouragreg River; the channel meets the
jetty that protects the Rabat beach. On the left, a massive ancient graveyard
stretches along the coastline in an eerily beautiful way, meeting the path
where the massive waves crash up against the rugged shoreline and silhouetted fishermen
cast their lines into the choppy sea.
After my run, I eat ftour and sit with the Cherkaouis. I spent time with Chaimae, watch
TV with Latifa and Rihab, and bring my notebook of Arabic vocabulary to the
salon and study, with Chaimae’s help, for about an hour. I write down all the
words that I don’t know at work, and it’s helpful to review them every night,
practice using them in sentences, and ensure that I really own those words. We
eat a small snack at midnight, and then I go to bed. Some nights, the
Cherkaouis wake up to eat the suhuur,
the Ramadan early morning meal, at 3:30. I woke up and ate with them the first
night, but since sleep, for me, is more important than a piece of toast, I
haven’t eaten suhuur with them since.
There are two more weeks of Ramadan left, and after the fasting period is over I'm sure I will readjust my routine. Until then, I'm going to enjoy the ftour meal and try not to complain to my co-workers about being hungry!













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