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News from the Desert

by Sahara Dreams 15 Oct, 2022
Every year in Autumn, late October early November, the desert town of M’hamid El Ghizlaine in Morocco, known locally as M’Hamid, becomes a flurry of activity, enthusiasm and excitement as the annual “Festival Taragalte” hits town. The Festival is the brain child of Halim and Ibrahim Sbai, two brothers local to M’Hamid who conceived the festival back in 2009. Created as a celebration of desert life and nomadic traditions, the Festival quickly gained renown for attracting high-level of artists and musicians. International artists, including the Touraeg blues band Tinarawen, have graced the Festival, and several local talented artists including the leading Moroccan band Generation Taragalte, young local musicians Les Jeunes Nomades and Daraa Tribes bringing their own rendition of the mesmerizing desert blues. The Festival takes place over several sites across M’Hamid. Artisanal demonstrations take place in the center of the village, with the lively and animated camel races held in the expansive riverbanks of the town. The main Festival stage and the bulk of the action are on the outskirts where M’Hamid’s palm trees slowly merge into the golden sands of the Sahara. There are plenty of lively workshops where you can learn about desert life and the traditions that are as alive now as in times gone by. Watch local women thread tents from camel hair, and hand make carpets with deft and precision, weaving traditional symbols into vibrant pieces of art. Basketry is also popular, with shoes, decorative items and floor coverings woven from local palm tree leaves. Date palm trees are big in M’Hamid, there are lots of them. In fact, the date palm grove of the South of Morocco is the largest in the world. Planning the Festival for autumn is a masterstroke, as the dates turn crimson, ready to harvest; set against the ancient Kasbahs, it’s a wondrous sight to see. The Festival’s lively programme changes daily. There are plenty of food stalls where locals sell the delicacies they’ve made. Hearty, tasty soups and fresh tagines. Bread made in the sand, yes the sand, it’s a local tradition and tastes delicious hot. All the food in M’Hamid is bio, the meat, the diary, the vegetables, with all the space of the Sahara it makes sense, and you really can taste the difference. Night-time is when the stars come out, literally. M’Hamid’s skies are a site to behold. Travelers visiting the Sahara for the first time are astounded by the night sky, clear, bright and over-filled with stars, the perfect backdrop to the evocative desert music playing on stage till the early hours of the morning, perfect for an evening relaxing in the dunes and dancing under the moon. The Festival also addresses the more serious issues faced by nomads and the local people of M’Hamid, with experts and speakers discussing, amongst other topics. the very real problems of desertification and droughts, and the impact this has on agriculture and life in the region. M’Hamid and the Sahara are a world away from the life most of us know. The Festival Taragalte is a celebration of this life and people of the Sahara. Be part of it and experience 3 days that could be life-changing or at the very least great fun. The 11th Edition of the Festival Taragalte runs across October 28th, 29th and 30th, 2022.
by Stephanie Ackland 11 Mar, 2019
On a recent trek in the Sahara, our guide Mustapha discovered ancient pottery on the old caravan route to Timbuktu. This is a brief history of the caravan route in Zagora and why M'Hamid was such an important town in history,
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