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FOM Newsletter September 2001

 Calendar information about cultural and community events in Morocco.   Events in Rabat, Casablanca, Fez, Tangier and throughout Morocco of possible interest to readers are included.  Updated weekly each Thursday.  Compiled as a community service by Carol McCreary.  Contact Carol to be included on the mailing list.

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    09/29 Week in Review:  News clips from Morocco
    09/22 Week in Review:  News clips from Morocco
    09/15 Week in Review:  News clips from Morocco
    09/08 Week in Review:  News clips from Morocco
    09/01 Week in Review:  News clips from Morocco
    08/25 Week in Review:  News clips from Morocco

Compiled weekly by Mhamed El Kadi in Morocco and posted each Saturday on this site

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  INTERVIEW-Moroccan Islamists say attacks hurt their cause

By Gilles Trequesser

RABAT, Sept 28 (Reuters) - Morocco's main Islamist group says the suicide hijacking attacks on the United States cost it 20 years of grassroots work to spread Islam's spiritual values. "Now we have to start all over again, if it's really bin Laden he played a nasty trick on us," Nadia Yassine, a leading figure of the al-Adl Wal Ihsane (Justice and Charity) Muslim fundamentalist organization, said in an interview.

  REAL-LIFE HORROR STORY OF A PRINCESS' COMPANION.

Brief reviews of new audio books.

Published Sunday, September 16, 2001

STOLEN LIVES: Twenty Years in a Desert Jail. Malika Oufkir and Michele Fitoussi. Read by Edita Brychta. Hyperion. Six hours. Abridged.

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  Little Maids of Morocco: They're Cheap, Obedient and Available on the Streets. An Ambitious Young King Wants to Stop Their Exploitation--But Poverty May Prove Too Powerful a Foe.

By ELISABETTA ANNA COLETTI, Los Angels Times.

September 16, 2001

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  Tangierino brings Moroccan magic to Boston.

Dining/by Mat Schaffer

Friday, September 21, 2001

Tangierino. 262 Main St., Charlestown; (617) 242-6009.

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  Moroccan Muslims, Jews, Christians pray for U.S.
 
RABAT, Sept 16 (Reuters) - Leaders of Muslim, Jewish and Christian communities in Morocco held joint prayers on Sunday in the first memorial service of its kind in an Islamic state for the victims of the terror attacks in New York and Washington.  The ceremony in the Great Cathedral of Rabat was attended by Socialist Prime Minister Abderrahmane El Youssoufi, advisers of King Mohammed, top army officers, government officials, leaders of political parties, and U.S. and Arab diplomats accredited to Morocco.  "We express our sympathy to President George W. Bush and the American people for the dead and missing in the aggression against the United States," Abbas al-Jirari, a top palace adviser, said.  Al-Jirari, reading a message from King Mohammed VI, said Morocco vigorously denounced the terror attacks against innocent people in the United states on Tuesday.  Islam warns against extremism and insists on peace and peaceful behaviour...It condemns the violence," the king said.  Morocco is a staunch ally of Washington and took part in U.S.-led coalition against Iraq during the 1991 Gulf war.

17:25 09-16-01
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Morocco airline to resume flights to New York

RABAT, Sept 16 (Reuters) - Morocco's state-run Royal Air Maroc will resume flights to New York on Monday after getting the green light from the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration.  The official MAP news agency said on Sunday the first flight to New York had been scheduled to leave at 1600 GMT on Monday.   Royal Air Maroc said in a statement later that its flights to Montreal in Canada would resume on Wednesday.  The airline's four flights a week to New York and Montreal were suspended after Tuesday's suicide-hijack attacks which killed up to 5,000 people in the United States.

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   Journey to limbo, by way of hell

Sandro Contenta

MIDDLE EAST BUREAU. CEUTA, Spain

Sep. 9, 02:10 EDT

THE SEA WAS a calm black sheet that summer night when Ghali Hacen and his two comrades stood on a Moroccan beach, stripped down to their underwear and began a three-hour swim toward their dream.

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   Banging on Europe's door.

Sandro Contenta, Middle East Bureau

Sep. 9, 03:40 EDT

Deadly Journeys: One in a continuing series. Illegal migrants risk death to cross from Africa to Europe. Hidden under trucks and aboard ferries, clinging to rickety boats or detouring through a former penal colony in North Africa, thousands of border-crashers set off from Morocco in search of better lives in Spain and beyond.

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   The Greening of Marrakes: .Mohammed El Faiz Campaigns To Restore City's Classic Gardens.

Marlise Simons New York Times Service

Saturday, September 8, 2001

MARRAKESH Beneath the minarets and reddish ramparts of this city lies the medina, a warren of alleyways, market stalls, bread ovens, bathhouses and tightly packed dwellings. Tourists flock here to see the ancient mosques and palaces, and to wander among the high mud walls, many dating from the Middle Ages.

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   Morroco find 39 immigrants on boat.

September 9, 2001

RABAT, Morroco (Reuters) -- The bodies of 13 would-be illegal immigrants trying to reach Spain were found washed ashore on a Moroccan beach, the official MAP news agency said on Sunday.

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   9 illegal migrants feared drowned off Spain.

Giles Tremlett in Madrid, The Guardian

Monday September 10, 2001

The bodies of 13 illegal immigrants who drowned while attempting a clandestine trip across the Straits of Gibraltar to Spain were washed up on a Moroccan beach yesterday, as the search began for 46 others believedto have died after their boat overturned.

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   Henna Tattoos May Leave More Than a Mark

By JANE E. ALLEN, September 3, 2001 Los Angels Times

You were proud of that cool-looking henna tattoo you picked up during a visit to Venice Beach, the one that was supposed to fade away with time. But then your skin started to itch. It turned red and swollen--and looked nasty.

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   In search of... hip Marrakesh

The rich came in the Thirties. The hippies in the Sixties. Even today, style gurus flock to this city for inspiration. Bridget Stott explains why.

02 September 2001, The Independent

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   Morocco's king hits back at Spain.

By the BBC's David Bamford in Rabat. Tuesday, 4 September, 2001,

The king of Morocco, Mohammed VI, has responded vigorously to criticism by Spain that his country is not doing enough to control the hundreds of migrants entering Europe illegally from Morocco.

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   The Ode to Morocco: A Globe-Trotting Couple's Color-Drenched Apartment Inspired by Exotic Locales.

By Annie Groer, Washington Post Staff Writer. Thursday, September 6, 2001; Page H01

They wanted color. They wanted drama. And they wanted their Dupont Circle co-op to evoke Casablanca. So it was that after a dozen years spent overseas in the exotic precincts of Tehran, Istanbul, Cairo and Moscow, foreign correspondents Geneive Abdo, 41, and Jonathan Lyons, 43, came to Washington and went wild with paint.

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   VENICE 2001: "Loin" Away, So Close; Techine's Trip to Morocco.

By Patrick Z. McGavinike

Like "Wild Reeds, " the essential story is a triangle, though the sexual and personal dynamics have been altered. Serge (Stephane Rideau) is a truck driver who imports cloth to Morocco and delivers high priced, stylish luxury clothes to France. The movie opens with his return to Tangiers, where he succumbs to the seductive criminal subculture, dangerously agreeing to smuggle hashish out of the port city.

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   Radish toast, a Fajita Feast, Moroccan sausages.

What restaurant critics are saying about dining in their regions:

Alexandria, Va. Page 7D

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   Slight progress in Western Sahara talks in Wyoming

By Evelyn Leopold

UNITED NATIONS, Aug 30 (Reuters) - A Western Sahara independence movement on Thursday apparently agreed to study U.N. proposals for autonomy within Morocco after insisting it would settle for nothing less than an independence referendum, the United Nations reported.

Three days of sensitive talks, conducted by James Baker, the former U.S. secretary of state, at his Pinedale, Wyoming, ranch ended with vague commitments to consider new approaches to settling decades of conflict between the indigenous people of the Western Sahara and Morocco, which has annexed the territory.  More

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   Alone? You'll never be in Morocco.

By Stan Sinberg Special to the Tribune Published August 26, 2001, The Chicago Tribune.

There are times in Morocco that you swear that you have never seen so many people in your life, and then you turn the corner, and there are more people than that.

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   The Arab Intelligentsia and Berber Revolution.

More than ten years ago I wrote an article supporting demands by Morocco's Tamazight population who were at that time pressing for their language to be recognized by the state-run media.

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   Kenyan reign, record taken by Moroccan.

By Len Johnson

For the first time in almost a quarter of a century, someone other than a Kenyan runner holds the world record for the 3,000m steeplechase.

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   Malika Oufkir: the American Making of a Moroccan Star.

By Mokhtar Ghambou

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   In Marrakesh, a Campaign to Restore the Classic Arab Garden.

AUG 30, 2001

By MARLISE SIMONS, The New York Times.

BENEATH the minarets and reddish ramparts of this city lies the medina, the inner city, a vast warren of alleyways, market stalls, bread ovens, bathhouses and tightly packed dwellings. Tourists flock here to see the ancient mosques and palaces, and to wander among the high mud walls, many dating to the Middle Ages.

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   Casbah cooking.

By JULIA WATSON

Wednesday, 29 August 2001

Anyone doubtful of the impact of its colonies upon a nation's eating habits should look at the ethnic restaurants of those countries which went empire-building or dabbled in geo-politics. Lose a nation, gain a restaurant," as they murmur along the corridors of the CIA.

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   Local man to race across the Sahara: Runner trains in city's late-summer heat.

By Stephanie L. Jordan. Published by the Corpus Christi Caller-Times.

Monday, August 20, 2001

With the sun high over his head, Edward Dramberger is in training for a marathon unlike any other he's raced in before. This time, his object isn't to win. "It's to finish the race," the 37-year-old said. "I live for goals." With temperatures in the high 90s, Corpus Christi is the perfect place to get ready for a150-mile race across the Sahara Desert. Race organizers say runners may experience 110 to 125 degree temperatures.

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   Morocco launches 'war on slums'

by David Bamford in Rabat Tuesday, 21 August, 2001,

Morocco's King Mohammed VI has ordered his government to tackle worsening poverty in an attempt to curb the growing shanty towns around the country's main cities.

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   Rhythm & Belief: African America calls across the water.

by Greg Burk, August 24 - 30, 2001

What everybody's doing here revolves around the throb and rattle of Gnaoua music. Gnaoua is an old sound, with a history that parallels that of Western Hemisphere blues, jazz and reggae, so the idea of reuniting the continents isn't that artificial. The ancestors of the modern Gnaoua brotherhood came to North Africa as sub-Saharan slaves in the 1500s, around the same time that African tribespeople were first kidnapped and shipped to NewWorld auction blocks.

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   Among the Golems.

By Brendan Bernhard.

Published March 27 - April 2, 1998 . Los Angels Weekly

Fez is the most daunting city in Morocco, its French-induced schizophrenia marked to an extreme degree. The old and new cities are two separate and contradictory worlds, each a riposte to the other. The new, French-built town is notable for its enormous tree-lined avenues, grand colonial statements that could only have been built with parades in mind. As an individual, you feel inadequate; you'd have to be part of an army to really feel at ease there.

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   Up Above the World: Remembering Paul Bowles.

An interview with Paul Bowles

by Phillip Ramey. Published May 15 - 21, 1998

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    Health experts warn of craze for henna tattoos.

By Elaine Cole, 17 August 2001

Henna tattoos can cause months of pain and discomfort and may lead to a lifelong allergy, a skin expert has warned. Bjorn Hausen of the Dermatological Centre in Buxtehude, Germany, says the temporary "tattoos" can cause contact dermatitis in some people, making the skin swollen, red and itchy.

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    When a passing fad leaves a lasting scar: Madonna made them desirable. But, henna tattoos can be with you for longer than you planned.

Lena Corner, 17 August 2001.

When Madonna was launching the single "Frozen" from her album Ray of Light in 1998, she scanned around, as she always does, for a completely new look. It was an important release for her, the first in a few years out of the public eye.  She turned to the East for inspiration, and the accompanying video featured a windswept Madonna, clad all in black, flapping around in the Mojave desert. The emphasis wasn't on her cleavage or her pout, as has so often been the case. This time it was her hands - each one painted with an intricate henna tattoo spiraling up her arm.

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    Henna tattoo allergy link.

Wednesday, 15 August, 2001,

Some henna tattoos could cause a lifelong allergy to a common chemical found in dyes, warn scientists.

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   Charmed by Morocco in a Wink.

AUG 19, 2001

By JERELLE ROBIN KRAUS

TIDY Europe, 1998, had left me restless. So I fled south to Morocco, land of voluptuous anarchy.  Emerging from the Agdal Hotel onto a wide Marrakesh thoroughfare, I melt into a thick throng. Mustachioed men, enigmas in their dark, hooded djellabas, wield barrows swollen with writhing turtles, honey-sweet dates and jangling copper kettles.

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   Morocco's Berbers want official recognition granted.

Aug 06 200, Business Day 1st Edition

Once they were called Barbarians by invading Romans. "We are not Arabs; bring out the real history," hundreds of Moroccan Berbers chanted during Labour Day marches this year. In the capital, Rabat, passers-by showed mixed reactions to the unusual sight of Berbers shouting slogans in their Tamazight language and carrying banners written in Tifinagh, the Berber script.

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   A taste of Morocco, by way of Marylou.

Saratoga Springs -- Priscilla, a cantankerous camel, steals the show at the Whitney Ball

By DENNIS YUSKO, Staff writer. Times Union

First published: Saturday, August 4, 2001

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   Police looking for motive in fatal shooting of Moroccan immigrant.

Abdelmajid Elchraa was doing what many immigrants to central Ohio do.  He was working hard at his job, learning English and endeavoring to learn how to drive in America.

Saturday, August 4, 2001

Dean Narciso, Dispatch Police Reporter. dnarciso@dispatch.com

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   Moroccan Berbers reject Arab identity.

By Souhail Karam

RABAT, Aug 5 (Reuters) - "We're not Arabs, bring out the real history," chanted hundreds of Moroccan Berbers during Labour Day marches this year. In the capital Rabat, passers-by showed mixed reactions to the unusual sight of Berbers shouting slogans in their Tamazight language and carrying banners written in Tifinagh, the Berber script. Some expressed sympathy while others wondered why the Berbers were denying what has been their country's official identity for more than 14 centuries. "Why did police allow them to march? And here in Rabat?", one asked.

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   Moroccan migrants kill each other in sea ordeal.

By Stephen Burgen. The Times. FRIDAY AUGUST 10 2001

A WEEK after setting sail for a better life in Spain, 19 of the 30 Moroccans who had embarked on the journey drifted ashore, almost at the point where they had started. The question police are asking is what happened to the other 11.

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   Good fun, good food at Moroccan Nights: An experience beyond a meal.

BY KENDALL HAMERSLY

Published Friday, August 10, 2001

The concept of greater Miami as melting pot and city of the future has been discussed at such great length that it risks boring even the most avid of boosters. Yet it really does hit home when you're discussing restaurants -- particularly in the tiny but densely populated hamlets of Surfside and North Beach.

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   Moroccan king´s rule seen as fragile.

By Andrew Borowiec THE WASHINGTON TIMES

August 10, 2001

GENEVA -- Warning signals about the fragility of the reign of Morocco's King Mohammed VI are increasingly reported byWestern diplomats. The continuing economic and political stalemate could eventually threaten the king, who recently celebrated two years on the throne as "descendant of the prophet and commander of the faithful," diplomats say.

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   Vanishing Tribe: Despite centuries of harmony, Morocco's Jewish communities are an endangered species.

By Scott MacLeod/ Casablanca. (May 28, 2001; Vol. 157, #21)

Saturday, August 4, 2001 / Time Europe.

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   The Road Less Traveled: An eccentric Brit traces medieval wanderer Ibn Battutah's route from Tangier to Constantinople

BY ROBIN KNIGHT . Time Europe July 16, 2001 Vol. 158 No. 3

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   Peace Corps facing new perils.

August 3, 2001

David Williams and Robert Charles from Washington Times

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   Berbers: The Proud Raiders.

They call themselves Amazigh, the proud raiders. But most people know them as Berbers.  For millennia, the Berbers of North Africa fought against Roman, Arab and French invaders. And, despite a history of colonisation, they have managed to preserve their language and culture, and have defended their land.

Monday 23 April, 2001, on the BBC

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   Morocco considers Berber rights.

King Mohammed VI of Morocco has promised to set up a body to preserve the language and culture of the country's Berbers, who make up a majority of the population.

Tuesday, 31 July, 2001, on the BBC.

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   King launches charm offensive: Desire for change could turn into overt political opposition.

King Mohammed VI of Morocco has launched an apparent charm offensive to win over critics to mark the second anniversary this month of his accession to the throne.

By David Bamford in Rabat  Wednesday, 25 July, 2001 on the BBC

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   In Morocco, getting great pictures can be a real snap.

Morocco -- Known to Arabs as the ``farthest land of the setting sun,'' Morocco has long been a source of inspiration to artists from distant countries. In the 18th Century, it was the ``hot spot'' for European writers. In the 19th Century, French painters flocked to Moroccan cities to create works of art that later graced Parisian galleries.

By Rick Sammon.  Published Sunday, July 29, 2001.The Miami Herald. Associated Press

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   Moroccan visitor learns about volunteerism in Grand Island.

Mohamed Azzaoui wants to get more citizens involved in Morocco. The founder of a non-governmental organization that supports local development efforts in Morocco came to the heartland on Thursday to see how volunteers and the government work in harmony.

Published Friday, August 3, 2001 By Mike Bockoven. mbockoven@theindependent.com

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   Morocco's Future:  Arab, African, or European?

By Bradford Dillman in Foreign Policy Magazine

Commenting on the late King Hassan II's determination to bring Morocco into a free-trade zone with the European Union (EU), a Moroccan newspaper editor asked, "Where else can we look? To the south there is famine. To the east there is slaughter. To the west is the ocean. The north is our only horizon." As Morocco redefines its place in the world in the new millennium, will it lean more toward Europe, weakening its roots in the Arab world and disassociating itself from the troubles of sub-Saharan Africa? Globalization will pull the country toward its liberal, industrialized neighbors across the Strait of Gibraltar. Nevertheless, this kingdom at the crossroads of many civilizations will continue to orient itself in many directions at the same time. Its future identity will depend on how politicians and citizens respond to global pressures for democratization, economic reform, and human resource development. By balancing and absorbing the cultural, political, and economic influences from surrounding regions, Morocco may remain one of the most peaceful, stable, and pluralistic countries in the Arab and African world.  MORE

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   Morocco and the CIA

Tuesday, July 24, 2001. International Herald Tribune.

The coming to the throne of King Mohammed VI in July 1999 allowed Moroccans to discover gruesome details about the magnitude of disappearances and deaths under torture during the reign of his father, Hassan II.

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   Memories of Morocco.

22.07.2001

The New Zealand Herald/ Wednesday July 25, 2001

On the taxi ride from Marrakesh airport to La Palmeraie, Morocco is as I remembered it. Drunk with fatigue, prickling uncomfortably in the humid night air, we drift through an eerie, biblical landscape that reeks of rotting garbage, bonfires and abject poverty.

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   TITOUAN, Morocco, 24 July -- King Muhammad VI of Morocco has said that there are no political prisoners in his country. "Now there is not a single political prisoner in Morocco," he told Asharq Al-Awsat, a sister publication of Arab News.

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   Moroccan woods hide Africa's lost souls.

July 28, 2000. Agence France-Presse

Claude Juvenal

BEN YOUNECH, Morocco, July 28 (AFP) - Within the green woods that lie inland from Morocco's northern coast, there are signs of life barely visible from the surrounding hills. They are all that can be seen of the illegal immigrants who, in the course of their journey to Europe's promised land, have lost their way in the scrubland.


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