Deep in the Berber
country, the Draa valley is a long succession of palm groves,
along the river, between the last slopes of the Anti-Atlas and
the first stone and sand deserts. From Ouarzazate
to Zagora, the road
goes first through the plateaus of the jebel Tifemine, fast a
desert, the it climbs between steep canyons, to the pass of Tizi
n’Tinififlt, at 1.660m. Then appear splendid landscapes,
with palm trees, fig trees, apricot trees, small cereals fields,
with wheat, henna, mint, all far away, in the irrigated area,
small lots split by little water canals and narrow paths. There,
the space is more than precious, adobe houses are relegated a
little bit higher away, their deep walls protecting from the heat,
their terraces welcoming family and friends at the end of the
day, one even sleep there during the warm summer nights.
From place to place, more important ksours, fortified common
lofts, some watchtowers remind that the place rebelled for very
long time against the central power, remained agitated and restless,
with never-ending tribal wars, and was finally pacified only in
the 30ies. One still remembers from these times the heroic battle
of Bougafer, the last and desperate fight of the Aït Atta
fighting the French, a battle where the women fought with the
men, and won the right to wear a tattooed beard as a witness of
their courage. One must visits the wonderful Tamnougalt Ksour,
among the slopes of the jebel
Sahro.
|
|
Skoura, Agdz, N’Kob,
Tazzarine, Zagora,
for each name a palm grove, a small city battered by a burning
sun, where one appreciates highly a hot tea sipped in the shadows
of the arcades. Men pass by, trotting on the back of a heavily
loaded donkey and women, wearing bounty dresses, carry water or
fodder. Oleanders and acacias multiply, their fragrances mixing
in the evening.
|
After a first proto-historic
population who left rock paintings and engravings, notably in
Tazzarine, Tinzouline
and Foum Chena, the first identified inhabitants are the Berbers,
and later on, in the VI° century, some Jews, around Tidri,
and an African tribe coming out of Ethiopia, the Koushites. Arabs
arrive in the VIII° century and convert the populations to
Islam. The deep South will be the starting point of several Moroccan
dynasties, Almohads, Merinids, Saadians and last but not least,
Alawites. |