It's a fairyland...Full of magical sights...If not for food and shopping...Why are we here?
Out for an early dinner, we had a bird's eye view of the Big Square. |
A wide variety of women's clothing is displayed in both the souks and in the Big Square. |
A postcard and newspaper stand in the Big Square. |
These four cats were on a rooftop. Gingerly, they move from rooftop to rooftop. |
The Medina and souks are guarded by local police. Overall, it feels safe in the walled city although one must be careful of pickpockets as one would anywhere in the world. |
Overall, the merchandise is geared toward the tourist anticipating negotiating the bargain of their lives for an excellent price from an owner. Most often, they may pay a similar price at the local mall, a short taxi ride outside the Medina.
Locals commiserating in the Medina. |
Playful interaction by the locals as they await their next "job." |
It could have been a bake sale at a local church bazaar or at a flea market in an effort to sell homemade craft items we somehow believed that people would flock to, and yet they didn't. We've all been there.
It goes against the grain of our humanity to pester potential shoppers to buy something. In a sad way, we equate it to begging. Our nature and desire is to simply display our hard begotten wares and buyers will come. Not the case as any person with a job or a career in sales so well knows. You have to "be in their face" in order to get results.
I commend these hard working people as we wander through the souks; the older generation selling peanuts in the shell, the middle aged well dressed man selling women's modern day dresses, the young man playing a game on his phone, frequently looking up to invite potential customers into his grandfather's pottery store or the butcher behind the bright lights and his hanging slabs of meat, hoping locals and self catering tourists will partake of his fresh meat.
It's no job any of us would choose. And yet, generations of vendors line the souks and the Big Square as tourists from all over the world long to partake of the unique excitement and energy one only finds in far away exotic places. Or, a Tom mentioned one day, "In a lot of ways, it's not unlike the State Fair." So true.
Amid the various satellite dishes, a common sight in the walled city, sits a local enjoying the view from his rooftop as darkness fell. |
Tourists come to Marrakesh to eat and to shop. For us, we must look deep inside the culture to discover the wonders it beholds beyond food and wares. Perhaps, in essence, that is a more interesting perspective for us to pursue as we strive to glean very possible treasure from this magical place for which we don't need a carpet, as opposed to an open mind and heart.