Marrakech: The Magic And The Madness

Marrakech Lifestyle Magazine:MRRKCH

Marrkech City Guide

Friday, September 30, 2011

In the calendar of its temporary exhibitions, the Museum of Art de Vivre in Marrakech opens its new cultural season with an exhibition devoted to the art of the garden in Morocco. Being a great lover of gardens, cacti in the first place, with great pleasure I write on this topic, more and more present in Morocco. The man, from his sedentary worked and modified landscapes. And it has created others. On the thread of time, farming techniques and diversification of cultures and the creation of new plant varieties with biotechnology and breeding techniques have changed and enriched prondamente flora around the world.
The Gardens
If the creation of a garden depends on the sun and weather, owes much to the cultural terrain on which it develops and historical era to which they belong. It can be said that a garden is a synthesis of physicality, of natural pictures, geography, history and culture. The gardens are a reflection of the civilization that saw them born, is not important in this example the names of territories and cultures that created them: Islamic gardens, Andalusian, Japanese, English, French, Italian. So fragile, the gardens have already known by ancient civilizations in different times, are sometimes able to cross time and witness the genes that have created these masterpieces. Dell'Agdal Gardens, Majorelle, Versailles, Doctors, and many others are excellent illustrations the size of their creators. Morocco, the crossroads between the Mediterranean and the Atlantic, is characterized by diversity dali landscape and its different climates.

The Sahara

Ref in dense forests, dunes in the Sahara, the Middle Atlas cedraie, visitors discover the Moroccan different situations, both natural and cultivated by man. Due to these differences, primarily the climate, the gardener is always plenty of opportunity to give free rein to his imagination by creating gardens to dream, to relate and love. It reaches the point of view two types of gardens coexist mixandosi in a unique fusion, creating a new form of movement. The photographers participating in the exhibition, Nourddine Tilsaghani Hassan Nadim, Abdellah Mahmoud and Abderrazzak Benchaâmane, have traveled all over the realm Moroccan photographing both the public and private gardens. Their goal is to claim the garden as an ecological and natural heritage, enhancing an art of living in harmony with the nature of Morocco. The exhibition will be visible until 30 November 2011.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

"Every winter I make this trip to Marrakech to escape the bitter cold of the mountains, desert or the sea, but also because I feel the need to come to terms with what happened that night here in Jemaa, on which hung the feeling of something wrong, even when the two strangers had made ​​their first appearance, which would prove to be the last. In fact, they are my torment. " 
In the famous Jemaa el Fna, the main square overlooking the medina of Marrakech, attentive listeners and passers-by gather around for years to Hassan, a storyteller who loves to recall the story of a couple of foreigners, gone one night a few years earlier . Everyone in the Jemaa el Fna had noticed the young American, bright and beautiful, accompanied by that Indian enigmatic, everyone had been hypnotized, and now seem to see them again appear and disappear in the alleys of the medina, in flashes of images evoked and memories.
Guilty Of Murder

Because everyone has a piece to add to the story that Hassan is trying to rebuild in an attempt to unravel the mystery of quell'inspiegabile disappeared. This' that presses to exonerate his brother Mustafa Hassan, who against all logic has been found guilty of the murder of two young men. Hassan is convinced of his innocence and stubbornly tries thread: why stirs memories and eyewitness accounts of that night. But more evidence gathers, the more the reality seems to be fading, because none of the pieces match with the other, indeed, to every detail that adds further blurs the truth, the facts become more elusive. And those two strangers assume an aura fabulous and enigmatic as their fate, while the reader is led to wonder if Hassan will ever succeed in his intent or whether, with increasing anxiety, he is not part of the mystery that haunts him. 

Desert Of Love

The book carries Joydeep Roy-Bhattacharya gracefully from the labyrinth of the medina of Marrakech to the stretches of "desert of love", where the wind and the sand seem to swallow anything in foreign wanderers and vagabonds. "The story-tellers of Marrakesh" overturns the rules of mystery to offer a mosaic of fragments of love that defies anyone to reflect on the nature of imagination and memory, and the links with the truth and beauty. Without intellectualism, with the passage of the grand narrative and a persuasive tone of emotion, in a story that demands to be read with growing urgency to each page. The writer was born in Jamshedpur, India, and lives near New York. Of the first novel was "The Club Gabriel." With "The storyteller of Marrakech" from the beginning of a trilogy set in the Islamic world .
"The story-tellers of Marrakesh" - Joydeep Roy-Bhattacharya - Mondadori - 19.50 Euro

Monday, September 26, 2011

Marrakech Art Fair 2011 The second edition of International Exhibition of Modern and Contemporary Art Fair Marrakech will be held from September 30 to October 3, 2011 at the Palace Es Saadi, with the participation of 45 international galleries to exhibit their most important artists. A dozen new entries since the first edition, proof that this show is reaching an important and recognized quality. In addition to representation, very important, the contemporary scene in Turkey, with six galleries (CDA Projects, IP Artworks, Empire Project, CAM Gallery, Art Gallery and Merkur PG), the halls of the fair will host two of the main actors of the New York scene: Metro Pictures and Edwynn Houk Gallery.
Another important gallery has confirmed its participation in Marrakech Art Fair: This is the Galleria Continua, based in St. Gimignano, Beijing (China) and Le Moulin (France). The scene of North Africa (Morocco and Tunisia) and the MO of the thirteen galleries are represented, including nine Moroccan. The gallery FJ, The Artothèque and Sous Sol Art Gallery have reached the galleries Moroccan Galerie d'art L'Atelier 21, David Bloch gallery, Loft Art Gallery, Matisse Art Gallery, and Galerie Venise Cadre shart-GVCC addition to the two galleries Tunisian Galerie Le Violon Bleu and El Marsa. At their side a gallery in Dubai, Art and Space 'Gallery Arhr of' Saudi Arabia. Among the French galleries mention the arrival of Albert Benamou, Aline Vidal, Daniel Da Prado Gallery, Dix9 Galerie, Galerie Jean Fournier and Besseiche Lartigue, all new entries of this second edition with the Aidan Gallery Russian Gallery and the Gallery Italian Voice. It is joined to the galleries last year: JGM. Magnin A-Galerie Jean Brolly, Galerie Di Meo, Galerie Dominique Fiat Galerie Rive Gauche Marcel Strouk, Galerie Marie Vintoux, Piramidon, and Centre d'Art Contemporani in Spain. The cultural journey of this year testifies to the same extent the ambition of this exhibition combining the best video artists in various projects within the town red. The Colisee, the legendary film in Marrakech, the ESAV (School of Visual Arts) and other venues will host a program desired by the National Center of Plastic Arts with video artists assembled by two sets of collectors: Jean-Michel Attal and Charlotte Jean Conrad and Isabelle Lemaître.

Marrakech Moroccan director Nabil will pay tribute to Ayouch (Oscar nominee) and will present two of his films, as well as a number of young Moroccan artists as Whid and Hicham El Moutanna Jebbari. At the Sofitel will feature the photographic exhibition "Fashion stills, the mode is m'était county," presented by the Polka gallery (Paris). I remind you also that in the former headquarters of the Bank of Morocco, on the Place Jemaa el Fna, there will be an exhibition of photographs and videos by contemporary artists of the Arab world, titled "Images affranchies". I will stop here giving you an appointment at this prestigious fair that Marrakech is proud to host, a major cultural event which brings together art experts, the personality of the Arab world and many fans who find themselves in the splendid Palace Es Saadi, which already applies only the visit. Organization: Art Holding Morocco Expo: Es Saadi Palace & Garden Resort - Rue Brahim El Mazin, Hivernage - Marrakech

Friday, September 23, 2011

The Marrakech hammam ritual: pure moments of pleasure. Hammam treatments, which have been used for centuries, are an opportunity for a delightful moment of peace and calm to awaken your senses. Did you know that one hammam session lasts at least two hours? To start with, you move through a series of increasingly hotter rooms, perfumed with Eucalyptus oil. Then, a hammam specialist
washes you with black soap, scrubs your body with a massage glove to get rid of dead skin cells and (for women) removes unwanted hair with sugar and honey. Lastly comes the deep massage, often with the precious argan oil. Extracted by hand, Morocco's green gold restores the hydrolipidic film, provides increased nutrients and stimulates cellular renewal and oxygenation. It's also an excellent anti-wrinkle treatment. A bath with rose petals or stone treatment complete the experience. Some hammams in the city also offer increasingly luxurious spa treatments.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

The Beldi Country Club is a green haven of relaxation 10 minutes away from the city.

"This peaceful garden is the ideal place for those who love plant life, like me. Just imagine fields filled with roses and hundred-year-old olive trees under the benevolent gaze of the Atlas mountains. VEHBQBF2QDS5
I was immediately taken in by the species of cactus including agave and aloe vera, the sap from which is great for healing sunburn, for example. Few people are familiar with all the good properties of aloe. The air is perfumed with aromatic herbs like lemon mint and basil, which you find in the hand-made preparations used in the Beldi's hammam and spa treatments. You can leave it all behind with a stroll amongst the groves or along palm-tree-lined paths, following a few tranquil lengths in the club's elegant pools or a simple but tasty meal made with home-grown produce."
Jane, 36, guest-house owner, Belgium

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Brought back to life by top craftsmen, the oldest house in the Medina has become a unique type of cultural centre.

"This is a beautiful, welcoming house, a wonderful place that breathes culture. Thanks to its considerate hosts, the original concept of literary café means that you can experience art in its true form. Painting exhibitions, sculptures and evening concerts: I was able to cross paths with poets, calligraphers, potters and even colourists eager to share their art, usually around a glass of mint tea or a tasty meal.
The association for the protection of Jemaa El Fna, of which the Spanish writer Juan Goytisolo is a member, chose this as the venue for their conference in support of the legendary square being recognised as part of the oral heritage of humanity. And, in 2001, UNESCO's decision to designate it as such was celebrated here. It is highly symbolic."
Antonia, 31, Spanish director.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Immerse yourself in the city of expansion. Try out new experiences from the range of possibilities on offer to visitors in Marrakech. Be at one with the rhythm of this legendary city, which gave its name to Morocco. Cosmopolitan, international Marrakech, like its archetypal counterparts of Madrid, Paris, Barcelona and London, surprises by its creative energy. The ramparts, gardens and fine palaces of the imperial city's golden age are now the backdrop for cultural, sporting, artistic and economic fervour.  

 1000 Activities In  Marrakech  
 
Marrakech means a change of scenery in the space of short hop with a predictably pleasant climate; it means suffering the agony of having to choose between the 1,000 activities on offer in the city. Will you engage in a feverish spot of shopping or relax with a well-being ritual in one of the city's many spas? Would you prefer to sample a traditional tagine or try out Marrakech-style tapas in the latest stylish lounge bar? You have a choice between blending into the lively crowd in Jemaa el Fna and finishing the evening in a fashionable night club listening to the greatest DJs. Will you go skiing in the High Atlas or be at one with nature in the foothills of the snow-capped Atlas mountains? What is more, these are all reasons why, as soon as you have returned from Marrakech, you'll quickly find another reason to go back there. This way please!

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Once a blight on Morocco’s Atlantic coast, Asilah has blossomed into something beautiful thanks to the ideas of two friends and the commitment of an entire community. Sarah Gilbert tells us its story. The man lifted the pointed hood of his djellabah against the breeze, reached for his brush and began to paint a dramatic swirl of colour onto the whitewashed medina wall. People stopped to watch him work, even offering to hold his ladder. Far from a Moroccan Banksy, he was just one of the many artists that flock to the white-cubed town of Asilah for its annual festival, the International Cultural Moussem.
With a history dating back over 3600 years, Asilah straddles the cliffs of Morocco’s north Atlantic coast, sitting at the crossroads of Europe and Africa. Blessed with a natural harbour, it became a prosperous trading town and was invaded by the Phoenicians, Byzantines, Romans, Arabs and Normans, among others. The Portuguese arrived in 1471 and built the town’s impressive ramparts. It was then under Spanish rule before finally being returned to Morocco in 1956.


Today, the fortified town is invaded every August by an equally diverse crowd, among them Japanese artists, Sufi chanters and Mexican dancers, along with thousands of spectators, for over a month of public art demonstrations, exhibitions and concerts, at one of North Africa’s largest cultural festivals.

Asilah’s medina is petite and impossibly picturesque. Oud players strummed in the square, and women offered to paint henna curlicues along my hands and feet. I strolled along the spotlessly clean warren of alleyways, where the brilliant-white buildings are punctuated with cerulean-blue paintwork that matched the vibrancy of the sky, past heavy wooden doors that led into shaded courtyards. After sunset, the winding streets and al fresco cafés teemed with families, while huddles of teenagers perched in the gaps in the ramparts. It was almost impossible to believe that, like neighbouring Tangier, Asilah had spent decades in a seemingly inexorable decline.

Its renaissance began in 1978, when two local friends, Mohammed Benaïssa and Mohammed Melehi, planned the first moussem (an Arabic derivation meaning season) under the banner ‘Culture and Art for Development’, inviting eleven artists from around the world to, quite literally, paint the town. Local residents pitched in to scrub and whitewash the whole place in preparation. Morocco’s Ministry of Culture restored a section of the crumbling ramparts. The Raissouni Palace, a former pirate’s home, was transformed into an opulent palace of culture replete with zelij (traditional ceramic tiles), crystal chandeliers and fragrant, intricately carved cedar woodwork. The Al-Mouhit Association was founded to organise events around the festival, and every year more and more artists came, leaving behind brightly coloured murals on the whitewashed walls.

When I met Benaïssa, former Minister of Foreign Affairs and Asilah’s mayor since 1983, he described the town in the 1970s: “There was nothing: no telephone, electricity was very poor, and there was drinking water for just one hour a day. Living conditions were terrible – sewage ran in the streets, garbage was everywhere.” The success of the festival engendered a sense of civic pride: teams of children competed to clean the beaches; adults did the same to maintain their neighbourhoods. Bit by bit, infrastructure was improved: power lines dating from 1926 were replaced; streets were paved: and people’s houses were renovated with traditional construction techniques, including the use of salvaged doors and windows. Historical buildings were also restored, including the Al-Kamra Tower, which is now an exhibition space. As a result of all the hard work, the town won the Aga Khan Award for Architecture in 1989.

The festival also created a forum for debate between the Arab world, Europe and Africa. “We started this project with a view to, on the one hand, providing the population with a new resource – in this case culture, creativity. And secondly, we felt that, in the south, there wasn’t really a place where people could meet for a so-called ‘dialogue of cultures’,” Benaïssa told me. Now a throng of economists, politicians and academics gather at the contemporary Hassan II Centre for International Meetings to attend conferences on social issues, as well as artistic and literary themes.

More than thirty years on, Benaïssa’s belief that art and culture can be used as a catalyst for change is unwavering: “Look at what it has done. With art you cannot end poverty, but you can bring about the end of misery.” When the Moussem ends and the flood of visitors leave, Asilah returns to its tranquil self. But the art remains. Murals – renewed every year – adorn the buildings, wrapping around pipes and enveloping shutters. Many of the children assigned to help the artists at the first Moussem are now professional artists themselves, and a new and enterprising generation is cashing in on the art boom, selling their naïve paintings from street corners. Galleries and workshops abound, and many wouldn’t look out of place in London or New York.

The medina may lack Marrakech’s tangle of souks and panoply of shops, but it’s also endearingly free from the hassle and hustle of other Moroccan cities: traditional barbers sat next to chichi boutiques; window displays overflowed with ornate silver jewellery studded with semi-precious gems; handiras’ (wedding blankets) silver sequins glinting in the sun; shaggy Beni Ouarain, with bold geometric markings; vivid kilims hung under awnings; and babouches (pointed, rounded, sparkling and furry slippers) jostled for space in narrow emporiums.

Outside the medina, the call of the muezzin mingled with the strains of Arabic hip-hop. I wandered through the covered market, engulfed in the aroma of freshly-baked bread, the tang of mint and the sweet smell of dates, passing villagers from the Rif Mountains – their distinctive straw hats decorated with gaudy pom-poms – trading gigantic yellow melons from makeshift stalls, mounds of pungent saffron and plump figs bursting with ripeness. Before the Moussem, Asilah had long sustained itself as a fishing community and, after a sweet mint tea at the ramshackle Fisherman’s Café, I headed to the established seafront restaurant, Casa Pepe. Waiters in white shirts and black ties squeezed between the heaving tables and a djellabah-clad fisherman blocked the doorway. He pulled two lobsters from his steel bucket – lunch had arrived for a gregarious Spanish family.




After feasting on crispy whitebait and freshly caught sardines, I took a taxi to Paradise Beach a few miles out of town. When the paved road ended we bumped over gravel, shrubs and dunes, overtaking more traditional taxis – donkey-drawn wooden carts – with passengers hanging precariously off the side. Finally, we turned down the winding path to the beach, and before me the sweeping bay glittered through the heat haze, mile after mile of honey-coloured sand pounded by Atlantic rollers.


Beyond the row of ramshackle cafes, impromptu football matches were underway. Grumbling camels plodded up and down the surf with their tourist cargo, while boys on scrawny mules galloped bareback between the beach towels. Children played under parasols and women sunbathed in everything from bikinis to burkas.
Asilah’s rehabilitation continues under Benaïssa’s watchful eye. When I remark that the festival has fulfilled its objectives, he demurs: “Let us say it is fulfilling its objectives, because there is no end to improvement.”


The old harbour is being rebuilt to serve as a commercial port and marina, and apartments are springing up along the once-neglected coast, east towards Tangier. But Benaïssa has allowed only limited tourism development within the medina’s ancient walls, determined that it won’t lose its spirit or  become another Marrakech.


It certainly has all the ingredients to become the new Essaouira, but it’s a modest place and, for now at least, it’s content to be the new Asilah.

Friday, September 9, 2011

At sunset, Marrakech's famed Djemaa el-Fna comes alive. Through the rising smoke of the food Stands, several hundred flickering yellow lanterns illuminate a turbulent sea Of hoods and veils. Crowds form around the most unusual spectacles, pausing to gape, then moving on. Mystics meet, spellbinders cast spells, witch doctors mix potions and leather-skinned old letter.writers rock back and forth on their haunches waiting for customers. Medicine men spread out gazelle skulls, dusty jars of horsehair and ancient medical texts. Old men dressed in white robes stand on wooden crates and shout the Wan to anyone who will listen. Colorfully clad women read your palms to tell your future.
Dentists with vise-grips pull teeth and display them proudly. Orphaned boys wear huge red wrestling gloves and swing punches to ohhs and ahhs while their street "father" passes the hat. In another whirlpool of bodies, an ensemble of sweaty men entice cobras to dance and a man with a curly mustache swallows his snake and regurgitates it minutes later. Don't miss the fire breathers, the shoe- shiners, the rubber band kids who do back flips off each other's shoulders, the midgets, the beggars, the troupe of transvestite belly dancers, the armless freak. Abandon the safety of your rooftop perch and wade Into the sea of people.

Beach clubs, trekking or hill retreats. If you thought it was a city just for weekend breaks, it’s time to think again!

Picture the scene: an old house, a riad, full of beckoning arches and curvaceous carvings, with a cool pool and a picture-book palm in the courtyard. Orange juice and pancakes on the roof for breakfast, couscous and salads under the stars at night. And all this in the middle of the medina, the old town of Marrakech, where the call to prayer rings out every morning and the sun shines all year round.
It’s no wonder we love Marrakech, and no wonder that more than 400 riads offer rooms in the medina. Up to now, however, this has been very much a weekender’s city, overflowing with atmosphere, but a little short on diversions. Once you’ve seen the Saadian tombs and the Bahia Palace, excavated the souks and wriggled among the snake-charmers on the Djemaa el Fna, you’re done. What next?

Plenty, actually. There’s a host of activities on offer beyond the medina, more than enough to make a week’s break here a tempting proposition. Here are some of the best.
Take me to the beach: a few days in Marrakech is bound to mean UV overload, and cooling off is compulsory. Until lately, you had to make do with a dunk in the narrow pool at your riad, or endure a 100-mile drive to the Atlantic coast at Essaouira. Now, though, in the city’s hinterland, the Nikki Beachclub complex at the Palmeraie Golf Palace (00 212-24 36 87 27, www.nikkibeach.com/marrakech ) brings a touch of St Tropez to North Africa.
With its outsize pool, nubile young things and surprisingly tasty Mediterranean food (once it comes - the service is slow), it attracts Marrakechis and visitors in search of chilled days and hot parties. All-day admission costs £17.
If that sounds a little slick, try Oasiria (Km 4, Route du Barrage; 24 38 04 38, www.oasiria.com ), Morocco’s first water park. Hurtle down a water chute, catch a wave in the surf pool or just splash about, all for £12.50 a day (£7 for children). Usefully, Oasiria runs a free shuttle from the medina.
Head for the hills: it’s just an hour’s drive from the centre of Marrakech to the cool kasbahs of the Atlas Mountains. Imlil is your obvious target. The approach, along a slinking valley road, is beautiful, and waiting at the end is the Kasbah du Toubkal (00 33-5 49 05 01 35, www.kasbahdutoubkal.com ), where the rooftop restaurant dishes up traditional Moroccan tagines and immense views of Jbel Toubkal - at 13,671ft, the highest mountain in North Africa.
The same kasbah organises what it calls “a day with the Berbers”, mixing a stop at a rural souk with village visits, a walk in the mountains and lunch (£70pp, including your pickup in Marrakech).
For proper treks, head for the city’s Bureau des Guides (00 212-24 48 56 26) or contact the Atlas superguide Mohamed Aztat (68 76 01 65, aztat.rando.free.fr ), who can arrange day trips and longer hikes into the mountains, with your transfers from town laid on.
Ride out: there is no shortage of stables in and around Marrakech, but finding one where the horses are properly kept and the tack is up to scratch can be a headache.
Bensassi Ranch (Zaouiet Bensassi, Route de Fes; 00 212-61 43 74 79) stands out. Swedish-born Jenny Angman and her Moroccan colleagues work to the highest standards and have collected a stable of fine horses. By all means join them for a short ride in the country (from £17 for 90 minutes), but their full-day expeditions are much more fun - they’re proper back-country adventures. Prices start at £50, which includes a picnic lunch.
Go clubbing: we don’t mean the down-and-dirty kind of urban clubbing, though you can find that close to town at the enduringly hip Pacha (Boulevard Mohamed VI; 00 212-24 38 84 00, www.pachamarrakech.com), where the Michelin-starred Pourcel brothers recently took over the Crystal restaurant.


For something more serene, try the Beldi Country Club (24 38 39 50, www.beldicountryclub.com ), amid rose gardens and olive groves, a 10-minute drive from the medina. The club welcomes all-comers for a set-menu lunch: served on the fringes of its garden, it tends to feature light and fresh salads, grilled fish and a tagine or couscous dish. That costs £17, or £24 if you’d like to use the pool as well.
Ourika: A 45-minute drive from the medina, the Ourika valley is not as close to the High Atlas peaks as Imlil, but it has long been a bolt hole for Marrakechis seeking a day’s escape from the city. Its principal attractions are the village of Setti Fatma, with its line of roadside stalls and simple restaurants, and the Jardin Bio-Aromatique d’Ourika.
The garden (00 212-24 48 24 47, www.nectarome.com ) nurtures some 50 varieties of aromatic plants and herbs - you can stroll and sniff on your own (£1) or take a 45-minute guided tour (£4) and learn about their traditional medicinal uses. Either way, be sure to visit the shop, which sells home-grown Nectarome essential oils and organic beauty products.
- Anthony Sattin travelled as a guest of Boutique Souk
TRAVEL BRIEF
Getting there: fly to Marrakech with Atlas Blue (www.atlas-blue.com ) or EasyJet (www.easyjet.com ), from Gat-wick; Ryanair (0871 246 0000, www.ryanair.com), from Bristol and Luton; or Royal Air Maroc (020 7307 5800, www.royalairmaroc.com), from Heathrow via Casablanca. Returns start at about £80.
Where to stay:in the medina, the grand old Riad Edward (00 212-24 38 97 97; www.riyadedward.com ; doubles from £80, B&B) is packed with antiques and oozes casual style, while Noir d’Ivoire (24 38 09 75; www.noir-d-ivoire.com; doubles from £140, B&B) is about as chic as it gets: black-and-white public areas and a classy restaurant. For a wider selection, try Boutique Souk (00212 61324475, www.boutiquesouk.com), Best of Morocco (08540 264585, www.morocco-travel.com) or Fleewinter (020 7112 0019, www.fleewinter.co.uk).
If you’d sooner stay out of the bustle, try the extraordinary Jnane Tamsna (00 212-24 32 94 23, www.jnanetamsna.com ; doubles from £160, B&B), in the green of the Palmeriae.
The fruit of an inspired collaboration between the style guru Meryanne Loum-Martin and her ethnobotanist husband, Gary Martin, it has 24 bedrooms in five houses, set in a nine-acre garden. Another good option is the vintage Es Saadi (24 44 88 11, www.essaadi.com ), in the Ville Nouvelle, where rooms in the charming original hotel (the new palace wing needs time to establish itself) start at £135, B&B.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Morocco is famous for its food, and no wonder. It's mouthwatering and eclectic, and there's something for everyone. The best-known dish is the tagine, a filling stew slow cooked in an earthenware pot with a conical lid. In addition to chicken, beef, lamb, fish, or vegetables, tagines often include stewed fruit, olives, onions, or almonds. Many restaurants also serve couscous, particularly as a traditional family lunch on Fridays. The seven-veggie couscous royale, topped with a raisin/onion concoction, is not to be missed.

Brochettes (skewers of meat or chicken) are always a safe bet and are especially popular with the junior set. Harira, a soup made with tomatoes and chickpeas and served with bread and dates, is a warming and often vegetarian alternative. If the food strikes you as a touch blah--you chili fiend!--request harissa, a hot sauce that'll send your taste buds into overdrive.
There's a wide variety of places to nibble and dine in Marrakech, from street stalls to opulent restaurants out of The Arabian Nights. And café culture is omnipresent--thanks, no doubt, to the country's history as a French colony. I provide a range of food choices below, from the super cheap to the save-up-your-pennies splurge. Also included are some non-Moroccan options for those who want to mix it up a little.
Marrakech's bountiful tangerine and orange trees make for fresh juice everywhere. Yay! By day, head to the orange-juice stalls on the Jemaa el-Fna, the city's famous central square. There are dozens of juice stalls, all of which are numbered. I haven't ever really noticed a difference between the juice at No. 1 and the juice at No. 23. So pick the stand with your lucky number and make a beeline. A smile usually gets you a free half refill.
By night, the juice stalls are wheeled away and dozens of open-air kitchens are set up in tidy rows, with communal bench seating. I'm partial to the stall where a chef with a handlebar moustache makes harira. Be sure to check out the stands that specialize in exotica like sheep's head or snails (you slurp them from a cup). Sadly, no beer is on offer at any of the stalls.
On the sidelines of the Jemaa el-Fna is Ice Legend, an ice cream shop. It's particularly enticing for the little ones in the group, but adults too will appreciate a scoop of one of the 50 homemade flavors. Café des Épices, in the medina's spice market, is a charming and aromatic spot for breakfast or a glass of hot mint tea. Further down the medina's serpentine alleys is La Terrasse des Épices in Souk Cherifia. (It's owned by the same guy who owns Café des Épices.) Salads start at just $6.50, and you can bask in the sun on the huge terrace.

There are four upscale restaurants in the Old City that I happily recommend. The stylish Kosybar, on the place des Ferblantiers, has a mix of Moroccan and continental offerings, as well as inventive cocktails. By day, you can watch huge storks in their nests from the upstairs terrace. Swanky Le Tanjia, a restaurant with rose-filled fountains, is nearby. The Sunday brunch is excellent, as is the tender monkfish available at lunch or dinner. Another chic spot in the Mouassine district is Café Arabe. This Italian-owned riad(courtyard home) boasts not only a restaurant serving homemade pastas from $9, but also a hip rooftop bar. And in the Kasbah area is Tatchibana, where you can break out of the norm with sushi and other Japanese delicacies. Tatchibana is open only for dinner except on Sunday, when it offers lunch, too.

Some of Marrakech's coolest eating spots are in the newer parts of the city. In Guéliz, Kechmara has mid-century modern decor with ever-changing art, and a sunny terrace that's a good choice for breakfast and lunch; the restaurant does a fine mixed grill for $12. Café du Livre, also in Guéliz, has free Wi-Fi and a selection of English-language books for you to peruse while ordering coffee, lunch, or an early dinner (entrées from $8). Sushi is served during the evening from Thursday to Saturday, but the café is open only until 9 p.m. And the colonial atmosphere at Grand Café de la Poste provides a nice backdrop for excellent salads, starting at $10, as well as hot meals. Enjoy a Casablanca beer on the covered veranda.
In the majorly upscale category is Le Bis-Jardin des Arts, a new restaurant with gorgeous decor. The delicious entrées start at $17. For other überglamorous experiences, hop in a car and head to the city's outskirts. Restaurant L'Abbysin is at the stunning Palais Rhoul, a luxurious palace hotel. The sleek, white outdoor venue is photo-shoot worthy, even if the nouvelle cuisine is more passable than memorable. The Crystal Restaurant Lounge, in the trendy Pacha complex, has artful food arrangements almost too pretty to eat. Make reservations for Friday or Saturday night to listen to jazz.
·  Ice Legend52 ave. Bab Agnaou, Jemaa el-Fna, 011-212/24-44-42-00
·  Café des Épices 75 Rahba Lakdima, place des Épices, 011-212/24-39-17-70, cafedesepices.net
·  Terrasse des Épices Souk Cherifia, Dar el Bacha, 011-212/76-04-67-67
·  Kosybar47 place des Fer­blantiers, Médina, 011-212/24-38-03-24, entrées from $19
·  Le Tanjia14 Derb J'did Hay Essalam, Médina, 011-212/24-38-38-36, le-tanjia.com, monkfish $14
·  Café Arabe184 rue el Mouassine, Médina, 011-212/24-42-97-28, cafearabe.com
·  Tatchibana38 Bab Ksiba, Kasbah, 011-212/24-38-71-71, tatchibana.free.fr, sushi plate $20
·  Kechmara3 rue de la Liberté, Guéliz, 011-212/24-42-25-32, kechmara.com
·  Café du Livre 44 rue Tarik ben Ziyad, Guéliz, 011-212/24-43-21-49, cafedulivre.com
·  Grand Café de la Poste blvd. el Mansour Eddahbi at ave. Imam Malik, Guéliz, 011-212/24-43-30-38, grandcafedelaposte.com

·  Le Bis-Jardin des Arts 6-7 rue Sakia el Hamra, Semlalia, 011-212/24-44-66-34, lebis-jardindesarts.com
·  L'AbbysinKm 4, rte. de Fes, 011-212/24-32-85-84, palais-rhoul.com, entrées from $19
·  Crystal Restaurant Lounge blvd. Mohamed VI, Zone Hôtelière de l'Aguedal, 011-212/24-38-84-00, pachamarrakech.com, entrées from $10

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

When she isn't trying to open a hotel or being a professional shopper, Maryam Montague blogs about life in Morocco. We can't think of a better guide to this bewitching—but often rather bewildering—city.
I'm an American, but for my whole life I've been a nomad. It started in Cairo, where I was born. (My dad, a New Yorker, was on assignment in Egypt.) My travels have continued through more than 70 countries--Cambodia to Colombia, Iran to Italy, Namibia to Nepal--and my work as a specialist in human rights and democracy means the list keeps growing.
Every place I've visited has been compelling in its own way, but I never found a city that made me want to settle down until I came to Marrakech. Its appeal comes from so much more than the snake charmers, the fortune-tellers, and the souks--though they help, too. The hospitable people, the delicious food, the mysterious architecture, and the fascinating Moroccan culture all add up to make Marrakech a city like no other. Borrowing the words of little Goldilocks, Marrakech felt "just right" somehow.

• Marrakech Uncut
So two years ago, my husband (an American architect), our two children, and I traded in our nomadic existence for a nine-acre olive grove on the outskirts of Marrakech. We then set out to open The Peacock Nest, an online shop selling beautiful Moroccan things, and to design and build a stylish, ecofriendly boutique hotel called Peacock Pavilions (peacockpavilions.com); both are named after the peacocks that roam the property. If all goes to plan, the 10-room hotel will be ready by July.
Somewhere along the way, I decided to start writing a blog, My Marrakesh (mymarrakesh.com), a great big love letter to my new home. I enjoy sharing my passion for Marrakech with anyone who will pay attention. And they do: I'm not exactly sure why, but thousands of people read My Marrakesh every day. Either my mother is paying them all--she always wanted me to be popular in high school--or people are genuinely interested in the enchanting city that I'm lucky enough to call home.
Wait, is it Marrakech or Marrakesh?
BT's style is to follow Webster's Geographical Dictionary for place-names, so we spell it Marrakech. Montague, however, calls her blog My Marrakesh because that spelling is closer to the way the city's name is pronounced.

Monday, September 5, 2011

Beldi 9—11 Souikat Laksour; 212-44/441-076. Jean-Paul Gaultier is a regular at Taoufiq Baroudi's boutique, for glamorous caftans, babouches (slippers), silk quilts, and pillows.
Ministero del Gusto 22 Derb Azzouz el-Mouassine; 212-44/426-455. This Italian-run gallery with a pool in the middle specializes in contemporary art and furniture.
Ryad Tamsna 23 Derb Zanka Deika, off Rue Riad Zitoun Jdid; 212-44/385-272. Meryanne Loum-Martin's restored medina town house has an excellent bookstore, an art gallery, and a boutique offering one-of-a-kind fabrics, scarves, bags, and jewelry.

La Porte d'Orient 9 Blvd. Mansour Eddahbi; 212-44/438-967. This vast emporium of North African antiques specializes in wood, including ornate doors, chests, and entire carved ceilings (they can be shipped anywhere).
Cooperatim Ave. Mohamed V, just beyond Place Djemaa el-Fna; 212-44/440-503. A well-edited collection of the usual souk stuff—carpets, pottery, jewelry—at fair, fixed prices.


In addition to the city's riad revolution, Marrakesh is stirring up interest on the food front. Here, some of the town's top tables:
Alizia Rue Chouhada-chawki, Hivernage; 212-44/438-360; dinner for two $30. Excellent Italian, French, and fish dishes; on mild evenings, Alizia's bougainvillea-shaded front garden is the place to be.
Amanjena Rte. de Ouarzazate, km 12; 212-44/403-353; dinner for two $94. For a change of scene and cuisine, the Thai dining room of the stunning Aman resort is worth a trek to the outskirts of Marrakesh.
Dar Moha Almadina 81 Rue Dar el Bacha; 212-44/386-400; dinner for two $72. The former mansion of designer Pierre Balmain provides the sumptuous setting for chef Moha Fedal's nouvelle cuisine marocaine.
La Maison Arabe 1 Derb Assehbé, Bab Doukkala; 212-44/387-010; dinner for two $50. One of the city's best small hotels now has a romantic new dining room, its blue ceiling inspired by a Persian mosque.
Le Tobsil 22 Derb Abdellah Ben Hessaien, R'mila Bab Ksour; 212-44/444-052; dinner for two $94. Innovative Moroccan cooking—lamb tagine with quince, moist pastilla (pigeon pie)—served in the courtyard of a lovely riad.

Sunday, September 4, 2011

This North African city of medieval souks and winding streets is undergoing a dramatic transformation.
Marrakech and I go back almost 40 years, when I was assigned by the Peace Corps to teach English at the Lycée Mohammed V, deep in the medina. At the time, the city was an exotic North African backwater with only a handful of decent places to stay and eat, most of them holdovers from the French-colonial era. And the visitors were mostly hippies in search of good hash and cheap crash pads in the medina, which in those days was an unpaved, tumbledown collection of souks and town houses. Still, I loved the place: the snake charmers and acrobats on the Djemaa el-Fna, the orange-tree-edged Avenue Mohammed V, the Parisian-style Café Renaissance, in Guéliz, the sweet-smelling rose gardens, the exhilarating views of the snow-covered Atlas Mountains, and, above all, the warmth and wit of the Marrakchis.

Over the next decades, I returned regularly and witnessed Marrakech’s transformation, as stylish travelers like Jackie Onassis and Talitha Getty replaced the hippies, and ramshackle palaces and riads in the medina were turned into chic boutique hotels. In 2002, I wound up buying and restoring a small house there and have called it my second home ever since. There are now several hundred riad hotels, each trying to out-design the next, and the big international brands—Mandarin Oriental, Four Seasons—are building resorts beyond the medina. Some insiders worry that Marrakech is perilously close to being “over,” while others say this is the mark of a bold new era.
Marrakech is essentially two cities: the medina, as the ancient walled Arab metropolis is called, and Guéliz, the name given to the part of town created by the French in 1913. South of Guéliz lies the residential neighborhood of Hivernage. While Guéliz has been somewhat overshadowed in the past decade by the rise of the medina, it is currently enjoying a bit of a renaissance itself. With its aging Art Deco villas, broad streets, and roundabouts, Guéliz is Morocco at its most Western. A symbol of the area’s revival is the year-old Bab Hotel, a mini-Delanoesque homage to the Philippe Starck aesthetic: oversize flowerpots, billowy curtains, cool white public spaces. Its pebbled half-indoor/half-outdoor garden by the pool is a perfect spot for lunch, and the top-floor Skybab Bar, set with lounging mattresses, draws the cocktail crowd in the evenings.
The legendary La Mamounia, the city’s oldest hotel, lies on the border of the medina and Hivernage. The 1923 landmark recently reopened after a three-year closure, during which French designer Jacques Garcia reconsidered, reimagined, and rebuilt every square inch of the place. With its dark lobby niches, mauve velvet chairs, and hanging silk-shaded lamps, the new La Mamounia feels a little reminiscent of Costes (the hip Paris hotel Garcia designed in the 1990’s). But beyond the lobby, the classic La Mamounia remains—only better. The gardens have been enlarged, as has the pool, now the size of a small lake. And the suites show off the best of Moroccan craftsmanship—marble floors, mosaic-tiled walls, carved doors, and meticulously painted ceilings.



A few streets away is Royal Mansour, the personal project of His Highness Mohammed VI, king of Morocco. The king has spared no expense on the hotel, which has encountered several delays but is scheduled to open this summer. Arranged around Andalusian courtyards and reflecting pools, the 53 two-story riad town houses have silk-paneled walls, tiled fireplaces, and roof terraces with bedouin tents and swimming pools. A butler is available in your riad upon request—and to make sure the staff never intrudes upon your privacy, the entire compound is serviced by a network of underground tunnels.
This summer, the Mandarin Oriental Jnan Rahma will open on 131 pristine acres in the Palmeraie, the palm forest northeast of the city. The fantasy of Morocco-based expat American architect Stuart Church, the hotel will bear a striking resemblance to the great Umaid Bhawan palace, in Jodhpur, India, with its 40-foot-high gilded ceilings. The bedrooms (the smallest is 750 square feet) will have gold-leafed four-poster beds, bathrooms of white and gray marble, and terraces with daybeds looking out toward the forest and the Atlas Mountains. It’s no wonder the hotel was used as a location for Sex and the City 2 (though Marrakech masquerades as someplace in the Middle East in the story line).
Back in the medina, the riads continue to flourish. The nine-month-old riad Siwan is owned by a Dutch couple, Cees and Maryk Van den Berg, who have strong ties to the community and a track record of success with their popular riad Azzar, a 10-minute walk away. A former palace, Siwan has seven large guest rooms, all appointed with locally made furniture and one-of-a-kind handblown glass lamps.
Many medina properties are expanding, including riad Farnatchi, which was opened in 2004 by British hotelier Jonathan Wix (who launched the Scotsman, in Edinburgh, and Paris’s Hôtel de la Trémoille). Its five guest rooms—with large fireplaces, sunken bathtubs, and Modernist furniture—were so popular that Wix acquired an adjacent mansion and incorporated four more chic suites set around a maze of courtyards, terraces, and bhous (alcove seating areas). Similarly, at riad Noir d’Ivoire, in the Bab Doukkala area of the medina, co-owner Jill Fechtmann pulled out all the stops. Opulent rooms here have a mix of Moroccan, Syrian, and Indian furniture. Next door, Fechtmann created three of the largest riad suites in Marrakech, along with a 36-foot lap pool in the courtyard. Meanwhile, over at riad El Fenn, one of the medina’s flashiest addresses, co-owner Vanessa Branson (sister of Richard) has tripled the size of the place since it opened in 2003. Favored by the British media and art-world elite, El Fenn now encompasses three adjacent palaces, with 22 extraordinary rooms—featuring leather floors, plunge pools, and modern works by British painter Bridget Riley—plus three pools, a rooftop putting green, and even a small theater.
When I was in town last fall with several houseguests in tow, I found my usual welcome-to-the-medina circuit blocked by crowds watching the filming of Sex and the City 2. Under normal circumstances, I start this tour at the northwestern edge of the famous Djemaa el-Fna and enter the souks via an archway just beyond the Place Bab Fteuh that leads to Rue Laksour. There, the tiny boutique Beldi dresses some of Marrakech’s most fashionable residents in linen shirts, mandarin-collared cashmere jackets, and embroidered silk caftans. Rue Laksour feeds into my favorite street, Rue Mouassine, where hole-in-the-wall shops showcase artfully arranged pottery, lanterns, and Berber carpets. The latest addition to this area is KIS (Keep It Secret), a by-appointment boutique hidden on the upper story of a tiny medina house that carries more caftans, as well as jewelry and gorgeous bags designed by Brazilian globe-trotter Adriana Bittencourt and her French partner, Caroline Constancio.
After the hassle and haggling of the souks, Guéliz provides an antidote for low-key shoppers who like to look and not be pressured into buying (one of the downsides of the medina). Many of the best shops lie along a two-block stretch of Rue de la Liberté. Among them: Atika, which has a loyal following of travelers who come just for the latest models and colors of its Tod’s-like loafers (most less than $50 a pair). On the corner of Rue de la Liberté and Avenue Mohammed V, Intensité Nomade sells brightly colored caftans by owner Frédérique Birkemeyer, as well as soft leather pants for women, raw-silk pants for men, and Casablanca designer Karim Tassi’s jeans, slinky suits, and sweaters. On the opposite corner, Place Vendôme carries top-quality Moroccan leather goods, from $10 men’s wallets to $200 jackets. One of Guéliz’s newest boutiques, Moor, is the creation of Yann Dobry (who also owns the stylish little shop Akbar Delights, in the medina). Dobry’s new outpost, hung with distinctive lacquered lanterns, features his beautifully embroidered linen, silk, and cotton tunics.


With its booming hotels and riads, Marrakech’s restaurant scene is keeping pace, but it helps to know where to go, as new places make their big splash, then drown just as quickly. One of my favorites is Le Tobsil, where owner Christine Rio offers a prix fixe feast of Moroccan dishes, including moist pastilla (pigeon pie), lamb or chicken tagine (stew), couscous, and dessert, all served at candlelit tables in an arcaded riad, with Gnaoua musicians playing softly in the background.
On the southern edge of the medina, in the former Jewish quarter known as the Mellah, is Le Tanjia, the brainchild of Marrakshi restaurateur Nourredine Fakir. This multilevel restaurant pays homage to its location with antique menorahs and historic photographs of the area. Belly dancers perform tableside while you sample tender beef tanjia—named for the narrow earthenware pot in which it is slow-cooked. The scene is more sedate at the medina haunt Le Foundouk, where the décor—gigantic spindly chandeliers; metal sconces—outshines the menu of Moroccan, French, and Thai dishes. And every visitor to Marrakech has to try Dar Yacout, a medina institution. Designed in the early 1990’s by American expat architect Bill Willis, this fantasy palace—shiny tadelakt (polished plaster) walls, scalloped columns, and striped turrets—has influenced Moroccan interiors ever since. The standard-issue Moroccan menu is less memorable than the theatricality of the presentation.
For a light lunch, stop at Un Déjeuner à Marrakech, a cool new restaurant with an attractive staff on the riad Zitoun Jdid street, a buzzing shopping strip I’ve loved for years. In Guéliz, head to Grand Café de la Poste, where you could almost be in Indochina, circa 1950, sitting under slow-turning ceiling fans on a vast bamboo-shaded veranda. It is popular with French expats, who treat it as their own private club.
Marrakech offers plenty of sizzle after dark—from funky clubs like African Chic, in Guéliz, with live bands, to Hivernage’s ultracool Comptoir, a slick lounge that features belly dancers in Bollywood-style production numbers. Théâtro, the formerly sedate supper club of the Hôtel Es Saadi, where Maurice Chevalier and Josephine Baker performed, is now a dance-till-dawn spot.
My favorite nighttime hideaway is the roof terrace of Kosybar, in the Mellah, which plays loungy Brazilian music. Having a nightcap here and looking out on the salmon-colored walls of the ancient Badi Palace—topped with storks’ nests—you experience the essence of Marrakech now: the ease with which this worldly desert crossroads accepts and mixes past and present, classic and cutting-edge.

Forget chilly lessons in the UK. Where better to beat a childhood phobia of water than on an intensive swimming course in Morocco? It was a warm winter morning in Marrakech and I was staring at a middle-aged man called Steven and urging myself to fall into his arms. "Just let yourself go," he said. "I can't, I just can't," I whimpered. "I'm scared – I have never done this before." "You can," urged Steven with persuasive authority. "You just need to let yourself relax."
I took a deep breath, summoned up what willpower I had and let myself fall. Into the heated swimming pool. For a few seconds my feet were off the ground and I was floating before Steven caught me. "That was great," he said, "I think we'll have you swimming by the end of the week."

I am a non-swimmer. I fell into a swimming pool during a lesson when I was 10 years old and was so traumatised that I refused to join in any more lessons. I didn't think I was missing much since my family never went on holidays when I was young and as an adult I have always preferred city destinations to beach holidays.

In the past that hasn't mattered but last year I married a woman who loves water so much I suspect she is a mermaid who has had the snip. I want to be able to swim in the sea with her, which is why I decided to go to Marrakech for a week-long swimming holiday led by Steven Shaw. Steven has taught 15,000 people to swim using a method based on the Alexander Technique.

There were 12 of us in the group – ages ranged from 39 to 80 – and our week at the Kenzi Farah Hotel began with an early morning session sitting in a large circle. Steven asked us all to introduce ourselves and then talk about any bad past experiences with the water. Listening to everyone share their stories it felt like I had joined AA – Aquatics Anonymous. Everyone apart from me could swim to some degree: they were here to improve technique or stamina. We talked about our hopes for the week. One man said he wanted to be able to swim with his head under the water, while a woman in her sixties talked about wanting to venture out of the shallow end without having a panic attack.

Then it was time to take the plunge. We made our way to the pool for the first of our two daily sessions. These were to be supplemented with individual lessons in swimming and Alexander Technique. Steven began by telling us to walk in the water. Next we had to crouch in the water, our arms in front of us and he told us to slide our feet backwards in the pool: an aquatic moonwalk. Once we were all comfortable in the water Steven tried to teach me to float. At his command I put my head in the pool, kicked off from the edge and let my hands float in front of me. And somehow, magically, I found that I was actually floating. It was a moment of indescribable joy, like learning I could fly.
Djemma el Fna Square in Marrakech Views over Djemaa el Fna in the heart of Marrakech. Photograph: Layne Kennedy

That evening the group ventured out into the heart of the old city, the Djemaa el Fna. The square throbbed with noise, the cries of stallholders selling spices and dried fruit, the drone of motorbikes and the babble of snake charmers. We found a restaurant that overlooked the square and had a terrace from where we could admire the chaos as I ate my fish tagine. Shaw's company also runs courses in Britain, but being able to explore Marrakech's markets and restaurants was one of the great advantages of learning to swim in Morocco.

The next morning began as usual with a session on land where Steven led us as we practised our strokes in a large circle. He instructed us to hum, first with our heads bowed, then looking straight forward. It was meant to show how our breathing became tighter when our heads were pointing down but I was distracted by the gawping hotel guests, who must have assumed that we were members of some weird cult, with bald-headed Steven as our Messiah – the buddha of the breaststroke.

In the pool the competence gap between the others and me was so stark I was singled out for individual attention. I thought I was doing well until Esther-Clare, a 72-year-old former midwife from Edinburgh, paddled up to me and asked, "Is there something wrong with your legs? I mean you don't look disabled, so why are your legs so crooked in the water?"

The next few days followed the same routine: early breakfast, a session on land and then a full day of lessons. The more time the group spent in the pool, the bar and the city, the closer we became. Having to admit to fears and vulnerabilities meant opening up to each other with distinctly un-British speed. Esther talked movingly about what being in the water meant to her. "I feel like I am a young girl when I am in the pool," she said, "and then I get out of the water and look into the mirror and I can't believe the old woman staring back is me!"

One lunchtime late in the week I paid a taxi driver to give me a city tour, and he took me to the smelly tannery, along the pink-tinged ramparts and to delve into the souks. I was hungry to experience more, but this was a holiday with swimming at its heart, and time was running out.

Everyone else had made great strides but I was still floundering when I attempted breaststroke. For the final two sessions, Steven showed me front crawl. Within two strokes I put my foot down again, but for those precious few seconds I was swimming and, for once, enjoying the sensation of being in the water. In seven days I had made more progress in the water than in the past 30 years, and I was determined to build on what Steven had taught me.

• The next Art of Swimming (0845 604 1910, artofswimming.com) holiday in Marrakech with Steven Shaw departs on 8 May and costs from £1,600pp (single room) including flights, lessons and seven nights' B&B at the Kenzi Farah Hotel. A three-day course in Ashby-de-la-Zouch, Leics, runs from 24 February and costs £530pp for a single room
It'a the kind of place one first hears about in a yoga class, discussed in heated whispers between sun salutations. Or while eavesdropping on two model types with French accents in a cafe. About 10 years ago that place might have been Tulum, Mexico, but these days it's Essaouira, a tiny white-walled port city on Morocco's Atlantic coast.
While Marrakech is increasingly attracting stylish travelers from all over Europe to North Africa, the stylish expatriates of Marrakesh drive two hours to Essaouira (pronounced ess-ah-WEER-ah) for the weekend to escape the crowds. "I think of Essaouira as the beach of Marrakech," said an American transplant, Nancy Bridger, over coffee in Pâtisserie Driss, known for its brusque service but Paris-worthy croissants.


Ms. Bridger, a former film set designer from Los Angeles, arrived in Essaouira five years ago, searching for a new life after divorce. She tried Martinique and then the south of France, but when she arrived at this intimate seaside city with its "cast of characters," she said she fell in love it.

"Within two weeks, I had found a ruin out in the countryside, bought it, renovated it, and lived in it for two years," Ms. Bridger said, adding that she has since sold that house to a British couple who are using it as a second home.
Ms. Bridger is just one of many free spirits who in the last few years have become so captivated by Essaouira that they dropped their old lives to move here. But if you ask them what it is about the place that instigated such a dramatic life change, the answers can be frustratingly vague.
"I felt something very special," said Cyril Ladeuil, a former commercial engineer in Paris, while sipping mint tea in the living room of the eccentric hostel he owns, La Maison des Artistes. "When I returned to Paris after my first visit here, I thought every day of living here."
Anne-Marie Dupré, an artist from Paris, said much the same. Surrounded by her fairy-tale collages in her colorful Moroccan tiled apartment, she admitted that the low cost of living was a big part of it.
"Sometimes I work a lot, sometimes I spend the day walking along the beach," she said. "In France, as an artist I couldn't eat, but here if I don't sell my work I can still survive."
It's easier to understand the city's appeal by wandering along its picturesque ramparts (the name Essaouira is thought to be derived from the Arabic word for "ramparts" but translates as "little image") or while people-watching from one of the cafes on the Place Mouley Hassan, which looks out onto the port's animated fish market and stalls. Seagulls are continuously wheeling overhead, their cries occasionally silenced by the muezzin's call, and the backdrop of the azure sky contrasts appealingly against the white buildings and sand-colored fortifications.
There is a gentle breeze of Europe about Essaouira; it has more open spaces and wider streets than most Moroccan cities. In fact, much of its footprint was laid out and designed in the mid-1700's by a French architect, Théodore Cornut, by order of Sultan Sidi Mohamed ben Abdallah.
While the medina hums all day long with spice, food and crafts sellers, it is relatively small, easy to navigate and hassle free. ("No one has ever been rude to me," Ms. Bridger said. "Essaouira is as safe as pie.") And thanks to a decree against vehicles in the streets, Essaouira's medina is considered the cleanest in the country.
"It's Morocco at its most easy and relaxed," said Mariangela Catalani, a cheerful tourist from Florence digging into fresh lobster at a table in Les Bretons du Sud, or Ali's, as everyone knows it, a tented fish stall by the harbor.
Just a block or two inland from the fish market is a tiny garden square featuring a bust of the filmmaker Orson Welles, a monument to the city's occasional brushes with fame. Welles was one of the first international personalities to be lured by Essaouira's charm; in 1949 he spent several months here filming scenes along the ramparts for "Othello" and waiting for financing at the bar of Hotel des Îles (the bar at this hotel, once grand but now faded, is named after him, as is the town square).
Two decades later, Essaouira became an important stop on the hippie trail; both Cat Stevens and Jimi Hendrix spent evenings strumming guitars around bonfires on the beach. It's said that the inspiration for Hendrix's anthem "Castles Made of Sand" is a decayed ruin sinking slowly into the waves across the bay. Eight years ago, the birth of the annual Essaouira Festival of Gnaoua and World Music (from June 23 to 26 this year; see www.festival.gnaoua.co.ma) brought musicians back in force.
Then, American filmmakers started to return. In 2003, the filming of Oliver Stone's "Alexander" brought such stars as Angelina Jolie and Colin Farrell to town, and last year "Kingdom of Heaven," directed by Ridley Scott and starring Orlando Bloom, was partly filmed in and around Essaouira.
"They hung out here a lot," confided Emma Wilson, who moved here from Britain, about the cast and crew of "Kingdom of Heaven" over dinner at Taros, Essaouira's hippest meeting point. "Especially on the terrace, which is a complete scene when the sun is out."
As if on cue, she and her partner, Graham Carter, were joined by Taros's bon vivant proprietor, Alain Fillaud. "The best party is the one we are having now," he proclaimed. "And I will say the same tomorrow."
Mr. Fillaud took over the two-story restaurant in 2002 and has been on site ever since, chatting up and charming first-time guests and regulars alike. Talk soon turned to the topic of the moment: a conglomeration of hotel groups, including Accor, which owns the Sofitel chain, has purchased almost 900 acres across the bay to develop a golf course, holiday villas and apartments and six upmarket hotels - a total of 8,000 beds - by 2010.
Ms. Wilson and Mr. Carter, although opposed to the project, are waiting to see how it develops. (They own two homes in the medina that they rent out to visitors.)
"The big draw here is definitely the people," Ms. Wilson said. "But if things change, we can always sell and move somewhere else."
Later, Mr. Fillaud said he was cautiously optimistic about Essaouira's future. "It won't turn into Agadir," Mr. Fillaud said, referring to Morocco's mass-tourism beach destination. "But it might be a St.-Tropez or a Mykonos."
But for now, it's still Essaouira.

Saturday, September 3, 2011

IN 1939, George Orwell wrote of Westerners flocking to Marrakech in search of “camels, castles, palm-trees, Foreign Legionnaires, brass trays and bandits.” Ever since, the city has been ravishing visitors with its teeming souks, ornate palaces and sybaritic night life. In recent years, a succession of high-end openings and restorations — most notably, the lavish reopening of the hotel La Mamounia — has transformed the city into an obligatory stop for jet-setters. Yet despite Marrakesh’s new cachet, the true treasures of the enigmatic city still hide down dusty side streets and behind sagging storefronts.
Friday

5 p.m.
1) MEDINA, REFINED


For sheer energy and intrigue, few places rival the labyrinthine souks of Marrakesh’s fortified old city. Skullcapped artisans sweat over ancient lathes while overdressed French tourists haggle over inlaid cedar boxes and silver lamps. In recent years, up-and-coming designers have opened fashionable boutiques in the Souk Cherifia that put a contemporary twist on Arab-Andalusian motifs. Lalla (Souk Cherifia, First Floor, Sidi Abdelaziz; 212-661-477-228; lalla.fr) opened in 2008 and carries slouchy Mauritanian leather handbags that are carried in stylish London stores like Paul & Joe and Coco Ribbon. The designer Marion Theard recently opened La Maison Bahira (Souk Cherifia, First Floor, Sidi Abdelaziz; 212-524-386-365; maison-bahira.com), which sells her signature handwoven textiles, hammam towels and embroidered pillows. For a break from the haggling, stop by Le Jardin (32 Sidi Abdelaziz, Souk Jeld; 212-524-378-295), a cafe that opened its doors last month and is owned by Kamal Laftimi, a young Moroccan also behind the popular Café des Épices and Terrace des Épices.

7 p.m.
2) SQUARE PLATES


Djemaa el Fna, the main square of the Medina, is a motley tapestry of life, where shoppers wade through a chaos of fortune tellers, snake charmers and pushy henna painters. But it’s also one of the best places to get acquainted with the rich flavors and textures of Moroccan cuisine. Go at sundown to the square’s myriad food stalls, when hundreds of gas lanterns light up billows of steam. Ignore the men trying to divert traffic to their particular stall, and grab yourself a seat where there are plenty of locals. A good starter is a bowl of snails in saffron broth, from one of the snail stands on the eastern end of the square (10 dirhams, about $1.23 at 8.2 dirhams to the dollar). Follow that with a lamb couscous doused in harissa at one of the stalls on the north end (30 dirhams). Adventurous eaters should try one of the mutton stalls near the square’s center, where everything from sheep’s brain to skewered heart is sold.

9 p.m.
3) BOOZING à LA CHURCHILL

Le Bar Churchill, in the resplendently renovated La Mamounia (Avenue Bab Jdid; 212-524-388-600; mamounia.com), is a perfect spot for rubbing shoulders with the well-heeled set. Named for its most famous patron, Le Bar Churchill escaped the hotel’s face-lift largely unscathed, and still drips in supple black leather, leopard skin and polished chrome. If you’re seeking belly dancers, Le Comptoir Darna (Avenue Echouhada; 212-524-437-702; comptoirdarna.com), a French-Moroccan brasserie in the up-and-coming Hivernage quarter, offers one of the city’s best floor shows, a hip-shaking affair that spills down the central staircase and into the dining room.

Saturday

10 a.m.
4) SOUK CHEF


Can’t get enough tagine? Learn to make it yourself at Souk Cuisine (Zniquat Rahba, Derb Tahtah 5; 212-673-804-955; soukcuisine.com), one of several Moroccan cooking workshops that have cropped up in recent years. Run by Gemma van de Burgt, a Dutch expatriate, the half-day workshop (10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.) starts with a visit to the Rahba Kedima market to forage for quince, argan oil and other Moroccan ingredients. Classes convene in the courtyard of an old riad, where budding chefs learn how to make dishes like lamb tagine and raisin couscous, culminating in a four-course lunch on the terrace, served with mint tea and wine (40 euros).

3 p.m.
5) MANICURED JUNGLE


French colonialism still informs facets of the city, and the melding of French and Moroccan sensibilities is perhaps most beautifully expressed in the Majorelle Gardens (212-524-313-047; JardinMajorelle.com), a 12-acre botanical garden in the French district of Gueliz. The cobalt-blue gardens were designed in the 1920s by the painter Jacques Majorelle and are filled with palms, yucca, lily ponds and a huge variety of tropical flowers and cactuses. They later became the backyard of Yves Saint Laurent, whose deep love for Marrakesh is evident in his personal collection of Moroccan crafts and textiles on display in the adjoining Islamic Art Museum.

5 p.m.
6) A FOCUS ON BERBERS

After being marginalized for centuries, Berber culture is now a cause célèbre for Moroccan gallerists and historians. The Maison de la Photographie (46 Ahal Fès; 212-524-385-721; maison-delaphotographie.com) opened last year in a restored fondouk, or traditional inn, and is devoted to documenting Berber life in the Medina. A 4,500-photograph collection includes rare glimpses of Jewish Berbers and a fascinating assemblage of glass plates dating from 1862. The museum is crowned with a roof cafe, which offers stellar views of the Medina. The 40-dirham ticket also gets you into Ecomusée Berbere de l’Ourika (Vilage de Tafza, Route de l’Ourika, Km. 37; 212-524-385-721; ecomuseeberbere.com), a new museum 23 miles outside the city that captures life in a traditional Berber village.

8 p.m.
7) FROM BEIRUT, WITH LOVE


If the city’s hotels have gone upscale, the dining scene has gone through the roof. Marcel Chiche, a restaurateur and local night-life titan, recently opened Azar (Rue de Yougoslavie, near Boulevard Hassan II; 212-524-430-920; azarmarrakech.com), a splashy Lebanese restaurant that draws a party-ready crowd. The shimmering design of the dining room is the work of Younes Duret, a rising French-Moroccan designer. The modern Lebanese dishes include eggplant caviar with sesame crème (40 dirhams) and a rotisserie chicken (140). After dinner, take the Astroturf-carpeted elevator to the downstairs bar, where the city’s beautiful people dance to live Arabic pop music.

11 p.m.
8) NORTH AFRICAN NIGHTS

Though Gueliz still buzzes with bars and clubs, the newer action is clustered in the industrial Hivernage district. One of the most fashionable spots is Lotus Club (Rue Ahmed Chawki; 212-524-431-537; riadslotus.com), a laid-back restaurant and nightclub styled as an urban retreat. On the weekends, 20- and 30-somethings mingle under floral-kitsch white lamps as D.J.’s mix electronic beats with Bollywood pop.

Sunday

10 a.m.
9) SWEAT ROYALLY


In the land of a thousand hammams, mega-spas seem to get larger by the day. It doesn’t get more lavish than the Royal Mansour (Rue Abou Abbas el Sebti; 212-529-808-080; royalmansour.com), a fortressed pleasure palace consisting of 53 riads connected by tunnels that is owned by King Mohammed VI. Women in elaborately embroidered caftans lead visitors through a palatial foyer into private chambers where treatments include an aromatic massage with argan oil, from 1,200 dirhams.

Noon
10) BOUTIQUE SHOPPING


Tired of haggling? Head to the fashionable boutiques that have opened recently along Rue de la Liberté in Gueliz. Moor (7 Rue des Anciens Marrakchis; 212-524-458-274; akbardelights.com) sells leather floor pillows and stylish tunics under a ceiling covered in giant white lanterns. Though the name of this children’s shop is unwieldy even for French-speakers, La Manufacture de Vêtements Pour Enfants Sages (44 Rue des Anciens Marrakchis; 212-524-446-704) carries everything from handmade Moroccan pajamas to colorful stuffed camels. A common complaint among Marrakesh art collectors is that all the good young artists decamp to Europe. But new galleries like David Bloch Gallery (8 bis Rue des Vieux Marrakchis; 212-524-457-595; davidblochgallery.com), which specializes in street art, have become a platform for up-and-coming French and Moroccan artists. The gallery, housed in a stark concrete block covered with colorful graffiti, creates yet another level of contrast in the ever-evolving city.

IF YOU GO

The boho-chic Peacock Pavilions (Kilometer 13, Route de Ourzazate; peacockpavilions.com), opened this year, sits on an 8.5-acre grove just outside the city. It’s made up of two stunning pavilions. The smaller, 1,300-square-foot double-room pavilion costs 350 euros a night, $460 at $1.31 to the euro; one of the rooms can also be rented for 150 euros.

After a three-year renovation by the Parisian architect Jacques Garcia, La Mamounia (Avenue Bab Jdid; 212-524-388-600; mamounia.com), originally opened in 1923, has never been grander. It now has indoor and outdoor pools and Michelin-starred chefs, not to mention helicopter rides over the Atlas Mountains. Rooms from 665 euros.

In a renovated traditional riad well-situated within the Medina, the welcoming and affordable Riad Dar Khmissa (166 Derb Jamaa; Arset Moussa Lakbira; 212-524-443-707; dar-khmissa-marrakech.com) offers seven comfortable rooms and a lovely roof terrace. From 50 euros, including a delicious home-cooked Moroccan breakfast.
Powered by Blogger.