“Water is life,” Hicham says while we eat barbecued fish on a coastal boardwalk in the fortress town of Essaouira.
“When Europeans come to Morocco, they are coming for all the sunshine. But here in Morocco, we celebrate the day when it rains. That is when everybody here is the happiest. In Morocco, rain controls the economy. If you don’t have enough rain, everybody suffers.”
Hicham, a family friend from the coastal city of Agadir, agreed to take off work for a week and act as my driver in Morocco.
The sky over the Atlantic coast is a deep blue, with only a few wispy, white clouds. If in Marrakech, the people find inspiration for their color palette in the sandstone hues of the desert and mountains, then in Essaouira, it is the sky and ocean, for Essaouira is a city of whitewashed walls and blue-painted shutters.
On some doors, where the paint is scuffed down to the bare wood, you can see the history of the door: one decade painted ultramarine, the next, azure, and then maybe majorelle or cerulean; but it is blue all the way through, and the effect, of all this blue and white, against a blue sea and a blue sky, is of an enchanted sky fortress, disconnected from Earth.
But the blue paint is more connected to the sea than the sky, as is all of Essaouira’s history. The city sits right on the coast, facing out from a moon-shaped bay, which is protected by the Purple Islands. These islands shield the bay, and Essaouira, from the open sea.
The Purple Islands have always dictated the importance of the area. By 1,000 B.C., after 2,000 years of use of the area by indigenous Berber fishermen, Phoenician traders set up trading villages, and were lured by the presence of murex shells, which contained glands of pigmented mucus.
The pigment made of murex shells harvested in the Mediterranean and beyond is usually called Tyrian purple — reddish purple, rare and expensive throughout the ancient world and sought after by the great rulers of the Old World.
But the murex shells of the Purple Islands are not reddish-purple at all. These beautiful Hexaplex trunculus murex mollusks produce a range between indigo, royal blue and bluish-purple, and the hue is known today as Phoenician purple after the traders that built production facilities on the Purple Islands.
“Game of Thrones” connection
The blues we see today honor the history of the city’s 3,000-year relationship with the murex shells.
And you see that color throughout the city. A lovely bluish-purple, painted even on every wooden boat that fishes the Purple Islands each morning. Those bluish-purple boats are captured briefly as Slaver’s Bay in the third season of “Game of Thrones,” where the ocean-facing walls and gates of Essaouira double as the backdrop for much of Daenerys Targaryen’s story.
After lunch, we drive to a small town at the southern end of Essaouira Bay, looking for access to the Oued Ksob River. For much of the past thirty years, the lone cafe in Diabat has been successful in propagating a story of how Jimi Hendrix lived here for some time in the 1960s, writing his famous songs on the beach.
Out beyond the high tide mark on the beach, a ruined 18th-century watchtower lies, like a fallen sandcastle. This, Moroccans from the area will exclaim, was the inspiration for Hendrix’s “Castles Made of Sand.” The purple murex dye, of course, was the inspiration for the psychedelic anthem, “Purple Haze.”
Hotels throughout the country claim that he stayed there, and in Essaouira, his presence is felt on the busier streets, in various forms. A rumor says that Hendrix wanted to buy the entire town of Diabat. Another states that he was in the planning stages of purchasing Mogador Island, the largest of the Purple Islands, but the Moroccan government was forced to stop the sale.
Others claim he was working on turning Diabat into a commune with the help of Cat Stevens and Bob Marley. And that he fathered many Moroccan children and also wanted to adopt a young Moroccan boy and bring him to Seattle. That while he was in Morocco, he drove around in a hippie van and met up with Timothy Leary.
Jimi Hendrix did visit Essaouira once, for a day or two. He stayed in a luxury hotel with a friend. But he never wrote songs here, and certainly never visited dusty Diabat.
We park the car on a bridge over the Oued Ksob and walk out through a series of improvised trails toward the mouth of the river. These river mouths in the desert, with their still water and wide clay mud flats, are magnets for birds. Today, a red kite floats in the sky above us, Mediterranean warbler species abound in the thickets and several species of sandpipers are in the river marshes. Closer toward the beach, we see stilts, terns and gulls. From here, we can see the ruined watchtower, the Purple Islands and the whitewashed walls of Essaouira.
I don’t think Hicham has ever looked at birds through binoculars before, but it’s a reward to see him in his skinny black jacket, fashionable black pants and black dress shoes investigating a handful of spoonbills.
Back to Marrakech
After the sun sets, and the blue hour sets over Essaouira, we drive the desert road back to Marrakech. It is amazing how quickly the stars become visible at night here. It extends that feeling of Essaouira being a sort of floating fortress, off on its own. The road is a straight one through rocky desert, so for much of the drive there is just black below, and lights above.
“What is the relationship between Morocco and the other Muslim and North African countries?” I ask Hicham. “They love us,” he says. “It is true that we have some problems with Algeria. But it is a problem with their government, not the people. We love the Algerian people. And everybody sees Morocco as the symbol for liberty. They love our liberty.”
This was how I had perceived Morocco as well: as a special exception within the Muslim states, as a progressive model for the rest of the Muslim world. A country that, far from the epicenter of places such as Saudi Arabia, had developed its own distinctly laid-back culture.
Freedom of the press, female politicians, secular political parties. This exception interested me keenly, particularly because of its relationship to my own state of Oregon. I explain this to Hicham.
“I see Morocco as being like what Oregon is to the United States. Both sit in the northwest corner and face out across a large ocean. Oregon is thousands of miles from Washington, D.C., and New York City. You are thousands of miles from Saudi Arabia. Both have a band of green along the coast, but the interior is dry, largely unpopulated desert. Both are largely rural, and both capture the hearts of their region.”
I tried to describe Carrie Brownstein and Fred Armisen, playing various Oregon stereotypes, and suggested that Morocco would be that place in a North African sketch comedy.
And then, in the distance, the warm lights of Marrakech.
If you go
To get toEssaouira, book a flight to Marrakech through Amsterdam, the best route from Portland if you want to keep your flight schedule to two flights each way.
Essaouira is a 2 1/2-hour drive from Marrakechand can be visited as a day trip or overnight from Marrakech. Any hotel in Marrakech will be able to arrange a driver for about $80. The road between Marrakech and Essaouira is a safe, modern road offering desert scenery, olive groves and argan trees.
Erik Gauger, Special to The Oregonian
Erik Gauger lives in Portland. His blog is illustrated with a large-format 4×5 camera, hand-painted sketches, watercolor maps and travel notes.