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Timbuktu, Mali
today
In Timbuktu the family of historian Ismael
Haidara and others in his Zakhor organization are
investigating the spiritual beliefs of their
ancestors. In many ways life has not changed for
centuries in Timbuktu. The streets are still
sparse and sandy, the air is still heavy with
heat. Nomads still lead camels hauling salt
blocks from the desert to the weekly market;
traders still sell beads and drink strong tea
beneath makeshift tents that shield them from the
sun. Changing climate patterns has caused even
more and more land around Timbuktu to succumb to
the encroaching desert. Changing economic
patterns and advances in communications and
transportation have caused the focus of trading
in West Africa to shift from Timbuktu to other
major hubs. Today Timbuktu is a shadow of the
grand trading center it was in the middle of the
last millennium. Still, the in this new world
geographical distance does not mean as much as it
used to. The information age is slowly reaching
Timbuktu. Today some households have televisions,
upon which they watch everything from CNN to
Spanish soap operas dubbed into French. The
Internet is coming and perhaps someday merchants
in Timbuktu will be able to reclaim their place
as a hub of the African economy.
According to Haidara, there are many rural
Malians, living mostly in villages along the
Niger River on the edge of the Sahara, have begun
to explore the religion of their ancestors. These
villagers, like those in Tangasne and Kirshamba,
are farmers, pot-makers and mat weavers; they are
Orthodox Muslims, but they still maintain many
Jewish traditions as vestiges of their ancestors
past.
Tangasane is a tiny village across the
Boucle du Niger, an inland delta crosscut with
rivers, lakes and channels that come together
just before Timbuktu. Though they have settled in
their current village, the members of the
Tangasane community still live like their nomadic
ancestors, dwelling in temporary structures built
beneath palm trees and termite mounds. The elders
of the community are bearded and wear long,
flowing Saharan robes. Their village lore
dictates that they are descendants of Jews and
though they have all converted to Islam they are
open to exploring their Jewish ancestry. In the
village of Kirshamba, all descendants of Jews
have the last name of Djarumba, which means the
same as "Aliahoudou-hou," the word for
Jews in Songhai. Though they too have converted
to Islam, there is a chapter of Zakhor there and
the villagers are learning about their Hebrew
roots.
(Some of
Haidara's family members are pictured above with
friend and fellow researcher, Abdulqadir.)
timbuktu
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