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Tombouctou
lay at the end of our journey, a hot, dusty four-hour
boat trip from Diré. As we drew closer, our excitement
grew. On the banks of the river, huge tents of swooping
white canvas heralded our approach to this country of
nomads. Hippos occasionally surfaced from under the dark
water, their eyes glaring at the suddenly fragile-looking
bow of our pinasse. The town itself, with its flat-roofed
buildings and empty streets, is somewhat disappointing
after the grandeur of Djenné. But it is notable
for its two major mosques -- the Djingareiber and the
Sankore -- as well as the ornate wood and metal doors
that adorn some of the larger houses. However, the city's
legend as the ancient world's most famous center of Muslim
wealth and scholarship continues to eclipse its present-day
reality. This is not the "exquisite, pure, delicious,
illustrious, blessed city" described by the writer
Abderhaman Sadi in 1630. Today, there are only illustrious
ghosts.
The
city's origins are found in the desert encampments of
nomads, dating from before the 11th century. Local lore
tells of an old woman named Bouctou who was asked to guard
the wells of wandering Tuareg nomads. Tin-Bouctou means
"the place of Bouctou's wells."
Tombouctou's
heyday came with the wealth of trans-Saharan trade, when
local nomads and businessmen became adept at extracting
heavy tolls from camel caravans carrying salt and gold.
More than 12,000 camels passed through the city each year.
The town also grew famous for its university, the Medersa,
and its 180 Koranic schools serving 25,000 students from
throughout the Islamic world. In 1325, the Malian King
Mansa Moussa used his empire's gold wealth to commission
a grand mosque, the ruins of which now sit beneath the
Djingareiber.
The
sea trade that killed Djenné's fortunes gradually
eroded Tombouctou's glory as well. Today, the most majestic
aspect of the city is its enduring mystique and the endless
white desert that encircles it.
We
drove an hour out into the sands to a CARE-built water
hole visited by the Tuareg, the famous nomads who wander
the Sahara from Libya down to Burkina Faso, and who recently
ended an armed struggle for development assistance from
the government. Despite the social upheaval caused by
the conflict, these "blue men of the desert"
(named for the indigo headdresses they often wear) still
hold fast to their traditional ways. Their camel caravans
continue to ferry salt and other commodities across the
Sahara. Many of the men carry the traditional takouba,
a broad, straight, double-edged sword that is intricately
forged from silver, copper, leather and steel. And it
is still unusual to see Tuareg women in public; many rarely
leave sequestered desert encampments, letting their men
search for food and water. The definition of a good husband,
according to a Tuareg saying, is "one who brings
enough water."
Westerners
have romanticized the Taureg, and stories abound in Mali
and Niger of enamoured Peace Corps volunteers and other
expatriates who have joined these desert warriors. But
the reality is that the recent civil war and two devastating
droughts have made the Tuareg among the poorest of Mali's
tribes. Their misery was compounded by the destruction
of much of Tombouctou's infrastructure during the recent
conflict. So it is the rehabilitation of this infrastructure
-- specifically schools and wells -- to which CARE has dedicated
its efforts.
"They
see themselves falling behind," says CARE's Dennis
Billingsley, who has worked with the Tuareg for more than
five years. "So the government and agencies like
CARE, in order to promote peace and reconciliation, are
trying to help them get back on their feet."
For
most Tuareg and Bella tribesmen, the overwhelming priority
is water for the camels, goats and donkeys they still
herd over thousands of miles of scorching desert.
"It
is our biggest problem," says Mohamed Aboubaerine
Ag, 37 , who has brought his camels and goats to drink
at the CARE well. "Without water, we could die, our
animals could die."
CARE
is rehabilitating traditional water points throughout
the Tombouctou area and hundreds of miles out into the
desert. In addition, CARE is also building primary schools,
providing school feeding and working to organize parents'
associations. For Tuareg -- whose traditional nomadic way
of life has in the past precluded formal education -- schooling
now represents new opportunities.
"I
have been in the desert for 37 years," says Aboubaerine
Ag. "Nothing has changed. I now think it is good
to seek a new
way to live. I would like to send my children to school.
Maybe they could get a job working for the government
or CARE."
Such
views are more prevalent among the young. There are still
elderly Tuareg, such as Almohari Ag , 62, who affirms:
"We were born this way. We die this way. The other
ways we ignore."
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