Crowds stream through Bab Boujloud, the 11th century gate that is
Transcription
Crowds stream through Bab Boujloud, the 11th century gate that is
C rowds stream through Bab Boujloud, the 11th century gate that is perhaps the most photographed entrance into Fez al-Bali, the ancient medina of this Moroccan city. While Boujloud's blue and green tiles glint under a setting sun, the immense square outside the gate swarms with people jockeying for position along brick ramps and across the open spaces of Place Pacha el-Baghdadi. As home-town guests at one of the free concerts featured in the annual Fez Festival of World Sacred Music, these Fassis (people of Fez) are in for a treat. This evening's gig by Johnny Clegg is a reprise of last night's performance at a more upscale venue, Bab Makina. There, in an outdoor theatre fronting the royal palace, a well-heeled audience had danced in the aisles to the sounds of Clegg, also as "the White Zulu", and his South African band. Here in Place Pacha el-Baghdadi, the kids of the medina do the same, but with more abandon. The little ones squeal as they spin on carousels improvised from the circular bases of unused flag stands, while their older brothers toss caps and sometimes their smaller siblings, in the air. Two nights earlier, the Festival, now in its 13th year, opened under the "royal patronage of His Majesty Mohammed VI" who, in his opening remarks, cited Morocco's cultural and spiritual capital, as a natural to such an event. had King Fez, host Before the Festival's first performance, royal guards stood to attention as Morocco's Princess Consort Lalla Salma, Princess Lalla Meryem, the sister of Mohammed VI, Her Majesty Queen Rania AI-Abdullah of Jordan and Madame Bernadette Chirac, former first lady of France, as guests of honour, were escorted to their front-line seats amid the hubbub and flashing cameras of an enthusiastic crowd. Outside, onlookers in jellabas (the hooded cloaks worn by both men and women in Morocco), headscarves and a few in fancy western dress, lined the streets leading to Bab Makina's palace courtyard and its crenellated walls, hoping to catch a glimpse of ticketed festival goers decamping from chaufferdriven cars. Its grand courtyard now fitted with a concert stage, seating for a thousand spectators and snack stands ready to serve up Moroccan specialities and Haaqan Dazs ice cream, Bab Makina was ready for action. The opening concert featured the Christian sacred music of Handel, Pergolesi and others, performed by US-born Barbara Hendricks and Sweden's Baroque Ensemble of Drottningholm. Starry skies and almost hallucinogenic purple and orange stage lighting provided a back-drop for hawks that swooped and dipped with the music. Half-way through Pergolesi's Stabat Mater the call to prayer sounded out from the city's many minarets, but this caused barely a flutter across the audience and no notice at all was taken by the musicians. The highlight of the evening was an acapella negro spiritual medley by Ms Hendricks, a personal favourite of hers that she first performed in 2002 for the East Tlrnor Independence Day Ceremony. The Fez World Sacred Music Festival was established after the first Gulf War, with the aim of demonstrating the possibilities for reconciling the Christian, Jewish and Muslim worlds through music. Speaking to the media after her concert, Barbara Hendricks noted the importance of musical "conversations" that cross cultural boundaries. This, she stressed, can only serve to mutually reinforce one's own cultural identity while broadening one's understanding of other traditions. During another Bab Makina performance, Angelique Kidju, an internationally known Beninese singer now living in New York, posed the question "Is it possible to keep your own culture and identity in a complex, global community?" Perhaps in partial answer, members of the audience joined her onstage for one of her Afropop songs, "Ae Ae," which laments the necessity for young Africans to move abroad to improve their lives. Photos: Tom Fakler The Andalusian gardens of Oar Batha Museum, formerly a palace, provided an intimate setting for afternoon performances among jacarandas and flowering shrubs. There, under an ancient Barbary oak, musicians were accompanied by unseen songbirds. For the performance I attended, the Iranian singer Parissa and the acclaimed Dastan Ensemble playing traditional instruments celebrated the poetry of Rumi and other mystical poets as the birds twittered along. Even though most of the audience did not understand Farsi, the group enthralled them for more than an hour, and with the circular rhythms and celebratory mood of the performance, time flew. Perhaps my favorite performance of the festival was the firstever public offering of Ayin-i Djern, the official ceremony of the Mevlevi sufis of Turkey. It was performed by members of the Kadiria and Mawlawiya brotherhoods, and featured dervishes whirling to mesmerising music led by Turkish reed flute master Kudsi Erguner. The dervishes whirled for more than an hour, their graceful movements apparently unscripted but completely synchronised with the music and chanting that accompanied them. This was the most spiritual of the Festival events I attended, with those on stage apparently oblivious to the audience observing the ancient invocations. When they were done, the singers, musicians and dancers bowed solemnly before leaving the darkened stage. After they had gone, the audience filed quietly out of the Bab Makina theatre. This thoughtful ending was in stark contrast to the lively applause and animated conversations that followed most festival concerts. Does the Fez World Sacred Music Festival fulfil its stated aim of promoting brotherhood across cultures and spiritual traditions? Do the performances of the festival demonstrate challenges to culture and identity? I cannot answer these questions from my brief exposure to this year's festival. The festival offers a fine sampler of Islamic music, presented in harmony with other spiritual traditions. And Fez itself is, as the king promised, just the right place to experience such a variety of sacred, spiritual, or just plain spirited, musical offerings. _ Fez, Morocco's oldest imperial city Fez is Morocco's third-largest city, with just over a million inhabitants. Its medina, Fez al-8ali, is one of the largest car-free urban areas in the world, occupying 889 acres of land. The only means of transport in the medina are feet, bicycles, and donkeys. Founded in the ninth century and home to the world's oldest university, Fez reached its height in the 13th-14th centuries under the Merenids, replacing Marrakesh as the capital of the kingdom. Although the political capital of Morocco was transferred to Rabat in 1912, Fez retained its status as the country's cultural and spiritual centre. It was named a UNESCO World Heritage City in 1981. In April, the Organization of the Islamic Conference designated the city as one of four capitals of Islamic culture for 2007, along with Tripoli, Tashkent and Dakar.