Morocco transports Sathya Saran
to another world.
He's dressed in quaint robes, wears a cap, and
sings Hindi songs, specifically from
Kabhi
Kabhi.
While he tells us that the Neander-thals inhabited Morocco before
the Berbers came in and later, the Portuguese and the French, our guide also
tells us that he adores Shah Rukh Khan.
In one short bus ride from the
airport to the centre of town, his blend of humour and history have wiped away
the fatigue of the eight-hour flight from Dubai, and the hours of sleeplessness
that preceded it. Gathered here are some of the facts about Morocco that
survived five hectic days of travelling through the country.
CASABLANCA CALLS

The city was founded by a Berber tribe, and in the hazy past when
it was created out of warring villages, was called Anfa.
The Portuguese
came in the 16th century and renamed it Casa Branca, in the way settlers do, to
make sense to themselves... The white houses inspired the name. The rich plains
and the wool-laden sheep attracted other nations, among them the English, with
their penchant for world conquest by way of adventure, and the Spanish, who were
practically neighbours anyway, across the Mediterranean.
Casa Branca
finally became Casablanca in the 19th century, after God’s hand, in the
form of an earthquake, dispersed the Portuguese, and the Sultans took over. It
was not long after that that the Europeans returned. Frenchmen, Jews, Spaniards,
Arabs...

‘Casa’, as the city is fondly referred to by all we
meet, gathered them all within its two stately gates that seemed more to welcome
than to repel visitors. And thanks to the fertile soil that Morocco boasts of,
and the port, and the readiness to trade, the city flourished to become a
commercial capital.
BEHOLD BEAUTY
The
city is pretty, but it is the imposing mosque that stands like a sentinel,
beckoning, that demands attention.
We walk the stone pathways buffeted by
winds that are blowing in from the Atlantic. It is Friday, and the faithful are
enclosed behind the great electronically-operated doors, so we have to satisfy
ourselves with looking at the wonderful exteriors.
The mosque - our guide,
who has had an image change today, and is dressed in traditional garb, tells us
- was built by a Frenchman, Michel Pinseau. Twenty-five thousand worshippers, of
whom 7,000 could be women, can fit in the hall and the galleries, and on holy
days, 80,000 can be accommodated in the area around.

While the photographer busies himself with capturing the grandeur
on film, I watch the scene around me. Girls, probably from colleges or still in
school, gather in small groups, chattering as they walk... Mothers sit on the
steps while children play. I look at the intricate stonework, bend down and pick
up chips of blue stone that lie in the cracks between the steps and make myself
a souvenir.
CASABLANCA BY NIGHT
IS A DIFFERENT STORY
We are at the Le Reserve Disco... The water laps
softly outside, the wind is doing a dance of its own. It’s just short of
midnight, and the diners are folding their napkins and getting ready for some
serious boogeying. Tall drinks in taller glasses appear on tables, the music is
turned up, and the sound of young voices fills the air.
As we leave on a
disco-hopping mission, couples are thronging in. The djelebas have been firmly
tucked away into bottom drawers; high fashion hits the streets at night. With
their high colour and snapping eyes, a little make-up transforms all the young
women into instant model material.
Downtown, at Caesar’s Disco at
the Sheraton Hotel, across from Le Meridien, the night is already swinging. The
music is as heady and loud as anywhere in the world, the women more beautiful,
and soon, tables turn into dance floors, as heels rap out rhythms that send the
blood racing.
The old-fashioned rooster who believes in early to bed and
the rest of that adage, is readying for his wake-up call, when the place finally
starts to empty and we troop out, weary yet exhilarated, to find our bit of
shuteye.
What a way to discover Casablanca... Bergman and Bogart never had
it so good.
Footloose In
FES