Two weeks ago marked the three-day holiday of Eid Al-Adha, or “feast of the sacrifice.” The second of two major holidays in Islam, it celebrates the moment when Abraham was ready to sacrifice his only son, Ishmael, to God. However, when Abraham attempted to cut Ishmael’s throat, God substituted his son for a sheep, and left Ishmael unharmed.
Much like Christmas in the United States, Eid takes over the spirit of the city. People are off of school and work. The holiday is a time of happiness, of giving, and of celebration. The Marjanes (Moroccan Wal-Marts) portion off parts of their parking lots to sell sheep. Teenagers erect hay huts in the streets of the medina where they sell hay, charcoal, and freshly sharpened knives.
The day had come. Sheep were dragged, kicked, and carried through the streets, and others bleat from the rooftops all around me, perhaps aware of their inevitable demise.
When I originally asked my host dad if we would be celebrating the holiday, he replied, “Non, c’est trop sale.” (No, that’s too dirty.) However, my host brother Malak apparently insisted that we participate, and a goat was led up the stairs of our three-story home the next day.
The process takes about 15 or 20 minutes altogether. The throat is slit, the blood is drained, the goat is hung, and the animal is dressed. While I may have had some reservations about it in the beginning, I didn’t find the sacrifice disturbing. In fact, I found it liberating to for once see the actual animal I would be eating, a luxury we are rarely afforded in the United States.
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Mr. Azami roasts liver brochettes on a small barbecue grill just twenty minutes after slaughtering the goat. |
And then, just as quickly as the holiday had started, it was over. The streets went back to normal, school started once again, and life in Morocco resumed.
That Wednesday, the J-Squad was chaperoned by Aida Alami, one of mentors on the program, to the studios of 2M in Casablanca, which is one of the larger television stations in Morocco. We toured the building, got a look at the newsroom, various sets where they film talk shows and game shows, and we stayed for the broadcast of the francophone evening news, which we were able to watch from the control room. It was certainly one of the highlights of the week.
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The control room of 2M during the evening francophone newscast. The control room is extremely out-of-date, but the employees there stand by their equipment, saying it "doesn't crash or lock up." |
Al and I shared a host mom for the week, Ms. Fatima Zaraoui. After going through a divorce, she used her own money to build a home on the family’s compound, where she takes care of the children, tends to the fields, and keeps a quaint little home. Maya Whitfield, another J-Squad-er, stayed in another one of the houses on the compound, so we saw her quite frequently during the week.
The week was spent playing games with the children on the compound, walking around the expansive commune to visit with the village people, and doing a little bit of manual labor on the family fields.
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Al and Maya pose for Photobooth pictures with the host family in Fatima's living room. Karime is on the far left poking his head in. Fatima is next to him in the floral shirt. |
By the end of the week, we were all ready to get back to Rabat, but it was surprisingly emotional leaving our host families. It’s amazing how you can get to know someone in a week.
We have one week until we take off for our one-day Northern Excursion to Chefchaouen and Ceuta, Spain. Then, we have one more week until we begin the Independent Study in Journalism portion of this Moroccan adventure. More to come soon.
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