The little alley ways of the Saida Souq |
Saturday, I took my father to visit a
friend down south in Kfar Tibnit. She was still busy with trimming the
olive trees, and so on our way we decided to stop at the old souq in Saida,
which is probably the only souq in the country that is still authentic and
working.
The little alley ways have been paved not that long ago, and some of
the alleys have been obviously restored, but the previous owners and business
did not have to make place for fancy shops and business. You can’t enter with a
car, and everything has to be brought in by handcar, or little electric scooters.
Trades are still organized by quarters.
You’ve got the gold souq, the vegetable
souq, there are alleys where all the woodworkers and carpenters are clustered,
the upholstery guys are in one street together, the mattress makers and blanket
sellers in another, there are the spice sellers, the butchers, the head scarves
and bra sellers, and in between you have your pastry shops and bakeries, the
mosques and the schools, and in between that, you have tiny little alleys and
stair cases that lead to even tinier little court yards and houses; a veritable
labyrinth. Hollywood could film an entire series on the middle ages here without ever having to change a thing of the scenery.
Remove the wires and the blue bin, and you are in 1455 AD |
After that, we spent the afternoon in Kfar Tibnit. When the evening was approaching,
it was time to go home. As I had gotten stuck in a nasty traffic jam in Sidon,
and I do not like take the same road twice, I wondered if I could go from Kfar
Tibnit straight to the small mountain village in the Shouf where we were
sleeping that night. Google Maps showed that this was very well possible.
Granted, it would take some time (2:19 minutes), but we were not in a hurry.
And armed with Google maps, we went on our way.
The bait shop. No idea how this guy is going to get something from the back of his shop |
But the night fell quite rapidly, Google maps kept
shifting its path from one road to another, seemingly unsure of what road it should
take, and for some strange reason, there seemed to be a massive black-out in
the entire region; not one silly street light worked. Or maybe there weren’t
any.
Traffic became sparser and sparser, while road
constructions seemed to be on the rise. Entire stretches of tarmac just dissipated
as we drove along.
Every now and then I consulted Google maps again, but the app had change to night vision mode, and in black, the map of Lebanon
looked quite unfamiliar to me. I tried to get on the road alongside the Qaroun
Lake, because once there, I know how to get home, but it seemed a lot easier
than it was in reality in the pitch dark.
Coffee on its way |
Somewhere, I knew, I had to go to the right, otherwise I’d
end up in the mountains of Jezzine, and then it would be tiny little hairpin roads
for hours and hours. And so when Google
maps suddenly indicates that I should turn right, off the main road into a
rather narrow wooded road, but into the Beqaa Valley, I thought that be a good
idea.
And so here we drive, along this tiny little road, and
not a village, house or light in sight. It’s a good thing my father doesn’t see
too well; he’s 102 and has only one eye. I do not see much either, for that
matter. I am constantly driving with big lights, blinding anyone coming from the opposite direction, but no one is coming from the opposite direction. We are clearly the only ones.
But I do see the flags in drums suddenly appear on both
sides of the road. The logo of Hezbollah, even in the dark, is like that of
Coca Cola; recognizable even when only partly visible. And then a large metal
barrier, with a young man in front of it.
A road block, but not an army one.
No gun, but the baseball cap
and that typical
blue parka are an open book: I have stumbled upon a gate with a Hezbollah
guard in front of it.
More medieval scenes. The should organize some Air BNB's here. "Sleep in an authetic souq." |
In the middle of nowhere, in the dark, on an unmarked
road, with a phone in my hand. Uhhh. How
is this going to look? Hezbollah guards are notoriously suspicious, even when
you have a credible story.
Saad Harriri just resigned blaming Hezbollah and the
Iranians for threatening his life, and here are two foreigners in the middle of
nowhere, in the dark, at some sort of Hezbollah base, claiming to be driving to a little obscure town in the
Shouf which is like very very far away, while using Google maps. No Lebanese
would ever be doing this.
"Where are you going?”
“Well, that way,” I point to the barrier, showing the road on my phone.
“But where do you need to go?”
Naming the little town to where I intend to drive is not
going to help much; he probably never heard of it. So I try “Shtoura”. Not
quite where I need to be, but it’s on the way. ”And my map says I need to drive
here.”
“Yes,” he replies, and then pauses for while, “But this
road is closed.”
“So how do I get to Shtoura?”
“You need to go back to the main road, and then to the
right. Ask at the army check point down the road.”
Yes, about that army check point.
You see, I am not really supposed to drive through this region with a foreigner (my dad) without permission from the army headquarters in Saida. Not sure why, but that’s the rule. I sort of had banked on the fact that in the dark, the soldiers don’t really check who is in the car, they just wave you through, so I am sure as heck not going to stop at that check point and ask for directions.
You see, I am not really supposed to drive through this region with a foreigner (my dad) without permission from the army headquarters in Saida. Not sure why, but that’s the rule. I sort of had banked on the fact that in the dark, the soldiers don’t really check who is in the car, they just wave you through, so I am sure as heck not going to stop at that check point and ask for directions.
Anyway. Like a good little obedient citizen, I, very nicely and very meekly, turn quietly around, go back on the
main road, do not ask for directions at the army check point, and decide to just go along with the hairpin mountain roads.
When we do get home, some three hours later, my father says, "Wonderful trip.”
2 comments:
Great story! Maybe an adventure better appreciated after the fact. Loved the photos, they remind me of Jerusalem's Old City where I loved to wander and get lost in the narrow alleys of the Muslim Quarter. I'd buy an "Palestinian pizza" to munch on (flat bread with olive oil and za'atar)and enjoyed all the exotic smells and watching the life there.
Great pics, as always!
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