Showing posts with label Culture of Morocco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Culture of Morocco. Show all posts

Discover Morocco Culture with Cultural Tours

Discover Morocco Culture with Cultural Tours 

Moroccan culture talks about ethics and civilization, followed by the people. Moroccan cultural tours says about people, their behavior, the tradition has continued and many other concept which is considered the most important and essential and necessary for most people. These cultural tours comes with wide respected thoughts, beliefs are a set of behaviors to follow people, festival and religion. Culture Morocco is part of the comprehensive and detailed population history and tradition. Travel to Morocco and holidays allow people to learn about the visits of Moroccan culture. Arts and culture in Morocco is excellent and although people say about the social structure of Morocco. Cultural visits Morocco specified ethics, civilization, religion, diversity and all its specifications. Cultural language of Morocco is totally different and is different from other languages. 
Marrakech

The culture of Morocco comes with Berber tents and camel Morocco and women are more civilized and they are personalized. Hostal de Fes, Morocco time, women in Morocco, Morocco food, says Morocco and education on cultural visits to Morocco. Culture Morocco offers a beautiful culture of relaxed people traditionalized, personalized and do to enjoy with Moroccan cultural civilization. The mixture of French and Moroccan Islamic religion to make us a unique destination. It is important for travelers to learn as much as possible in advance so that we can fly respect these differences and minimize any negative impact. 

Modest dress and a few words in the local language are the keys to open the doors of the local interaction in Morocco. Respect and understanding of differences between self and other citizens of the world will be beneficial interaction for all parties. Especially his visit to the small village of Imlil in the High Atlas mountains and camping experience in the Sahara with the Berber village gives you the opportunity to share the best of yourself and get the best of the inhabitants of this region have to offer. This will be an unforgettable experience for you. 

Trekking in the Atlas Mountains will surely make for an amazing holiday. Small towns perched on the slopes of the mountains, the warmth and hospitality of the Berber people and the spectacular views there all add up to an incredible vacation Atlas Mountains. Marrakech or Marrakesh, known as the "Red City" or "Al Hamra," is a famous city with a population of 1,036,500 in the southwest of Morocco, near the foothills of the Atlas Mountains. After Casablanca, Marrakech is the second largest city of Morocco and is known to early travelers as "Morocco City." Before the advent of the Almoravids in the 11th century, this area was considered the city of Aghmat. 

Marrakech has the largest traditional market in Morocco and the place occupied in the entire African continent, also called Djemaa el Fna. Place teems with acrobats, storytellers, dancers, musicians and vendors of water per day; and food stalls by night, becoming a large outdoor restaurant. 

Like many cities in North Africa and the Middle East, Marrakech comprises both its ancient walled city of Medina and the adjacent modern city called Gueliz. It is served by Menara International Airport and a rail link to Casablanca and the north.

Culture of Morocco

Morocco is an ethnically diverse country with a rich culture and civilization. Through Moroccan history, it has hosted many people coming from East (Phoenicians, Carthaginians, Jews and Arabs), South (Sub-Saharan Africans) and North (Romans, Vandals, Andalusians, Moors and Jews). All those civilizations have had an impact on the social structure of Morocco. It conceived various forms of beliefs, from paganism, Judaism, and Christianity to Islam.
Gnawa

Since independence a veritable blossoming has taken place in painting and sculpture, popular music, amateur theatre, and filmmaking. The Moroccan National Theatre (founded 1956) offers regular productions of Moroccan and French dramatic works. Art and music festivals take place throughout the country during the summer months, among them the World Sacred Music Festival at Fès.
Each region possesses its own specificities, thus contributing to the national culture and to the legacy of civilization. Morocco has set among its top priorities the protection of its diverse legacy and the preservation of its cultural heritage.
Culturally speaking, Morocco has always been successful in combining its Berber, Jewish and Arabic cultural heritage with external influences such as the French and the Spanish and, during the last decades, the Anglo-American lifestyles.

Culture of Morocco

Culture of Morocco


Morocco is a country with a multiethnic society and a rich culture, civilization, and etiquette. Throughout Moroccan history, Morocco has hosted many peoples, in addition to the indigenous Berbers, coming from the East (Phoenicians, Jews, and Arabs), South (Sub-Saharan African), and North (Romans and Vandals). All of these have had an impact on the social structure of Morocco. It has also hosted many forms of belief, from Paganism, Judaism, Christianity to Islam.
Each region possesses its own uniqueness, contributing to the national culture. Morocco has set among its top priorities, the protection of its diversity, and the preservation of its cultural heritage.

In the political world, Morocco is referred to as an African state. The majority of Morocco's population is Arab by identity. At least a third of the population speaks the Amazigh language. During the Islamic expansion, some Arabs came to Morocco and settled in the flat regions, such as Tadla and Doukkala. For example, there are groups called Charkawa and Arbawa who settled in Morocco from Arabia. The Charkawa claimed to be descended from Umar ibn Al-Khattab, the second caliph of Islam.

Facts and figures

The following figures are taken from the CIA Factbook.
Population: 33,757,176 (July 2007 est.)
Ethnic groups: Maghrebians (Arab-Berbers) by heritage, and Arab or Berber by identity.
Languages:
Classical Arabic (official, though not used in daily speech)
Amazigh (A standardized version of all Moroccan Berber languages, official since July 2011)
Moroccan Arabic (not used in writing, locally known as Darija)
Vernacular Berber: Tarifit, Tachelhit, and Central Atlas Tamazight (spoken and written but not fully standardized).
Hassaniya Arabic: Primarily in the south
French: used along Arabic in business, government, military, and diplomacy.
Literacy: (definition: age 15 and over can read and write) total population: 52.3% (male: 64.7% / female: 40.6%) (2004 census)
Legal system: based partly on Islamic law, French and Spanish civil law systems; judicial review of legislative acts in Constitutional Chamber of The Moroccan Higher Council (the equivalent of the US Supreme Court).

Literature




The history of Moroccan literature started in the early Middle Ages. In the era of the Berber dynasties, coinciding with the flowering of Al-Andalus, there were several important Moroccan writers, especially in the fields of religion and historiography, as well as poets employed in the courts of, for instance, the Marinid sultans. The same goes for the period of the Saadian and Alaouite kings. The influence of France and the English-speaking world (Paul Bowles) on Morocco started in the 1930s.



Ethnic groups and languages

Morocco is considered by some as an Arab-Berber country. Others insist on the Berber-African identity of Morocco.
ahidouss
different people in morocco
Classical Arabic is an official language of Morocco, rather than a mother tongue, and is used in a limited and formal socio-economic and cultural range of activities (like newspapers and official documents), in competition with French, and until recently, Berber. The most common spoken languages of Morocco are Berber and Moroccan Arabic.
Linguistically, Berber belongs to the Afro-Asiatic group, and has many variants. The three main varieties used in Morocco are Shilha, Central Atlas Tamazight, and Riff (also called Tamazight by its speakers). Collectively, they are known as Shelha in Moroccan Arabic, and as Barbaria in the Classical Arabic used in the Middle East. The terms Barbar and Shelha are considered offensive by most Berber activists, who prefer the term Amazigh.
sehraoua
berbers
Shilha (also known locally as Soussia) is spoken in southwest Morocco, in an area between Sidi Ifni in the south, Agadir in the north, and Marrakesh and the Draa/Sous valleys in the east. Central Atlas Tamazight is spoken in the Middle Atlas, between Taza, Khemisset, Azilal, and Errachidia. Riff is spoken in the Rif area of northern Morocco in towns like Nador, Al Hoceima, Ajdir, Tetouan, Taourirt, and Taza.

Most Berbers embraced Islam quickly, though their non-Arab ethnic and linguistic distinction has resisted the Arab-Islamic influence. Hundreds of Amazigh (Berber) associations have been created to defend their culture and identity in the last few decades in Morocco and Algeria. Newsstands and bookstores in all the major cities are filled with new Berber publications that provide articles and essays about the Amazigh culture and art. In 1994, the state-owned TV station RTM (now TVM) started broadcasting a daily, 10 minute long news bulletin in the 3 Berber dialects. Berber activists are repeatedly demanding a 50% share of broadcasting time in standardized Berber (Tamazight) on all state-owned TV channels. There is also a national Tamazight channel in Morocco, called Tamazight TV. It opened in 2010, and broadcasts for over 6 hours a day, with an extended broadcast on weekends.

Traditional clothing



The traditional dress for men and women is called djellaba; a long, loose, hooded garment with full sleeves. For special occasions, men also wear a red cap called a bernousse, more commonly referred to as a Fez. Women wear kaftans decorated with ornaments. Nearly all men, and most women, wear balgha (بلغه) —- soft leather slippers with no heel, often dyed yellow. Women also wear high-heeled sandals, often with silver or gold tinsel.
The distinction between a djellaba and a kaftan is that the djellaba has a hood, while a kaftan does not. Most women’s djellabas are brightly colored and have ornate patterns, stitching, or beading, while men's djellabas are usually plainer and colored neutrally. Women are strongly attached to their "Moroccan wardrobe," despite the financial costs involved; the production of such garments is relatively expensive, as most of the work is done by hand, yet most women purchase a minimum of one new kaftan or takchita every year, normally for a special social event, such as a religious festival or a wedding. These days, it is an unwritten rule that traditional Moroccan dress is worn at such events.

Cinema


Main article: Cinema of Morocco
1944: Establishment of the "Moroccan Cinematographic Center" (CCM/the governing body). Studios were open in Rabat.
1958: Mohammed Ousfour creates the first Moroccan movie "Le fils maudit"
1982: The first national festival of cinema – Rabat.
1968: The first Mediterranean Film Festival was held in Tangier. The Mediterranean Film Festival in its new version is held in Tetouan.
2001: The first International Film Festival of Marrakech was held in Marrakech.

Movies in Morocco

Many foreign directors have been inspired by Morocco or filmed there. In 1952 Orson Welles chose Essaouira as the setting for several scenes in his adaptation of Shakespeare's "Othello", which had won the Grand Prix du Festival International du Film at that year's Cannes Film Festival. In 1955, Alfred Hitchcock directed The Man Who Knew Too Much and in 1962, David Lean shot the Tafas Massacre scene of Lawrence of Arabia in the city of "Ouarzazate", which houses Atlas Studios. Aït Benhaddou has been the setting of many films. The film Hideous Kinky was filmed in Marrakech.

Domestic architecture



Dar, the name given to one of the most common types of domestic structures in Morocco, is a home found in a medina, or walled urban area of a city. Most Moroccan homes traditionally adhere to the Dar al-Islam, a series of tenets on Islamic domestic life. Dar exteriors are typically devoid of ornamentation and windows, except occasional small openings in secondary quarters, such as stairways and service areas. These piercings provide light and ventilation. Dars are typically composed of thick, high walls that protect inhabitants from thievery, animals, and other such hazards; however, they have a much more symbolic value from an Arabic perspective. In this culture the exterior represents a place of work, while the interior represents a place of refuge. Thus, Moroccan interiors are often very lavish in decoration and craft.

Consistent with most Islamic architecture, dars are based around small open-air patios, surrounded by very tall thick walls, to block direct light and minimize heat. Intermediary triple-arched porticos lead to usually two to four symmetrically located rooms. These rooms have to be long and narrow, creating very vertical spaces, because the regional resources and construction technology typically only allow for joists that are usually less than thirteen feet.

Upon entering a dar, guests move through a zigzagging passageway that hides the central courtyard. The passageway opens to a staircase leading to an upstairs reception area called a dormiria, which often is the most lavish room in the home adorned with decorative tilework, painted furniture, and piles of embroidered pillows and rugs. More affluent families also have greenhouses and a second dormiria, accessible from a street-level staircase. Service quarters and stairways were always at the corners of the structures.
Tanjier is one of the heart places of Morocco as now its destroyed by the builders with big empire buildings.

Cuisine

Moroccan cuisine is home to Berber, Moorish, and Arab influences. It is known for dishes like couscous, pastilla, and others. Spices such as cinnamon are used in Moroccan cooking.
Sweets like halwa are popular, as well as other sweets. Cuisines from neighbouring countries also influence the country's culinary traditions.
(see the cuisine page )


Music




(see Music of Morocco page)







See also

Sport in Morocco page

Popular Posts in Last Month