International

An Arabic Influence On Tunisia's Culture

Explore Djerba's alleyways, visit the Jewish Quarter Hara Kebira, walk through Tozeur and watch the Berber musicians in Tunisia, North Africa

Amphitheatre El Jam in Tunisia Photo: Shutterstock
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A golden hue illuminated a jigsaw of blue and white, ushering the first rays of rhythmic synergy into a sleepy neighbourhood. The silence of dawn was gently cajoled by a distant out - the lute's deep, basal strains emerging from well-tuned strings. But the first music I heard on this trip was the earthy sonority of rustic Arabic spoken by an octogenarian Jewish grandmother as she prepared an irresistible kosher breakfast for her long-awaited guest - an Aha Moment for my spirit. So I savoured deep-fried, vegetarian brwk (pronounced 'breek') at a Jewish restaurant plonk in the heart of the Arab world, in a centuries-old brotherhood between two communities otherwise at war. It seemed to sum up the very essence and origin of music itself, the manifestation of a cosmic harmony inherent in all existence. Nearby, the pristine blue Mediterranean rose with the sensuality of a maiden in a mystical love dance.

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