Yes, it's real. There is a place called Timbuktu and it is not just an imaginary figment at the end of an exclamatory statement. What child has not muttered at some time that he, or she, was "going all the way to Timbuktu!" What adult has not dismissed it as "some far away place," not knowing quite sure where it actually was, if it did exist at all.
It does exist and grown up people do go there and an occasional child with them. Situated between the southern edge of the Sahara Desert and the great bend of the Niger River, Timbuktu is the best known and the most remote city in Mali, the crown jewel of West Africa. Nine centuries old, it abounds with legends of wealth and power, culture and learning, conquest and intrigue.
Due to the writings of Leo Africanus, a sixteenth century African who had been there and who spoke of the plentitude of gold, wealth and learning, Europeans pictured it as Eldorado and Eden enveloped in a mysterious dust cloud in the desert. Rewards were offered to adventurers who could find their way there and back alive. The first European to do so was in 1828 and he found Timbuktu deep in decline. There's no gold in those dunes, he reported when returning home, and you can get there from here, but it's damn hard to do so. Disbelief was his reward. The European had believed in the legend of Timbuktu for so long that he and she refused to believe this disappointing news. The legend of the far away place of wealth and gold persisted, then gradually dissolved in time, to just far away Timbuktu.
It is far away and it's still damn hard to get there and other than charter aircraft there is no reliable, direct route for pilgrims to take to Timbuktu. There are ways more interesting than others; one such is through Ouagadougou, entry port to Burkino Faso, and trekking northward for four days into Mali and the Dogon lowlands in Bandiagiara. The Dogon, a tribal nation of 250,000 people, are rich in history, tradition and mystery, with a culture of ancestor worship, animist cosmology with astrological inclusions and unique architectural skills. They also have talents in both the decorative and abstract arts, the latter reportedly an inspiration to Picasso.
Dogon villages are perched on a broad expanse of cliff and escarpment and this interested pilgrim and a few companions, undertook a three-hour climb upward. The reward was a myriad assortment of villages with cone shaped buildings with whimsically constructed thatched roofs, pillared dwellings carved in the hillside, an insane asylum in one of those pillared dwellings replete with animal skins and religious sculpture and a circumcision cave festooned with graphically illustrated symbols. Decorative carvings, prized today by western art collectors, are everywhere. The pilgrims were fortunate enough to enter a village during the completion of a mourning period when the Dogon mask dance occurred. The Awa, the mask cult of several dozen adult males adorned with masks, some fifteen feet high, of animals, religious symbols and elements of nature, wove its way through the village to a pounding syncopation of drums in celebration of both death and life.
After spending five days with the Dogon, then returning to sea level and moving westward to Mopti, a commercial town on the River Niger, the pilgrims boarded a pinasse, a forty foot, thatched- roof canoe powered by a forty horse-power outboard motor and began a three day journey to Korioume, the gate city to Timbuktu, twelve miles distant.
The river, Africa's third greatest, teems with the great fish capitain. Here and there, a hippo peers from the water and on the banks, Bozo and Songhai villages, white and clay buildings centered by the ubiquitous mosque, (for this is a largely Muslim country), are alive with activity, and children and overseeing mothers swarm to the river's edge when the pinasse pulls ashore for a visit.
It is a curious time for the adults and a happy one for the children as they take the pilgrims' hands and scratch the white skin with their little black fingers and laugh hysterically when the white doesn't come off.
Nighttime, the pilgrims sleep as guests in one of the villages, then move on, Timbuktu always ahead. Then one morning it is there.
The wind governs Timbuktu as it does the Sahara. Sand is everywhere. Pilgrims entering from the south see Timbuktu as the end of the world. The desolation of the desert is ever present in the sand-strewn streets, and the ever-decomposing clay buildings. But it is a town that has lived with the desert and survived and even thrived in spite of it and because of it.
But some of its past still lives. It is still a terminus of a camel caravan route across the Sahara that brings salt from the mines of Taoudenni four hundred miles in the desert and Tuaregs, the sword and knife-wielding romanticized nomads of the desert, still swagger through the area wielding sword and knife. The culture of the past lives as well at the Ahmed Baba center for Historical Research, a repository of seventeen thousand ancient books and documents undergoing translation from Arabic to French, the national language of Mali, to English, for placement on the internet. Yes, the past is moving into the future for there is now one computer in Timbuktu.
North of the city lies the Sahara, an area larger than the contiguous United States and through it come visitors from the north: cameleers with their caravans from Taoudenni, nomads from their wanderings, pilgrims on their explorations.
In January, Harmattan, the hot dry wind of the winter months has its way with them. The pilgrims returning to Timbuktu see a horizon of three hundred and sixty degrees, a vast ring of desolation in which Harmattan hurls sand and dust upward, the perimeters becoming a circular translucent veil of grayish purple rising toward the pale blue sky. Overhead the noontime sun is ablaze. By two o'clock it is a lunarlike globe having slipped behind the veil leaving the pilgrims in a land of total desolation.
To the pilgrims returning from the desert, Timbuktu is the beginning of the world. The greenery of trees and shrubs, the strain of a flute, the smiles and talk of people, the movement of a car or truck greets them with the color and music and life of civilization.
It is a long way to Timbuktu from any direction, but if one is not a cameleer in the salt business or a native of Timbuktu why would one go there? The question put to one pilgrim brought him to a pause, "Well, when I was a kid, I used to say that when I grew up, I was going to go all the way to Timbuktu. Well, here I am. "
Don Bracken is Senior Editor of History Publishing Company, LLC and is the co-editor of the Civil War Historyscope Series, which has been hailed by educators and Civil War experts and can be seen on http://historyscope.com. He is also the author of the forthcoming book Times of the Civil War dealing with the coverage of that war by the New York Times and the Charleston Mercury. Don Bracken traveled to Timbuctu in 2002 with four other individuals as part of an adventure travel team.
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
Camping is a delightful and adventurous way to spend your... Read More
Pictures of a massive dead Great White shark on the... Read More
HOW ARE MINERALS FORMED?MINERALS are naturally occuring, inorganic solids, with... Read More
If your aim is not good, or is not quite... Read More
Ask me which Pacific island has the most to offer... Read More
You aren't lightweight backpacking if you are carrying twenty-five pounds... Read More
So unknown is this treasure of Lake Jipe not many... Read More
Of course you know about Southern California's premier attraction, Disneyland... Read More
An inflatable boat trailer is needed if the user has... Read More
I stood at the observation point on the balcony at... Read More
WHAT TO HUNT AND WHERE: Alaska is a hunter's paradise.... Read More
You CAN grab something to eat, enjoy every bite, AND... Read More
Hiking shoes versus hiking boots? Hiking shoes win. Okay, next... Read More
Why should you use hiking poles is perhaps the first... Read More
There are many manufacturers of inflatable boats on the market... Read More
(NC)-With approximately 42,000 mosquitoes for every person in Ontario, most... Read More
The key to getting a good bargin, instead of a... Read More
The owner can attempt small inflatable boat repair if factory-gluing... Read More
When it comes to birding, Acadia National Park is a... Read More
Directly south of Louisville, just off Interstate 65 and not... Read More
Mount Rainier National Park is the most popular park in... Read More
Scotland has taken its place as the new Mecca for... Read More
There are so many selections available when it comes to... Read More
The intricate details on a topographic map can be befuddling,... Read More
Packing in general can be a hassle. But when going... Read More
Zambia is Africa's best kept secret as far as safaris... Read More
Boston is a great destination city for a vacation. There's... Read More
Mystic Seaport celebrates the seafaring past of New England. Known... Read More
Perhaps you have wondered about taking an RV vacation. It... Read More
Eulogised as the Queen of the Arabian Sea, Cochin, Kerala's... Read More
For the 92nd time, the Tour de France has started.... Read More
I stood at the observation point on the balcony at... Read More
Stay warm or die. That's what it comes down to... Read More
The most famous Egyptian pyramids to be built are the... Read More
1st day : Airport / Amman, O/N Our representative will... Read More
"Do you know about Wal-Mart camping?" We didn't know, but... Read More
There's nothing that will quicken the interest of RVers like... Read More
If you're looking to spot a whale, the first few... Read More
How to get the most out of your trekking poles... Read More
Costa Rica's mountainous topography and copious rainfall are both responsible... Read More
Sharklife.co.za has been fighting an ongoing for the protection of... Read More
Why ultralight backpacks? Devotees of ultralight backpacking know you reduce... Read More
As the warmer weather approaches, we look forward to another... Read More
As the weather cools in late summer and the days... Read More
Eaton Canyon Natural Area Nature Center, entrance, 1750 N. Altadena... Read More
Visitors to Hawaii frequently see dolphins from shore or on... Read More
Why should you use hiking poles is perhaps the first... Read More
Camping is a delightful and adventurous way to spend your... Read More
Live your golfing dreams on an Ireland golf vacation.The K... Read More
Romancing History ? A Holiday in RajasthanRajasthan, the name evokes... Read More
Truly a small wonder, the eTrex takes the best features... Read More
White-water rafting can be one of the most exhilarating experiences... Read More
Boston is a great destination city for a vacation. There's... Read More
Up to now the preponderant view held by many historians... Read More
SAFE WALKING TREKKING OUTDOORSIf you are contemplating a long distance... Read More
Of course you know about Southern California's premier attraction, Disneyland... Read More
Which is the best African safari company for my safari... Read More
Bird Watching is a great way to escape the rat... Read More
Every year around 40 million visitors come to Florida for... Read More
Before you take off on that great outdoor adventure, be... Read More
We love spending time outdoors and if you are expecting... Read More
When you're on the Internet looking for discount camping gear,... Read More
Holidays in India, awesome in her size and diversity. This... Read More
It seems like the most adventurous thing in the world.... Read More
The call of the wild can be seductive. The exquisite... Read More
If you've been dreaming of traveling the highways in your... Read More
Outdoors |