FROM THE SAHARA TO THE SEA - March 13 to 27, 2020 a program of the stanford alumni association
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S T A N F O R D T R A V E L / S T U D Y F RO M T H E S A H A R A T O T H E S E A M a rc h 1 3 to 27, 2020 a p ro g ra m of th e st a nfo rd a lu m ni asso ciati o n
Few destinations offer as much intrigue as Morocco, a land of impressive mosques, exquisite palaces and labyrinthine souks. Morocco is home to a richly diverse landscape with its snow- capped Atlas Mountains, vast Saharan sand dunes, haunting Roman ruins and bustling fishing ports. Above all else, Morocco’s people are welcoming and gracious, inviting travelers into their homes in the centuries-old Berber tradition. On this trip we’ll have a chance to experience the traditional, indigenous Berber culture during a mule ride at the base of North Africa’s highest peak. With Dr. Martha Crenshaw, we’ll meet local educators and artisans who will share with us their experiences and perspectives as citizens living in a multifaceted kingdom. We invite you to join us on this remarkable and memorable adventure! B R E T T S. T H O M P S O N , ’ 8 3, D I R E CTO R , S TA N F O R D T R AV E L / S T U DY Highlights T A S T E some of the finest M E E T with Moroccan S P E N D the night in a crûs of Morocco and take academics at the Center desert camp and enjoy a cave tour at Domaine for Cross-Cultural the romantic thrill of tak- de la Zouina, one of the Learning, a private ing a camel ride atop the country’s prime wine institution in Rabat’s dramatic windswept dunes producers. 17th-century medina. of the Sahara Desert. COVER: MOROCCAN LAMPS IN A MARRAKECH SOUK AÏT BENHADDOU
Faculty Leader M A R T H A C R E N S H A W is a senior fellow at the Center for International Security and Cooperation and the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies. Her primary areas of interest are international conflict and political violence. Since 2005, Dr. Crenshaw has been a lead investigator with the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and the Response to Terrorism under the aegis of the Department of Homeland Security, and has lectured for the U.S. State Department on Morocco and Algeria. She continues to conduct research on the rise and expansion of violent Islamism in the Maghreb as well as in the Sahel region. On this trip, Dr. Crenshaw will lecture on how Morocco and other monarchies largely escaped the turmoil of the Arab Spring, and “Professor Crenshaw its relations with other countries in North Africa. She will also touch on the often-overlooked history of Moroccan nationalism and resistance to possesses that French colonialism. Finally, she will expand upon the country’s role as an international ally, and as a moderate force in the region today. rare combination of — Co-author of Countering Terrorism, 2017; Author of Revolutionary extensive knowledge Terrorism: The FLN in Algeria, 1954–1962, and Explaining Terrorism: Causes, Processes, and Consequences and the ability to — Senior Fellow, 2007, and emerita Senior Fellow, 2019, Center for International Security and Cooperation, Stanford University communicate it — Professor of political science by courtesy, School of Humanities and Sciences, Stanford University, since 2007 flawlessly and — At Wesleyan University: professor of government, 1987–2007; chair, department of government, 1985–86, 1994–95, 1996–97; effectively. She is director of international studies, 1993–94 — Wesleyan University Award for Teaching Excellence, 1995 a star!” — International Studies Association Distinguished Scholar Award, 2016 — Corresponding fellow, British Academy CARL SCANDELLA, — ABA, political science, 1967, Newcomb College of P H D ’ 71, A L O N G T H E Tulane University M E K O N G , 2 0 17 S T A N F O R D T R A V E L / S T U D Y SIGN UP ONLINE: alumni.stanford.edu/trip?morocco2020 OR BY PHONE: (650) 725-1093 THE VALLEY OF DADES
Atlantic Salé Volubilis Ocean Rabat Fes Bou IFRANE Regreg NATIONAL River PARK MOROCCO Midelt MOROCCO Ziz Valle Marrakech Todgha Essaouira Aghmat Gorge Arfo MT. TOUBKAL Sijilmassa NATIONAL PARK Erg Aït Benhaddou Ouarzazate Chebb Itinerary covered souks and its quarters where all types of crafts are still fashioned by hand (and Enjoy a tea break in a local home and a Berber lunch at the award-winning Kasbah du foot!). Stop at the Ben Youssef Toubkal ecolodge. Returning F R I DAY & S AT U R DAY, Medersa, the largest of the to Marrakech, attend a private M A R C H 13 & 14 theological schools initially set dinner at the home of the U.S. / MARRAKECH, up in the 14th century by the president of the Marrakech MOROCCO Marinid Dynasty. After lunch in Art Biennale, set amid the Depart the U.S. on overnight the medina, enjoy the afternoon palm groves outside the city. flights to Marrakech, arriving at leisure before a cocktail HOTEL LA MAISON ARABE (B,L,D) on Saturday and transferring reception at the famed Hotel to our hotel. This evening enjoy La Mamounia. HOTEL LA MAISON T H U R S DAY, M A R C H 19 a welcome cocktail reception ARABE (B,L) MARRAKECH / and dinner of local specialties in AGHMAT / the heart of the old city. HOTEL LA T U ES DAY, M A R C H 17 OUARZAZATE MAISON ARABE (3/14: D) MARRAKECH / Head south to the archaeologi- ESSAOUIRA cal site of Aghmat, the first S U N DAY, M A R C H 15 Drive to the coastal city of capital of the 11th-century MARRAKECH Essaouira, noted for its lovely Berber Almoravid Dynasty that Start the day with a visit to blue-and-white architecture founded Marrakech. After a light the 12th-century Koutoubia displaying both Moroccan and lunch, cross the spectacular Mosque—a reference of world Portuguese influences, 18th- Tizi n’Tichka pass to Aït Benha- Islamic architecture—and the century ramparts, colorfully ddou, an assembly of multi- late-19th-century Bahia Palace painted fishing boats, and for storied granaries often used of vizier Ba Ahmed, an example being the setting for much of as background for films (e.g., of Moorish-Andalusian art. Also Orson Welles’ Othello. On the Gladiator). Next, visit the inter- visit the nearby private Tiskiwin way, look for the area’s infa- national film center of Ouarza- Museum of fine rural Moroccan mous goats climbing up argan zate, whose surroundings have and sub-Saharan crafts, and trees. Dine independently this been used in dozens of films, the Saadian Toombs, a last evening back in Marrakech. including Lawrence of Arabia. window into the splendor of HOTEL LA MAISON ARABE (B,L) LE BERBÈRE PALACE (B,L,D) early-17th-century Moroccan interior art. After lunch in the W E D N ES DAY, M A R C H 18 F R I DAY, M A R C H 20 new city, stroll through its MARRAKECH / OUARZAZATE / garden of French orientalist MT. TOUBKAL BOUMALNE DADES Jacques Majorelle and visit its NATIONAL PARK Today, follow the Kasbah Trail new Museum of Berber Culture. Take a mule ride through with its fortified residences HOTEL LA MAISON ARABE (B,L,D) walnut-shaded terraced fields made of adobe. Drive up the at the base of 14,000-foot-high Dades Valley, considered M O N DAY, M A R C H 16 Mount Toubkal, North Africa’s southern Morocco’s most MARRAKECH highest peak, to observe the picturesque, with its variety of Explore Marrakech’s vast reed- ways of Berber tribesmen. orchards and odd rock forma-
L MAJORELLE GARDENS, MARRAKECH ey oud bi tions. Take an excursion to the spiritual capital of Fes. W E D N ES DAY, M A R C H 25 the dramatic Todgha Gorge, RIAD FES (B,L,D) FES / RABAT Morocco’s “Grand Canyon,” Drive to the capital city of before settling in for the night M O N DAY, M A R C H 23 Morocco, Rabat, designated in in Arfoud. HOTEL KASBAH XALUCA FES 2013 as a World Heritage site. (B,L,D) Walk the narrow alleys of Enjoy a seafood lunch by the Fes, considered the last true crashing waves of the Atlantic, a S AT U R DAY, M A R C H 21 example of a typical medieval leisurely walk through the white- BOUMALNE DADES / Arab town with its bustling washed Oudaïa Kasbah and ERG CHEBBI bazaars, colorful tanners’ the Chellah fortress, and an af- Head south to the Tafilalet quarters and fragrant spice ternoon stop at the Mausoleum Oasis—Morocco’s largest—and market. Visit the restored of Mohamed V, considered by visit the ruins of former caravan Attarine Medersa; the many to be modern Morocco’s hub Sijilmassa. After lunch in mausoleum of city founder “father.” VILLA MANDARINE (B,L) Arfoud, board 4WD vehicles Idriss II; the 17th-century and head into the Sahara’s Nejjarine caravanserai, now an T H U R S DAY, M A R C H 26 Erg Chebbi, one of Morocco’s exquisite museum of wood arts; RABAT / SALÉ great sand dune areas, rising the 700-year-old Bou Inania Cross the Bou Regreg River 600 feet above the desert floor. Medersa; the famed Blue Gate; for a morning tour of Salé, a Spend the night in a desert and pottery and zellige mosaic traditional residential town camp, ride a camel or clamber tile workshops. RIAD FES (B,L) with a restored 14th-century up the dunes to witness sunset medersa, a gem overlooked by over the Sahara, followed by T U ES DAY, M A R C H 24 many tourists. Enjoy lunch and dinner and a bonfire at our FES / VOLUBILIS / a lecture on post-Arab Spring overnight camp. GOLD SAND MEKNÈS developments at the Center CAMP (B,L,D) Venture west to Volubilis, for Cross-Cultural Learning Rome’s commercial hub for situated inside Rabat’s me- S U N DAY, M A R C H 2 2 the region until the 3rd century, dina. Visit the new Museum of ERG CHEBBI / MIDELT renowned for its numerous Modern and Contemporary Art, / IFRANE NATIONAL mosaics still in situ. Then travel a magnificent structure of neo- PARK / FES south to former imperial city Moorish architecture, followed Follow the palm-filled Ziz Valley Meknès and its astounding by a farewell cocktail reception across the stark, multihued granary, a World Heritage site and Moroccan dinner. VILLA expanses of the Eastern High built in the late 17th century by MANDARINE (B,L,D) Atlas range to the Berber en- Sultan Moulay Ismaïl to feed clave of Midelt for lunch. Take a the city’s population and his F R I DAY, M A R C H 27 detour into Ifrane National Park, 12,000(!) horses. Tour the cave RABAT OR CASA- the last forest of giant Atlas ce- at Domaine de la Zouina, the BLANCA / U.S. dars, and try to spot a band of Kingdom’s prime wine pro- Transfer to the Rabat or indigenous Barbary macaques ducer, and enjoy a tasting of its Casablanca airport for flights before arriving this evening in finest crûs before returning to home. (B) Fes. RIAD FES (B,L,D)
Trip Information costs Meals and beverages other than those specified as included Independent and private transfers Trip-cancellation/ DATES interruption and baggage insurance March 13 to 27, 2020 (15 days) Excess-baggage charges Personal items such as internet access, telephone and fax SIZE calls, laundry and gratuities for nongroup Limited to 36 participants services COST* AIR ARRANGEMENTS $8,995 per person, double occupancy You are responsible for booking and purchasing $10,995 per person, single occupancy *Stanford Alumni Association nonmembers airfare to the start location and from the end add $300 per person location of the program. These air purchases are NOT included in the program cost. To assist INCLUDED you in making these independent arrangements, 12 nights of deluxe hotel accommodations; we’ll send you information with your confirmation 1 night of luxury camping 13 breakfasts, materials on when to arrive and depart. 12 lunches and 9 dinners Welcome and farewell cocktail receptions Gratuities WHAT TO E XPECT to porters, guides and drivers for all group We consider this to be a moderately strenuous activities All tours and excursions as program that is at times is physically demanding. described in the itinerary Transfers and Much of the walking takes place at ancient sites, baggage handling on program arrival and where paths can be rocky and uneven. In some departure days Minimal medical, accident instances steps are a necessary part of the tour and evacuation insurance Educational and may not have handrails. While hotels on this program with lecture series and pre-departure program do have elevators, in some occasions materials, including recommended reading list, they can only be reached by first ascending a a selected book, map and travel information staircase. Some days require early-morning starts, Services of our professional tour manager to as we often have a full schedule. Our journey may assist you throughout the program require several hours of travel by motor coach, the longest drives being up to eight hours including NOT INCLUDED stops. Participants must be physically fit, active International and U.S. domestic airfare and in good health. We welcome travelers 15 Passport and visa fees Immunization years of age and older on this program.
NEJJARINE MUSEUM OF WOODEN ARTS AND CRAFTS, FES Terms & Conditions if you purchase your policy within other causes beyond our control. Deposit & Final Payment A $1,000-per-person deposit is 14 days of written confirmation of All such losses or expenses will required to reserve space for this your participation on the trip. have to be borne by the passenger program. Sign up online at alumni. as tour rates provide arrangements Eligibility only for the time stated. We reserve stanford.edu/trip?morocco2020 or We encourage membership in the call Travel/Study at (650) 725-1093. the right to make such alterations Stanford Alumni Association as the to this published itinerary as may Final payment is due 120 days program cost for nonmembers is be deemed necessary. The right is prior to departure. As a condition $300 more than the members’ price. reserved to cancel any program prior of participation, all confirmed A person traveling as a guest paid to departure in which case the entire participants are required for by a current member will not payment will be refunded without to sign a Release of Liability. be charged the nonmember fee. further obligation on our part. The Cancellations & Refunds For more information or to purchase right is also reserved to decline to Deposits and any payments are a membership, visit alumni.stanford/ accept or retain any person as a refundable, less a $500-per-person goto/membership or call (650) member of the program. No refund cancellation fee, until 120 days prior 725-0692. will be made for an unused portion to departure. After that date, refunds of any tour unless arrangements Responsibility are made in sufficient time to avoid can be made only if the program is The Stanford Alumni Association, sold out and your place(s) can be penalties. Baggage is carried at the Stanford University and our operators owner’s risk entirely. The airlines resold, in which case a $1,000-per- act only as agents for the passenger concerned are not to be held person cancellation fee will apply. with respect to transportation and responsible for any act, omission or Insurance exercise every care possible in doing event during the time that passengers Stanford Travel/Study provides so. However, we can assume no are not on board their plane or all travelers who are U.S. or liability for injury, damage, loss, conveyance. Neither the Stanford Canadian citizens with minimal accident, delay or irregularity in Alumni Association, Stanford connection with the service of any University nor our operators accept medical, accident and evacuation automobile, motor coach, launch liability for any carrier’s cancellation coverage under our group-travel or any other conveyance used in penalty incurred by the purchase of insurance policy. Our group policy carrying out this program or for the a nonrefundable ticket in connection is intended to provide minimal acts or defaults of any company or with the tour. Program price is based levels of protection while you are person engaged in conveying the on rates in effect in May 2019 and is traveling on this program. You may passenger or in carrying out the subject to change without notice to choose to subscribe to optional trip- arrangements of the program. We reflect fluctuations in exchange rates, cancellation and baggage insurance. cannot accept any responsibility for tariffs or fuel charges. Information offering such insurance losses or additional expenses due will be provided to travelers with their to delay or changes in air or other welcome materials. The product services, sickness, weather, strike, offered includes special benefits war, quarantine, force majeure or TELEPHONE (650) 725-1093 © COPYRIGHT 2019 STANFORD ALUMNI ASSOCIATION. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. EMAIL travelstudy@alumni.stanford.edu PRINTED ON RECYCLED, FSC-CERTIFIED PAPER IN THE U.S. California Seller of Travel Program Registration #2048 523-50
S Stanford Travel/Study Nonprofit Org. Frances C. Arrillaga Alumni Center U.S. Postage T 326 Galvez Street PAID Stanford, CA 94305-6105 Stanford Alumni A (650) 725-1093 Association ESSAOUIRA N F O R D F RO M T H E S A H A R A T O T H E S E A M a rc h 13 to 27, 2020 T R A V E L PAT R I C I A J O N E S , ’ 76 , T H E K I N G D O M O F M O R O C C O , 2 019 / S T U D all the colors, scents, tastes and sounds on full display.” “An immersive experience in the culture of Morocco, with Y
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