The Lazy Nomad in Kabylie (Part 1)

in #travelfeed4 years ago

The energized Kabylie

Hey travelers, non travelers and travelers without moving! The Lazy Nomad here! Hope you’re all doing great. Once again, a lot of time without posting! But I believe that the story I’m about to tell, might make you forgive me...

Some years ago I spent a couple of months in Algeria... Everything started with an enormous desire of resting from the mighty desert were I lived several months before... But the adventure in the desert with the Tuareg I will leave for later, today let’s talk about Kabylie!

image.png

Image Source

Before talking about the actual adventure, I would like to do an introduction about this region and ethnicity.

The Kabyle, are an ethnic group of Berber, mainly located in North Africa’s mountains, once historically it served as a refuge and a resistance base against the Romans, Vandals, Byzantine, and Arabs. When the Arabs arrived in the area after the coming of Islam, they found it impossible to penetrate the eastern mountains. The people they encountered came to be known as Kabyle, derived from the Arabic term for "tribe".

They constitute 10 percent of Algeria's population. They are mainly Muslims with a few Christians and their language is Kabyle (also called Zouaouah, or Zwāwah).

In general, the Kabyle are sturdy, independent, and hospitable. Shaped and claimed for centuries through a language, a common history, a culture and a civilisation rooted in the large Amazigh family, giving them a collective consciousness, a unique socio-political organisation and an age-old and strong attachment to the values of democracy, freedom, secularism, solidarity and respect for others..

image.png

Image Source

The story that I’m about to tell you, occurs between Tizi-Wezzu and Bgayet (both Bold in the map above) and it´s a delicious spicy soup, having kidnapping, shisha and wedding as ingredients!

Stay toned, to dive more into the Kabyle energized culture!

(For the ones who want to know more about the aim of the blog, you can always click here)

References:

Sort:  

Hi @heteronimo, your post has been reviewed by the TravelFeed content team, but due to the volume of high-quality posts, your post does not qualify for an upvote. If you post your next post through TravelFeed.io, you a guaranteed an upvote as long as you don't violate our content policies.

Feedback

Based on your post, we have the following feedback for you:

  • We noticed that you did not publish your post through TravelFeed.io or edited your post on other Steem frontends. For better-looking blogs, we recommend you use our EasyEditor. As a bonus, when you post through our platform, you receive double upvotes from us, you are eligible for the top pick of the day (resteem + featured on the TravelFeed.io front page) and you can earn extra rewards from being featured in our daily curation posts. You can simply login with your existing Steem account using Steemconnect or Steem Keychain. See you next time on TravelFeed.io!
  • We love hearing about your experience, but readers would enjoy a more coherent story. In general, telling a story instead of merely describing photos or a timeline of events makes for a much better reading experience. We would love to know more!
  • You have reached our minimum 250 words requirement but we encourage you to tell us more about your travel experience.
  • Your post will be hard to find. With the location picker in the TravelFeed.io editor you can easily add a location to your post to improve its discoverability.

PS: Why not share your blog posts to your family and friends with the convenient sharing buttons on TravelFeed.io?