Imsallata

It deserves to be better known. I spent ten weeks there last year. Imsallata's a Libyan rural market town, about ten miles south of Al Khoms. I've also seen the name spelt 'mesallata' and 'msallata'.
Few of the streets are metalled. On market days, you would actually see people coming to town on donkeys, though most of the farmers drove ancient, battleship-grey Peugeots . The street corners were occupied by men idling at all hours: they weren't used to outsiders, and stared, and stared.
There was one cafe, where we'd eat sometimes; and a couple of nights a week we'd go there for a shisha pipe; (that picture in the top right hand corner was taken there, as was this one of Peter and Padraig).
After my ten weeks in Imsallata I was teaching in Tripoli again and found that my students were very amused that I'd spent time in such a rural area. The inhabitants of Imsallata are figures of fun, I learned, because they're always saying "Sh'ni?" ("What?"). And the fact that people still go about on donkeys is a source of hilarity to the Tripoli lads; (donkeys are ancient comical/sexual symbols throughout the Arab world, I'm told).
There must have been other westerners there at some point in the place's history: I saw a little boy with blonde hair, and there was a young man you couldn't miss, wearing traditional Libyan dress, with red hair and freckles. Padraig and I christened him "Ismail O'Flaherty", behind his back of course - Libyans are very touchy about the red-hair genes that surface in the populace.

I was sixteen months altogether in Libya, but the ten weeks in Imsallata seem to have left the most interesting memories.
This is the road to the town centre, from the house we were staying at. The adjective I kept using in letters home was "biblical".

I googled my way accidentally to this site about Libya's Jews .

The Libya.alt group on flickr has masses of pics now. A lot of them are great photos.
Finally, for the noo, here's Gilbert the Gecko, who lived on my bedroom ceiling for a while in Imsallata.
the gecko is great...
ReplyDeleteand so is the story.
your blog has just got better.
again.