I had wanted to
keep my journey on the ground or sea as much as possible and had contemplated
crossing the Sahara Desert in a camel caravan or something to that effect, at least in my head. However, the
realities of the situation were much different and somewhat of a hindrance to my vague plans. The Moroccan border with Algeria had been
closed for years due to a rift between the two countries over oil rights. Libya was blowing itself up from the inside
and Egypt was stoning people in Tahrir Square.
To save my parents some grief and myself a sore ass from the camel ride,
I decided to take the more traditional route and fly, but that doesn't mean there was nothing to write about.
Qatar Air was the
cheapest option out of Casablanca and when I purchased my ticket on their
website I was given a list of options for my name prefix such as Mr., Mrs.,
Miss, Doctor, Captain, Priest, Rabbi, Infidel, etc.… Well ‘Captain’ had a nice
ring to it and since I had just recently sailed across an ocean, I felt like
the title suited me quite well. Plus,
there were no questions asking to verify my identity so what could it hurt.
My plane was
severely delayed leaving Casablanca. After a few hours of reading all the leftover newspapers others had left behind while boarding their planes and being on a first name basis with all the saleswomen in the duty free liquor store, I finally asked an agent what the exact problem was and when we might actually leave. She said, rather casually, they were still looking for a pilot. At first I was quite disconcerted and normally would have had a few follow up questions like, "Well have you checked the pilot schedule I assume most airlines have?" or "Have you tried his cellphone? It was invented in the 1980's and most, if not all people, carry one on their person in modern times." However on this occasion before being asked who I was, or who my ticket said I was, I made haste back to the friendly women of the whiskey aisle.
Finally onboard, our first of
three legs was a short two-hour flight to Tunisia to pick up a
few more passengers and I am guessing to also test the flight skills of whatever pilot they quickly recruited. After a safe
landing, while waiting for the new passengers to board, I wanted to check with a
flight attendant if I would still be able to make my next connection in Doha. She asked to see my ticket and the
conversation went on like this:
Flight Attendant: (After looking at my ticket.) Oh, so you’re the Captain! We knew we had a captain on board but weren’t
sure where he was sitting.
Me: (After a slight stutter.) Why yes, that is me. You found him.
FA: Whom do you fly for?
(Now this is where tough decisions must be
made and you have to commit to the role or bail out. I committed.)
Me: Well I am between airlines right now. Looking for a change.
FA: Well you should fly for us. How many hours do you have?
Me: That’s a very good question. How many do I need?
FA: You have to have 200 to apply to be a pilot
with us.
Me: Oh, I am just shy of 200.
FA: Well get some more hours and send in your
application. This is a great airline to
work for.
Me: So I have heard. Ok, I’ll look into it when I get the
hours. (Now to change the subject.) So will I make my connection?
FA: Oh yeah, let me check and I will get back to
you after theses passengers finish boarding and we are set for takeoff.
(When everyone had boarded the stewardess
came back and knelt beside my seat.)
FA: Captain Berger, I'm sorry but we won’t make it in time for your original connection but there is a flight leaving one hour later you can catch. Would you like me to set you up on that one?
FA: Captain Berger, I'm sorry but we won’t make it in time for your original connection but there is a flight leaving one hour later you can catch. Would you like me to set you up on that one?
Me: Yes please.
FA: Also, we have a few seats open in First Class
if you would like to sit up there.
Me: Hmmm, sure.
Why not. It’s so stuffy back here
with all these common folk. Also can you
get me into First Class on my connection out of Doha?
FA: Sure.
No problem.
Before I even had
my seat belt on in my new First Class seat, my first glass of champagne
appeared and I was promptly asked what type of wine I would like to accompany
my steak for dinner. After I had the
flight attendant explain the pros and cons of the two red wines on board, I
told her to just bring me one before the meal and one during. That way I
wouldn’t have to make another tough decision.
Moral of the
story: If we ever meet in an airport,
please refer to me as ‘Captain’ because that is what will be on my ticket from
now on.
Dubai
A small family
that struck oil and became rich beyond their wildest dreams and moved to the
big city sounds like a good idea for a sitcom in the 60’s. Instead of moving to the big city, the
Emirates built the big city where they lived, in the desert. Let’s call this show “The Desert
Hillbillies”. The Emirates transformed
this sand swept region into one of the financial centers of the world and a tourist mecca of their own to rival their neighbor’s in Saudi Arabia. Using the motto, “If you build it, they will
come,” from one of their favorite Kevin Costner movies, ‘Field of Dreams’ (Luckily they haven't seen "Waterworld" or Kevin may have dropped a few spots.), they
built one of the most grandiose cities in one of the world’s most barren
places attracting visitors from all over the world to see their man-made marvels. Using cheap labor from Ethiopia
and the Philippines along with shrewd business sense, they turned Dubai into a regional powerhouse in less than a decade.
~ The city currently boasts the world’s tallest building, the Burj Khalifa, standing at 2,722
ft (829.8 m) tall. This trumps the
previous record holder by an astounding 700 ft (200 m).
~ It’s home to the largest mall in the world, which out-built the old record holder that was also in Dubai. The current record holder has a Red Lobster. The previous record holder has an indoor ski slope where you can meet and greet penguins.
~ They have the world’s only 7 star hotel, the Burj Al Arab, which has a helipad that doubles as the world’s highest tennis court.
~ And since every rich person’s dream is to have their own island and there were none in the vicinity of the Persian Gulf, the Emirates again built their own and of course not just any island. Known as Palm Jumeirah, it was built in the shape of a palm tree, it is the largest artificial archipelago in the world . It is home to 60 luxury hotels, 4,000 residential villas, 1,000 water homes, 5,000 shoreline apartments, and multiple marinas, restaurants, and shopping malls to satisfy the masses. Two more palm islands are underway and an island map of the world consisting of 300 smaller islands all of which can be owned. I put a down payment on Fiji. Thought it would be cool to say I owned Fiji even if it is the one off the coast of Dubai.
~ It’s home to the largest mall in the world, which out-built the old record holder that was also in Dubai. The current record holder has a Red Lobster. The previous record holder has an indoor ski slope where you can meet and greet penguins.
~ They have the world’s only 7 star hotel, the Burj Al Arab, which has a helipad that doubles as the world’s highest tennis court.
~ And since every rich person’s dream is to have their own island and there were none in the vicinity of the Persian Gulf, the Emirates again built their own and of course not just any island. Known as Palm Jumeirah, it was built in the shape of a palm tree, it is the largest artificial archipelago in the world . It is home to 60 luxury hotels, 4,000 residential villas, 1,000 water homes, 5,000 shoreline apartments, and multiple marinas, restaurants, and shopping malls to satisfy the masses. Two more palm islands are underway and an island map of the world consisting of 300 smaller islands all of which can be owned. I put a down payment on Fiji. Thought it would be cool to say I owned Fiji even if it is the one off the coast of Dubai.
The Burj al Arab |
Tennis court / Helipad |
(I couldn't afford stepping foot in this hotel much less renting the helicopter for these photos.
Image compliments to Google.)
Aquarium in Dubai Mall: Another world record for largest acrylic panel. |
World record as the only seafood restaurant to offer endless snow crab legs in 2003 almost causing the franchise to go bankrupt. It's true. Look it up. |
Cooling costs for a ski slope in the desert: Sky high Ski outfits leftover from the Dream Team: Dirt cheap |
This was as close as they allowed Frank to the actual penguins. |
The Palm Jumeirah: Required 65 million pounds of sand and rock. (Again image compliments to Google.) |
A view of the
skyline shows nothing but skyscrapers and cranes building more skyscrapers pushing
farther and farther out into the open expanse of desert with nothing to stop
it. It is a city built on opulence and
decadence where you wouldn’t question if the streets were paved of gold.
If it’s not
obvious by now, Dubai is a place meant for spending money and for a guy traveling with
just a pair of flip-flops and a few swimming trunks, this wouldn’t be my first
choice for travel destinations but I had friends to meet. And usually when I meet with these friends, we tend to do more
drinking and partying than sightseeing. Good thing for us the main attractions in Dubai are drinking and partying.
Although Islam is
the state religion, things are kept pretty relaxed to keep the international
clientele coming in especially compared to its neighbors: Saudi Arabia, Oman,
and Iran, and thank Allah for that. The one exception are the "sex police". No, these guys don't barge into your room at inappropriate times to critique your bedroom swagger but they do lurk in the corners of most bars and night clubs to make sure no "inappropriate" behavior takes place. This would include any public displays of affection, dancing too provocatively, or in Frank's case, dancing by yourself on your back in a seizure type fit on the dance floor. Luckily they weren't sure what to do with Frank and he was just given a stern warning after first checking if he needed medical attention.... multiple times. However things can get quite serious and the jails are filled with Brits who had a night on the piss and if at home would have
just been laughed at by their friends for pulling their pants down, but here they are thrown in jail and deported.
Frank using a choke hold on me and himself to get us "dancing". And no, I don't know what I was drinking. It was very, very late. |
Lebanon
For all of
Dubai’s newfound glitz and glam, Lebanon still holds sway over most Europeans
and Middle Easterners as the vacation capital of the region where the attention
is focused in and around Beirut. The
city is one of the most cosmopolitan and religiously diverse cities in all the
Middle East holding onto a complex network of nine major religions: Maronite Catholic, Greek Orthodox, Greek
Catholic, Armenian Apostolic, Armenian Catholic, Protestant, Sunni Muslim, Shia
Muslim, and Druze. However, just because
they are all living together in the same city doesn’t mean they have always
gotten along.
Lebanon had a
brutal civil war beginning in the 1970’s and lasting until the early 1990’s
mostly between the Christian and Muslim majorities leaving scars that are still
visible today including a tattered power infrastructure causing ill-scheduled blackouts all day and night. Even though Beirut has
cooled over the years, their neighbors to the north and south still keep things
lively. Syrian rebels use the north as a
retreat and safe haven from the Syrian army who unpredictably lob bombs across the
border in retaliation for harboring the rebels.
To the south lies Israel/Palestine where Hezbollah forces amass to
defend their land from the Israelis since the Lebanese army is little to
non-existent.
If Lebanon's current political situation is intriguing, its ancient history and natural landscape go far beyond that. It is home to Byblos, the oldest inhabited city in the world just north of Beirut dating back to 8800 B.C. The country's coast line is littered with remains from Phoenician,
Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine, Arab, Crusader and Ottoman civilizations. The interior is filled with magnificent cedar forests which are the symbol of the country and a cave system that is on the short-list as a new wonder of the world.
Of course Gus wanted us to see as many of these sites as possible. He also wanted to take us to the best night clubs and beach bars which ended in some very late nights getting home. This sometimes made for difficult mornings lacking the motivation to get up and see a very old building that will most likely be there for years to come while still seeing double and wondering why my shirt is on inside out and the shoes I have on aren't mine and don't match.
Once we got going, the sites were incredible but getting there and back was usually half the fun since Gus's sense of direction is on par with an Asian woman who has blonde hair. Getting lost and asking locals for directions is never a big deal, however making a wrong turn or bad exit and ending up in Hezbollah territory can lead to some site-seeing that none of us were too keen on seeing. We were actually told by many people that it would be quite safe and interesting to have someone drive us through for a tour of a Hezbollah neighborhood but we could never find anyone to volunteer.... intentionally.
Driving around the country is one thing but driving in Beirut is another. It has the worst traffic I have ever seen or could fathom. On an 8-lane road, with 4-lanes for each direction, traffic starts to build up a few miles before an intersection coming into town. The cars going one direction, the direction we are headed, are completely stopped so the people start using the other 4 lanes heading the wrong way to bypass the traffic. Soon all 8 lanes are jammed with cars trying to go one direction while coming from the intersection 8 lanes are jammed coming the other way with no room to pass. It seems infuriating and mind-boggling that this can actually happen and it can take 2 hours to go 2 miles but yes it does. After having some time while sitting in the aforementioned traffic to reflect upon how people can drive like this, I came to the conclusion that after living through years of civil war and complete devastation, driving the wrong way down a street really isn’t that big a deal. You could always handle it like these guys who kept the traffic and themselves entertained for most of the time:
Driving around the country is one thing but driving in Beirut is another. It has the worst traffic I have ever seen or could fathom. On an 8-lane road, with 4-lanes for each direction, traffic starts to build up a few miles before an intersection coming into town. The cars going one direction, the direction we are headed, are completely stopped so the people start using the other 4 lanes heading the wrong way to bypass the traffic. Soon all 8 lanes are jammed with cars trying to go one direction while coming from the intersection 8 lanes are jammed coming the other way with no room to pass. It seems infuriating and mind-boggling that this can actually happen and it can take 2 hours to go 2 miles but yes it does. After having some time while sitting in the aforementioned traffic to reflect upon how people can drive like this, I came to the conclusion that after living through years of civil war and complete devastation, driving the wrong way down a street really isn’t that big a deal. You could always handle it like these guys who kept the traffic and themselves entertained for most of the time:
But this tends to be the attitude of the people. To make the best out of whatever situation they are in. To enjoy yourself when you can because tomorrow things may change. It is a country of contrast with a five-star hotel
built next to a blown out building, a luxurious home rebuilt next to a
neighbor’s still pock-marked with bullet holes, a Vegas style pool bar next to a mosque, a concert venue hosting the most current performers in one of the oldest cities in the world, bombs dropping in the north while tourists party on the beach in the south. It is a country of resilience and great pride trying to lead the way as the multi-cultural example of the Middle East.
View from Byblos looking south to the beach clubs and coastal neighborhoods. |
A day at the beach turns into an evening for dinner on the coast. |
A model posted on a wrecked building winks at drivers as they sit in Beirut traffic. |
The Lebanese flag during sunset on the Mediterranean Sea. |
Cheers,
Jb
No comments:
Post a Comment