Travels Through Islam: The Sands, and Waters, of Time

Dominic Nahr—Magnum for TIME
Dominic Nahr—Magnum for TIME
Morocco, 2011. A passenger of a bus waits while a flash flood takes out the road ahead of them near the northern edge of the Sahara desert in present-day Morocco

This is the first installment in a five-part series from TIME International’s annual Summer Journey issue, Travels Through Islam: Discovering a world of change and challenge in the footsteps of the 14th century explorer Ibn Battuta.

In February 1352, Islamic scholar and explorer Ibn Battuta set off from the city of Sijilmasa at the edge of the Sahara to journey with a camel caravan to lands far to the south. The voyage across the desert was a grueling two-month ordeal through salt wastes and terrain “haunted by demons,” yet it was a trek made by many then.

Trade goods and Islam meant the Sahara was a crossroads, not a sandy oblivion. In almost every town he visited in the kingdom of Mali, Ibn Battuta was gifted calabashes and cucumbers by men who had made the hajj, the pilgrimage to Mecca. Upon seeing the Niger River, Ibn Battuta mistakenly concluded he was by the Nile. A crocodile to him looked “just like a small boat.”

TIME contract photographer Dominic Nahr followed Ibn Battuta’s path into sub-Saharan Africa. Starting at tourist-trodden Fez, he went to Sijilmasa, whose ruins, says Nahr, “feel forgotten.”

Through the desert and into Mali, Nahr passed the ancient mud town of Djenné, much the same now as it was in Ibn Battuta’s time. At the shores of the Niger River, Nahr captured the pan-o-rama of an age-old festival, with fishermen sinking their nets en masse. Says Nahr:

“It’s a beautiful mesh of life as half-naked women clean their laundry, men move their goods of wooden boats onto donkey carts and children dip in and out of the water. Walking across a desert with five men holding makeshift fishing nets, I could not have imagined the scene that presented itself in front of me. I was walking backwards focusing on the men when suddenly I hear a roar. I turn around and see hundreds of men with fishing nets waist-deep in a lake taking part in this yearly fishing festival. My heart beat faster as I entered the water.”

Ibn Battuta would have known the feeling.

Ishaan Tharoor is a writer-reporter for TIME and editor of Global Spin. Find him on Twitter at @ishaantharoor. You can also continue the discussion on TIME’s Facebook page and on Twitter at @TIMEWorld.

Dominic Nahr, a TIME contract photographer, photographed the aftermath of the Japanese earthquake and tsunami and the spring uprising in Egypt. Nahr is represented by Magnum. Check back tomorrow for the second photographic installment of TIME’s Summer Journey issue.

Related Topics: , , , ,

Latest Posts

Saudi citizens rest after presenting Saudi Billionaire HRH Prince al Waleed bin Talal with petitions for his help at a desert camp outside of Riyadh, in Saudi Arabia, February 27, 2013.   Like many families across Saudi Arabia who are barely scraping above the poverty line each month, many poor Saudis rely on the hope of the charity of others to survive. (Credit: Lynsey Addario/ VII)

Rich Nation, Poor People: Saudi Arabia by Lynsey Addario

With its vast oil wealth, Saudi Arabia has one of the highest concentrations of super rich households in the world. But an estimated 20 percent of the population, if not more, lives in crippling poverty.

Read More
USA. Illinois. Chicago. 1948. An alley between overcrowded tenements, with garbage thrown over the railings of the back porches. Most of the area's tenants were transient. Contact email:New York : photography@magnumphotos.comParis : magnum@magnumphotos.frLondon : magnum@magnumphotos.co.ukTokyo : tokyo@magnumphotos.co.jpContact phones:New York : +1 212 929 6000Paris: + 33 1 53 42 50 00London: + 44 20 7490 1771Tokyo: + 81 3 3219 0771Image URL:http://www.magnumphotos.com/Archive/C.aspx?VP3=ViewBox_VPage&IID=2S5RYDI201Y8&CT=Image&IT=ZoomImage01_VForm

In Memoriam: Wayne Miller (1918 – 2013)

Michael Ackerman—Agence VU/Aurora Photos

Darkness Visible: On World Goth Day, Photos of Romance and Shadow