A durbar is an annual festival celebrated in several northern cities of Nigeria at the culmination of Muslim festivals Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha. We visited the durbars in Kano and Katsina, both famed for the pageantry as the traditional rulers greet the Emir of Katsina and Kano, which consisted of a colorful parade of decorated horses, dancers, acrobats and musicians, and ending at the Emir's palace (where we had great seats with a view). The women had a opportunity to visit with the Emir's second wife in the palace.
This trip was run by the Nigerian Field Society and lead by Paulette, a resident of Nigeria for 27 years (from Belgium). The durbars were the main attraction but we also went shopping in a market, toured the oldest indigo die pits, visited the traditional men weavers, a pottery village, and a Fulani village, went to a camel and cow market (not for those with a weak stomach), and had our hands/feet painted with henna (those who wanted it anyway). The trip ran from Saturday September 27 to Wednesday October 1.
I will be posting more details and pictures soon.
A Fun Day of Sailing
15 years ago
2 comments:
Well ... silly me. I'm just not that good at blogging or making comments -- self conscious I guess -- I know that should be an oxymoron concerning the source. But what I wanted to say is that I love the pictures and comments. I love to see what you all tackle and the adventures you have. I love your take on life and adventures. And that you tackle all kinds of things.
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