Read The Intimate Bond Online

Authors: Brian Fagan

The Intimate Bond (27 page)

Caravans (
qualafil
in Arabic) large and small traversed the Sahara for many centuries. Larger ones comprised thousands of beasts traveling in lines that extended several kilometers.
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One has an image of unchanging desert tracks, of camels moving steadily across utterly arid landscapes looking neither left nor right. Nothing could be further from the truth. Reality was harsh in the extreme. The caravaner was at the mercy of a constantly changing desert, where environmental and weather conditions differed from month to month, year to year. The agricultural calendar and heat determined the start of the caravan season, which typically lasted from October to March. Most caravans traveled from dawn until just after noon, the time of the afternoon prayer. Many journeyed at night. An average day covered about 34 kilometers (21.7 miles), but there was no such thing as an average day, thanks to strong winds, rough terrain, and the varying number of beasts.

Figure 13.2
  A Saharan camel caravan led by a puller. Anna Gibiskys/Shutterstock.

The caravaners walked alongside their beasts through featureless landscapes where mirages were commonplace, the horizon masked by haze. The caravaners' minds were beset by boredom, their bodies by dehydration and exhaustion. In 1858 the traveler Mardochée Aby Serour complained that the “ground is as uniform as paper and reverberates in your eyes like crystal.”
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He remarked that camel droppings appeared to be human riders at a distance. There were, of course, relatively predictable areas where water and grazing could be found, but the sparse rainfall and pasture varied from year to year, so routes changed constantly. Every caravan depended on intelligence about watering holes and graze. A high level of trust existed between different leaders, merchants, and agents, some of whom formed collectives to organize larger, safer caravans. Caravaners shared route planning, information on potential markets, and insights about volatile political conditions along the way.

Caravan guides provided expert advice from their encyclopedic knowledge of landscape, water supplies, and the latest environmental conditions. Many were expert trackers of animals and of potentially hostile nomads, and knew the most insignificant of landmarks. The fourteenth-century Arab traveler Ibn Battuta marveled at the skill of
his guide, who was “blind in one eye and diseased in the other and yet knew the way better than anyone.”
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Every guide had to be able to navigate with the aid of the heavens. The polestar
, bilhady
in Arabic, did not move, and guided the traveler toward north. Saharan navigators knew the constellations that traveled across the heavens and used them to establish their position, to calculate the distance traveled. Skies were generally clear, but when a sandstorm blew, the caravan was as lost as a mariner in the midst of the Pacific Ocean.

Extreme heat, mirages, thirst, raiders, and sandstorms—the caravaner learned the realities of a tough trade at an early age and was literally born to the job. There was, of course, far more to the plodding caravan than the camel and its rider. Families, entire communities, wealthy merchants, and breeders all played important parts in a trade that has now all but vanished in the face of the truck and the diesel engine. Only a few caravans and a will-o'-the-wisp of vivid recollections survive.

The journey was never easy, with the attendant hazards of heat and dehydration, quite apart from desert nomads, clad in blue burnooses, who would attack without warning. Safety lay in numbers and in carefully thought-out logistics, for the larger the loads the greater the profits. As early as the eighth century, West African gold was well known in the Islamic world, financing wars of conquest and bringing immense wealth to Islam. By the twelfth century, some caravans numbered as many as twelve hundred to two thousand beasts. In July 1324, the sultan of Egypt welcomed a truly exotic visitor, Mansa Musa, ruler of the West African kingdom of Mali. He traveled in style, with hundreds of camels and numerous slaves. The Malians injected so much gold into the Egyptian economy that the value of this most precious metal dropped as much as 25 percent for some years. Before Columbus sailed west, Mansa Musa and his successors supplied two-thirds of Europe's gold. Such was the demand for gold and salt that caravans traversed the Sahara long after Portuguese ships landed in West Africa and gold flowed from American mines.

Even in the twenty-first century, the last remnants of the trade survive. Camel caravans connect the salt mines at Taoudenni, deep in the Sahara, and Timbuktu, near the Niger River on the southern fringes of the desert (see sidebar “The Salt Carriers”).
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The Salt Carriers

The four-wheel-drive diesel truck is today's Saharan camel, but a few remnants of the ancient caravan trade linger on. Camels still transport cake salt slabs in Mali, four slabs per beast, the driver keeping one at journey's end. How much longer the caravans will continue is an open question, for the truck drivers pay cash up front for their loads, and prices have fallen. At least camels do not require diesel fuel or expensive maintenance.

Salt has been Saharan gold for many centuries, since at least the twelfth century when Islamic merchants discovered the rich deposits deep in the remotest parts of the desert. This most commonplace of substances may not seem like gold to you and me, but even small bags of it were critically important to tropical farmers, who lived off predominantly carbohydrate diets. Each winter, large slabs of Saharan salt reached Timbuktu, at the southern edge of the desert, on the backs of thousands of camels. Once in Timbuktu, the salt traveled by boat downstream to the riverside town of Mopti, where it was broken into smaller packages for sale in other markets in the Sahel.

The Tuareg call these seasonal caravans the
Azalai
. Traditionally, they were journeys from Timbuktu to the salt mines at Taoudenni, eight hundred kilometers (five hundred miles) to the north in northern Mali. At one time, the
Azalai
extended from Timbuktu to Taoudenni, then northward onto Taghaza, another salt mining location, then to the Mediterranean. North-traveling caravans of as many as ten thousand camels carried gold and slaves. The beasts returned laden with salt. Enormous caravans traveled back and forth through remote, featureless desert. The winter caravan of 1939–40 involved more than four thousand camels and thirty-five thousand slabs of salt. Current production has declined, but remarkably, the camel caravans persist to this day. The numbers are much smaller, each weekly caravan involving perhaps fifty beasts, but the routine never varies, with much of the travel at night. The eight-hundred-kilometer (five-hundred-mile) trek takes about fourteen days through some of the hottest and most featureless dune terrain on earth.

Taoudenni is an unpleasant place by any standards. For some decades a penal settlement, the tiny village occupies an ancient lake bed in one of the hottest regions on earth. Here, summer temperatures reach 40 degrees Celsius (120 degrees Fahrenheit), with average winter highs around 27 degrees Celsius (81 degrees Fahrenheit). Over one hundred sixty kilometers (a hundred miles) of unrelenting Saharan landscape isolate the inhabitants from any popular center of any size. Arid, windy, and blessed with a mere four days of rainfall a year, Taoudenni has only one asset: cake salt. Thousands of cavelike pits from centuries of mining litter the salt lake bed, each about four meters (thirteen feet) deep, dug by teams of three miners, who are usually indentured servants. Three layers of high-quality salt lie under poorer-quality material and red-clay overburden. Using crude axes, the men cut rectangular slabs of salt weighing about thirty kilograms (sixty-six pounds), each about five centimeters (two inches) thick. These the camels carry to Timbuktu four slabs per beast, stacked from the saddle, one going to the owner. Everyone takes care not to break the slabs, for their value would then plummet. The mining takes place during the cooler winter months, with the miners living in crude huts made of poor-quality salt blocks.

The caravan journey is almost mystical in its isolation, traversing featureless dunes across a landscape that warps one's sense of distance. Nothing grows for thousands of square kilometers. Water is measured in drops rather than liters. The camels walk from watering hole to watering hole, led by a human guide, who has only the wind, the stars above, and the subtle changes in the color of the sand to help him. He knows the route like the back of his hand, his knowledge of desert pilotage a legacy going back centuries. Each guide operates by dead reckoning, keeping careful track of days and distances. To miss a watering hole means almost certain death. The young drivers, sometimes mere boys, act as “pullers.” They head each column of beasts under the charge of the guide. However young, they are well aware of the hazards of the featureless landscape with its ever-shifting horizons and dunes. The big problems are forage and water, so each caravan drops loads of hay every few days, to be used on the return trip. They also tend to travel in the early morning; later in the day, to avoid the midday heat; and quite often, at night. This journey of great isolation is far more than a journey back to a medieval world of camel caravans. For the young pullers, it's a spiritual journey, a kind of pilgrimage that takes them closer to Allah. Their suffering and fear give them a powerful spiritual awakening, a chance to see themselves in a landscape that some Islamic sages call a mirror of the soul.

Camels on the Silk Road

Around 2500
BCE
,
NOMADS
living in the mountains and plateau regions between Iran and Turkmenistan domesticated the two-humped Bactrian camel.
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The art of breeding this animal spread across the Iranian Plateau, into Central Asia, and into Mesopotamia, where the Assyrians depicted it on bas-reliefs as war booty. Many of these camels hauled carts.

Bactrians are better adapted to colder landscapes and became a staple of the Eurasian Silk Road, especially during the first century
CE
, when trade between the Han Dynasty and the Parthians of northeastern Iran expanded dramatically. Somewhere in the breeding ranges of southern Mesopotamia, some herders interbred one- and two-humped beasts. The resulting hybrids were powerful single-humped camels that were formidable load carriers. According to the Greek author Diodorus, some of them could heft loads weighing nearly 410 kilograms (900 pounds). The Silk Road caravans ultimately depended for the most part on hybrids in warmer landscapes and on hardier two-humped Bactrians in cold regions such as the Altai and the Hindu Kush.

What Was Eurasian Caravan Travel Like?

The traveler and writer Owen Lattimore gives us one of the few firsthand accounts of what it was like to travel in a Eurasian camel caravan before motor vehicles diluted the experience.
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In the 1920s, he joined caravans traveling from eastern China through the Gobi Desert to Mongolia. The Bactrian camels traveled in rows of about eighteen beasts, with a puller for each file. A caravan master led the way, the equivalent of a ship's captain, whose word was law. On the march, the puller led the first camel in his row with a guide rope attached to a wooden peg in the lead beast's nose. Similar ropes linked the lead camel to the ones behind it.

Being a puller was not an easy job. He was responsible for the health of his beasts, which required keeping them away from poisonous plants and finding the best grazing for them. Pullers coped with camels' pack sores and minor injuries, ensured the loads were distributed properly, and prevented the camels from drinking too much water. They also secured their beasts for the night and checked they had adequate protection from wind-blown snow in winter. Loading a camel was an art unto itself, well described by missionaries Mildred Cable and Francesca French, who traveled widely in the region during the 1920s: “In the loading of a camel its grumblings commence as the first bale is placed on its back, and continues uninterruptedly until the load is equal to its strength, but as soon as it shows signs of being in excess, the grumbling ceases suddenly.”
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The caravans carried food and tea for the drivers and any passengers, also dried peas or barley, the cheapest camel feed available. Lattimore heard estimates of thirty loads of fodder for every one hundred of merchandise. The paid cargoes were commodities such as cotton, wool, and tea, and manufactured goods for sale. There were exotica, too: jade from Khotan, elk antlers that were prized in Chinese medicine, and even the remains of dead caravaners and merchants, which traveled in special caravans—or at least their bones did, for the bodies were temporarily buried until the flesh had fallen off the bones. There was opium, too, carried surreptitiously at night. During the summer, when camels
molt, their owners would pick up extra profit by selling the wool. In Lattimore's day, the pullers had learned to knit from White Russians in exile after the Russian Civil War. When they needed wool while knitting on the march, they would simply pluck some from the nearest beast, turn it into thread, and continue knitting.

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