Posts

Showing posts from June, 2018

Beauty

Image
Mohammed Hojily was kind enough to share a few Tweets with me, which I'm going to include here on the blog in the new couple days.  You can follow him on Twitter at: @MohammedHojily. "Unlike the Arabic peninsula #Yemen has diversity's environmental and cultural, where that beside the green heavens there are huge mountains contains villagers houses on clouds, despite the ravages of war that Yemen is passing through.  But it is still the wondrous land." I'm so happy that Mohammed kindly shared his Tweets, but also that he shared these beautiful pictures and words. In the popular imagination Yemen is sometimes unfairly reduced to a rugged desert, but it is so much more than that.  One of our main goals with this blog is to change people's default perception of Yemen.

Barran Temple

Image
This story was sent along by Mohammed Alzaeem.  You can follow him on Twitter at @mohammedalzaee1. "Barran Temple is a Sabaean temple near Ma'rib, Yemen; also known as the "Throne of Bilqis", the queen of Shiba whose story with the prophet Solomon is mentioned in the Bible and the Holly Qur'an. The temple is located to the west of Awwam Temple, dedicated to the God Almaqah. The main features of the structure are the six columns and the sacred well in the middle of the courtyard. It was partly excavated by Wendell Phillips' expedition of 1951-2. To make it clear, Yemen is one of oldest centers of civilization in the Near East. Its relatively fertile land and adequate rainfall in a moister climate helped sustain a stable population, a feature recognized by the ancient Greek geographer Ptolemy, who described Yemen as  Eudaimon Arabia  (better known in its Latin translation,  Arabia Felix ) meaning  Fortunate Arabia  or  Happy Arabia . Between th

Lunch In Sana'a

Image
Even though this blog isn't about me - and even though I was only there over a weekend - I have my own memories of Yemen, and I'll share them occasionally.  And although you probably came here via Twitter, there's a chance that you didn't, so I'll give you my Twitter handle: @scuddertravel "Here are a couple pictures that I snapped on my very brief visit to Sana'a several years ago.  I was wandering around the Old City (and when you're talking about Yemen Old City really means OLD CITY) of Sana'a and it was time for lunch.  It was Friday afternoon and the city was just starting to get busy after the Jumu'ah prayer. As I walked past a little restaurant on a square two gentlemen told me me that their place was the best and that's all the convincing I needed.  I've spent a couple years over seas and I can't imagine I ever had a meal that I enjoyed more or that I remember more fondly." The nice gentlemen who ran the restaur

Kindness

Image
Mohammed Hojily was kind enough to share a few Tweets with me, which I'm going to include here on the blog in the new couple days.  You can follow him on Twitter at: @MohammedHojily. "A child from Socotra was trying to survive a small goat from the #Mukono Cyclone.  #Yemen." What strikes me about this Tweet is that it perfectly captures something that anyone who has ever traveled to Yemen learns: the incredible kindness of the Yemeni people.  Even when faced with natural disasters (but also sadly man-made disasters) that kindness is never shaken.