Morocco is a Rainbow - A Poetic Reality
By Linda Fletcher
Traveling to different parts of the world or
to different parts of the country broadens
our scope of reality.  If we are open
minded and receptive we can experience
the spiritual dimensions of travel in that not
only do our physical body travel but also
our soul.

As I grow older I find myself adding up
remembered events, places, people and
experiences that remain in the recesses of
my mind.  I conjure up these past
pleasures, enlightened insights and lessons
that have enhanced, changed or moved my
life further into being who I am.  I have been thinking a lot about travel and realizing its depth and
importance in that not only does ones perspective broaden but that also new dimensions are opened.
Lately I have become aware that I remember my travel experiences the most as if they were yesterday
and in vivid details.  Many years ago I traveled to Morocco and it was a beautiful soul awakening
experience. This experience remains permanently in my gaze of remembered pleasant experiences.
Morocco is a place where for centuries the East has met the West.  I enjoyed meeting people that were
not impressed by the West and a people that are living within their own tradition dating back thousands
of years before the West came into existence.

The spiritual experience of the Sufis was everywhere - a visual presence, and I could see how
Rembrandt was inspired by this part of the world. I could see the rainbow everywhere within my gaze,
and it reminded me of Rembrandt's hidden rainbows beneath his famous paintings that influenced
Europe's enlightenment.

Many of the experiences that I had while in Morocco are not easily describable within a western cultural
context; mainly because Morocco is ancient and predates Europe. It is a very spiritual reality - where
souls are not static from consumerism, and the population has evolved as a unit; as a genetic pool of
gradual variation.

I remember vividly the rich vibrant colors that were constantly set in motion in many shades of orange,
reddish earth tones, blues and browns. I can still remember the henna dyed palms, hands and fingers as
Moroccans went through their daily activities.  Also I remember the many smells of tangerines and
spearmint.  The rainbow was apparent everywhere and it seemed to be a part of the culture as a
reminder that life is light and that color is reflected in many dimensions and enters into our very
collective being.  I could see everywhere within my gaze the shifting flow of colors reflected from the
sun's radiant light and the Moroccan people interacting with colors, shape, light and forms in their
environment that was enhanced by songs, chants, callings and prayers.

I can remember riding on one of the local busses and looking out the window and seeing people wearing
colorful clothes that looked softly meshed that blended into the terrain.  The people looked as if they
were softly painted into their environment as if painted by a painter as they wore coral and onyx jewelry.
 Their hands and hair were dyed with henna in beautiful patterns of art.  I saw sheepherders blending
into the terrain.  I did not want to speak English because I felt that it would be an intrusion upon this
sacred space and moment.  I did not want to influence this North African culture with Westernisms.

I can remember an old Arab man stretching out as if he was stretching out to God, the open spaces
around him, relaxing and smoking hashish. I walked through the Atlas Mountains and I saw stars in the
sky that seemed so close but yet distant.  I felt ancient wisdom all around me as an old Arabic man said
to me when I told him that I was an African American that, "the African American was the soul of
America", as he laid stretched out under the stars.

I can still feel the aura of Tangier, Marrakech, Rabat, Tifni and the many veils of serenity in shades of
black and deep blue indigo.  I can never forget the smiles of the Berbers and dozing off on a bus ride
and waking up and seeing an Arabic man smiling at me as if he had been guarding my sleep with prayer
and meditation.

But the most important lesson that I learned is that we can learn and teach through our eyes.  I learned
the art and the many lessons of seeing each other softly and with warm contentions.  I learned that our
eyes can teach us about life and the many truths that lay before us waiting to be unfolded through ones'
gaze upon the horizon and within ones soul and the soul of others.  We can witness life through vision
aided and enhancement by sight and smell.

I met people that communicated starting from a place of similarity rather than from differences.  I felt
that I was experiencing high culture and was a part of a massive domain of space, sight, sound and
smell.  I felt the embrace of Islam in its splendor and that there was poetry to its existence.  I saw poetry
as the women and men worked.  They moved like sculpture gliding in union with the physical
environment.  Through the display of cultural, beauty and art the culture of the Moroccan people
touched my soul with their flow of gentle meditative energy that moved from one person to another like
a gentle sea.

I looked into their eyes and I saw a unity of similarity flowing through time and that genetics had united
them through the soft glow in their deep dark eyes.  Reality seemed to be laid bare with no pretenses.  I
feel honored in experiencing this culture and this place in time.  I felt a glimpse of their spiritual haven.  
It made me feel the indefiniteness of time, space and spirituality and that Morocco is a place to rest ones
soul indefinitely in time.