Globetrotters meeting Saturday
5th October 2002 By Padmassana
Eamon Gearon's talk entitled “Walking to
Siwa” gave us a glimpse of the Egyptian desert.
Eamon first visited the area in 1994 and has returned
regularly since. His slides depicted the mad Siwa traffic and
told us about the Brooke Hospital for working animals, a
charity that seeks to alleviate the suffering of mules and
other working animals. The camel market where Eamon buys his
camels is a sight to be seen, the camel's owners mark
them with paint and each subsequent owner adds their mark, so
that in the end some of the camels are psychedelically
coloured! Eamon told us a good camel costs around £200
and when he trades them in after use, “One careful
owner”, he normally gets his money back. Eamon's
treks into the desert last around 3 weeks. For the first 100
miles or so from the coast water wells are well marked, but
after this water becomes an issue, he told us how he got
dysentery from a well where he suspected an animal had fallen
into it and died thus polluting this important source of
life. The Egyptian desert is not a sea of rolling golden sand
dunes as we may have expected, but mile upon mile of
rock-strewn desolation. Though this landscape does lend
itself to some superb sunset photographs. Eamon's slides
of Siwa showed us the houses made of mud and the 100 feet
high mud city walls, which have
21st century additions like
electricity cables and satellite dishes. Eamon explained that
these mud constructions can be killers in the rain as they
are prone to collapse and turn into mud slides. Siwa is a
series of oasis, it is said that you can sink a well anywhere
in the locality and you will find water, Siwa is a green
place, despite its location.
Our second talk was by Tahir Shah entitled
“Searching for King Solomons mines”.
Tahir's ambition was to find the location of these
legendary mines. After extensive biblical research Tahir came
to the conclusion that they lay in present day Ethiopia. On
his second day in Addis Ababa Tahir struck lucky finding a
taxi driver called Sampson who had previously worked as an
illegal gold miner. Tahir and Sampson headed to the mines via
a town plagued by hyenas. The locals believed these
hyena's came off the mountain in order to steal the local
children, so to placate them, the local “Hyena
men” would slaughter a cow and feed it to the hyenas
each evening. The illegal mines are a dangerous open cast
type of operation run as co-operatives. The material is moved
by hand, along chains of miners. The women then do the
panning. Tahir explained that if a miner finds a nugget he
usually swallows it, waits for nature to take its course and
then goes to the city to sell it. However it is not uncommon
that if other miners find someone has done this, they are
often murdered and disembowelled for the nugget. This is just
another danger for the miners, especially the brave ones who
go down deep pits in search of their prize, as these pits
frequently collapse with loss of life. Tahir showed us a cave
he suspected could be the fabled place he was looking for,
but alas it was just full of bats and ended after a few
metres. Tahir is sure that the legendary mines are out there
somewhere, just waiting to be discovered.
London meetings are held at The Church of Scotland, Crown
Court, behind the Fortune Theatre in Covent Garden at 2.30pm
the first Saturday of each month. There is no London meeting
in August, but we will be back in September. For more
information, you can contact the Globetrotter Info line on
+44 (0) 20 8674 6229, or visit the website: www.globetrotters.co.uk