Sunday, April 12, 2009
A little about Aqaba, Jordan
Aqaba is Jordan's only seaport and is evenly split between a rapidly developing world class port and a resort town. It borders Eilat, Israel and is at the head of the Gulf of Aqaba, an offshoot of the Red Sea. The town sits in valley between two arms of a mountain range as it reaches the sea, making it quite beautiful. From the Aqaba area, on a clear day, you can see Israel, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia.
This area at the head of the Gulf has been settled since 4000 BC under the Edomites, Nabataeans (also built Petra), Greeks, Romans, the Islamic Caliphate (after Muhammad), the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem, Saladin, Mamluks, the Ottoman Empire, Lawrence of Arabia, and finally Jordan. Aqaba also sits astride one of the routes to the holy sites in Mecca.
Visible from everywhere in the area is the Aqaba flagpole, the second tallest free-standing flagpole in the world at nearly 450 feet tall. It flies the flag of Arab Revolt (Palestinian support), which looks like the Jordanian flag with the colors rearranged and minus the star. There is also amazing diving in the Gulf of Aqaba, but I didn't get to experience that. The water was nice though with a higher than normal salt content making me more buoyant than normal...pretty easy to swim. I can definitely vouch that there are some great hotels and despite the global economic downturn, Aqaba is undergoing significant development of some impressive new living and resort areas. With Petra and Wadi Rum nearby, it is a great place to visit.
Saturday, April 11, 2009
Copyright...we don't need no stinkin' copyright!
So do you think the "Gifts Shop" is full of official merchandise? This picture shows further evidence that copyright and trademark are very much a Western world construction. Copyright/trademark acknowledgment is generally non-existent in the Middle Eastern and Asian (except Japan) countries that I've visited. I haven't been to Africa, but I assume it's similar. This gift shop is just outside Petra, which, as I mentioned in the previous post, was featured in an Indiana Jones movie. Notice the high quality graphics on the sign.
Friday, April 10, 2009
Visiting Petra
After a few weeks of procrastination (and late nights at work), it is time for some posts from my Jordan visit. This first post is about the highlight of the entire trip and it happened the first day. On our inbound travel day, we arrived in Aqaba, Jordan around 8:00 am. The downside is to get there that early, the travel process started in the very early morning. The bonus was that with no planned conference events that day, we had a golden opportunity to knock out a little sightseeing (after a quick stop at McDonald's).
A group of four of us hired a car and driver to take us out to see Petra. It took us about one-and-a-half hours to wind our way inland and up into the mountains. Petra is one of the World Heritage sites and some also place it as one of the new 7 wonders of the world. It is an archaelogical site in southern Jordan renowned for its rock-cut architecture. The Nabateans constructed it as their capital city around 100 BCE and portions of it are amazingly preserved to this day. If you've seen "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade", then you are familiar with part of Petra which played the role of the Templar Knights' tomb and final resting place of the Holy Grail.
Heading down into the valley to the site, you walk through a dark and narrow gorge called the Siq ("the shaft") that is naturally cut through the sandstone rocks. As you come to the end of the narrow gorge, Petra's most well-preserved ruin, Al Khazneh (popularly known as "the Treasury") peeks through the gap between the walls of the gorge. This is the amazing view familiar from "Indiana Jones" (first picture on left). It was incredible.
There are hundreds of caves/tombs/temples/buildings throughout the "city" of Petra as you wind down the gorge. Each of them has multiple chambers cut into the rock, some with additional tombs built inside and underneath the larger ones. All through the gorge are also the remains of stone-carved stairways cut into the beautifully colored, striped sandstone - paths to access the higher places. There is even a full amphitheater with multiple tiers of seating, tunnel entrances, and a stage.
We did a ton of climbing and exploring in four hours, but you could easily spend days here and not see everything. This site is easily one of the most amazing things I have ever seen, definitely worth a return visit. I have merely brushed the surface of all that is here, so please check out the web-link above to learn more.
Tuesday, April 7, 2009
Missed the President this time
This time, I missed seeing the President. We found out too late to make it over to the Palace without a weapon and before lockdown. You know you're out of time when CNN is broadcasting the visit right after you find out. I did, however, get to enjoy the intense security around the base since it was dinner time and finding an open road to get anywhere was difficult. We prevailed though and made it to dinner and back, just no Presidential sight-seeing tonight. Sounds like it was a good experience for those who made it though.
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