Executive summary by darmansjah
One of the oldest
cities in East Africa, the one time slave port of Stone Town beguiles with its
exotic blend of cultures and historical landmarks, by Lee Yu Kit
the house of wonders
It is easier to let yourself get lost in the labyrinthine
streets of Stone Town than it is to resist their allure. On my first visit to this World Heritage Site on Unguja,
the main island of Zanzibar, the dismaying similarity of every street fed my
apprehensions about exploring the urban maze. Alley ways radiated in every
direction, and buildings pushed in on all sides like canyon walls, obscuring
all points of bearing except for the narrow slits of piercing blue sky above.
Yet every blind turn and corner held some new intrigue that drew me deeper: a
woman peddling an exotic assortment of spices; a quiet lane lined with ornately
carved wooden doors; a smart café plying aromatic teas and coffees.
Outside Stone Town’s old Arab Fort complex
I paused to ask a resident how he was this morning: “habariyaasubhuhi? “Dzury! He replied in
Swahili-‘Good!’-adding in flawless English. “Where are you from?”
At first it was a surprise to hear English, but then, this
historic town has long been about the intermingling of peoples and cultures. Ever
since its humble beginning as a cluster of fishing huts, the Zanzibar capital
has seen a constant wash of influences carried by the easterly Indian Ocean
winds. Portuguese settlers, Arab and Indian traders, Persian merchants, German
Colonist, British empire builders, even Indonesians from far across the seas –
they all came to this cluster of islands off the Tanzanian coast, and they all
left their mark. And the cross-pollination continues today. On my visit, I
encountered sari-clad Indians, longtime European residents, Muslim women in
black burkas, Africans with florid, flowing robes, and plenty of camera-toting
tourists from all corners of the world.
A Swahili woman framed by one of stone town’s intricately carved doorways.
Exoticism aside, Stone Town’s origins are somewhat mundane. It
earned its name because the Portuguese seafarers who landed here at the end of
the 15th century built their homes from the island’s coralline rock.
They started off in what was the fishing village of Shangani, and ever the
countries the town sprawled into its current chaos as new corners continued to
built, without plans or regulations. Streets became claustrophobically narrow
as there was no motorized traffic, and few provisions were made for open spaces
as most houses had courtyard. Arabs and Indians introduced the carved wooden
doorways with ornate lintels and doorpost that are so common throughout town. The
brass spikes that adorn these doors are holdovers of an Indian tradition in
which such spikes were used to ward off elephant attacks – never mind that no
pachyderm could possibly fit down these narrow streets.
A young member of the town’s majority Muslim community
Stone Town occupies a triangular peninsula on Unguja’s west
coast, some three square kilometer in all, bounded on two sides by the sea, and
on the third by Creek Road, its sandy shores are now almost over run by development
– for a beach holiday, you’d best look elsewhere along the coast. . but there
is plenty enough to explore amid the town’s warren of alleyways: two churches,
at least two Hindu temples, and between 40 and 50 mosques, depending on who’s
counting. Some 20,000 residents inhabit the area, and it’s been home to several
notables over the years, including Scottish explorer and missionary David
Livingstone. Freddy Mercury, the late front man of the British rock group
Queen, was born here, as well, and though I’d hoped for some sort of monument
or tribute to him, I found none.
amid the maze-like network of stone town's back street
I did, however, find the home of Tippu Tip, the infamous
slave trader. Zanzibar, East Africa’s main slave port, was the last place on
the planet where humans were traded openly, with some 15,000 slaves sold
monthly at the height of the trade. It wasn’t until 1873 that the Sultan of
Zanzibar signed a royal decree abolishing the practice, though that didn’t stop
traders such as Tip from carrying on illegally for years to follow. Tip’s
house, a sprawling, dilapidated building in dire need of repair, is now owned
by the government and occupied by local families. A man sitting outside the
notorious residence told me that he lived there, and invited me inside. I politely
ceclined.
I had no such qualms at Christ Church Cathedral, built in
1873 on the site of the slave market. The spiritual hub of Zanzibar’s Anglican
community, it’s a grim and stolid affair, yet nevertheless an uplifting
landmark as the official symbol of the end of the slave trade. Inside, the
church is all stained glass windows and wooden pews, with the altar sitting
resolutely over the spot where the old whipping post used to be. Also of
passing interest is the Livingstone
Cross, a crucifix made from wood taken from a branch of the tree under which
the explorer died, in present-day Zambia.
The church has a soaring steeple, yet this is not the
tallest structure in Stone Town. That honor goes to the Beit el-Ajaib, or ‘House
of Wonders,’ a four-story palace on the water front that the sultan decreed no
building could exceed in height. When it was constructed in 1883, the House of
Wonders was indeed wondrous: it had electricity, running water, and an
elevator-though that didn’t prevent it from being damaged in 1896 in what is
remembered as the world’s shortest war, when a British naval bombardment ended
a nascent insurrection by a rebellious young sultan in under 45 minutes. The building
now houses a decidedly less wondrous museum, where I found large, musty rooms
full of artifacts and long gloomy corridors, though the commanding view of the
seafront from the top floor is still quiet impressive.
I could see down to the old Arab Fort, which now hosts a
film festival every July, and out over grassy Forodhani Park, where children
tumbled and dove into the shallows from a walled embankment, and grown-ups
lounged like lizards under shade trees. The ulu lating call to evening prayer
echoed across the rooftops, and vendors were setting up seafood stalls on
trestle tables and unloading huge crab claws and muscular slabs of fish to grill up for passerby. At the park’s periphery,
old cannons still pointed seaward, and the ocean beyond bobbed and glinted with
yachts, pleasure craft, ferries, and dive boats. In the gathering dusk, life in
stone town ambled along as it always has-people pushed carts full of their
wares, walked children home from school, bartered over goods and services. Leaving
my perch, I descended into the throng, just one more visitors to these shores.
Stone Town – Getting there
From Asia, the most direct route to Zanzibar is via Doha on Qatar Airways, which operates a double
daily service to Dar Es Salaam, the Tanzanian capital. From there, it’s a
20-minte flight to Zanzibar with national carrier Precision Air.
When To Go Zanzibar’s best weather occurs during its long
dry season, from June to October.
Where to Stay – For a full immersion into the Stone town
milleu, book a room at the Emerson Spice (tharia St; 255-24/223-2776; emersonspice.com; doubles from US$175),
a newly restored heritage building dating back to 1836. For something closer to
the beach and outside town, consider The Residence Zanzibar (Mchamgamle;
255-24/555-500, the residence.com;
villas from US$875).
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