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#moroccan — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #moroccan, aggregated by home.social.

  1. I made targine lamb vindaloo. The scales say I have put in two kilos. I’m inclined to believe it! #targine #moroccan #cookinf

  2. I made targine lamb vindaloo. The scales say I have put in two kilos. I’m inclined to believe it! #targine #moroccan #cookinf

  3. I made targine lamb vindaloo. The scales say I have put in two kilos. I’m inclined to believe it! #targine #moroccan #cookinf

  4. #French 🇫🇷 footballer Sasha Boye carried the #Palestinian 🇵🇸 flag on his back during Galatasaray's #Turkish 🇹🇷 Super League title celebration in Istanbul. He followed the example of #Spanish 🇪🇸 player Lamin Yamal of #Moroccan 🇲🇦 origin. The club defeated Antalya to secure its fourth consecutive championship. [Al-Quds Al-Arabi]

    Follow for the latest updates

  5. #French 🇫🇷 footballer Sasha Boye carried the #Palestinian 🇵🇸 flag on his back during Galatasaray's #Turkish 🇹🇷 Super League title celebration in Istanbul. He followed the example of #Spanish 🇪🇸 player Lamin Yamal of #Moroccan 🇲🇦 origin. The club defeated Antalya to secure its fourth consecutive championship. [Al-Quds Al-Arabi]

    Follow for the latest updates

  6. #French 🇫🇷 footballer Sasha Boye carried the #Palestinian 🇵🇸 flag on his back during Galatasaray's #Turkish 🇹🇷 Super League title celebration in Istanbul. He followed the example of #Spanish 🇪🇸 player Lamin Yamal of #Moroccan 🇲🇦 origin. The club defeated Antalya to secure its fourth consecutive championship. [Al-Quds Al-Arabi]

    Follow for the latest updates

  7. #Moroccan 🇲🇦 armed forces discovered the body of a second missing #American 🇺🇸 soldier in Cap Draa during a military exercise in Africa. [نايا - NAYA]

    Follow for ongoing coverage

  8. #Moroccan 🇲🇦 armed forces discovered the body of a second missing #American 🇺🇸 soldier in Cap Draa during a military exercise in Africa. [نايا - NAYA]

    Follow for ongoing coverage

  9. #Moroccan 🇲🇦 armed forces discovered the body of a second missing #American 🇺🇸 soldier in Cap Draa during a military exercise in Africa. [نايا - NAYA]

    Follow for ongoing coverage

  10. "Arénas is a contemporary reimagining of #NorthAfrican #Jewish #music, where traditional #Moroccan textures meet electronics, horns, and sampling.

    Shaped by migration, memory, and the energy of the #diaspora, the #album draws on the #artistic worlds of #NetaElkayam and #AmitHaiCohen, alongside influences from #NewOrleans. Across seven extended tracks, Arénas unfolds as an immersive, trance-like listening experience.

    Echoing her grandmother’s birthplace in #Tinghir, #Morocco #Elkayam developed an intimate dialogue with her ancestral memory, writing #lyrics through cyclic structures and repetition, and choosing her mother tongue—#MoroccanArabic—as the language of her #art. In close collaboration with #musical #producer Amit Hai Cohen, the #music was co-written and composed, taking shape through a blend of electronic and acoustic #instrumentation. Both trace their family roots to #Amazigh villages in Morocco..."

    harlemworldmagazine.com/neta-e

  11. "Arénas is a contemporary reimagining of #NorthAfrican #Jewish #music, where traditional #Moroccan textures meet electronics, horns, and sampling.

    Shaped by migration, memory, and the energy of the #diaspora, the #album draws on the #artistic worlds of #NetaElkayam and #AmitHaiCohen, alongside influences from #NewOrleans. Across seven extended tracks, Arénas unfolds as an immersive, trance-like listening experience.

    Echoing her grandmother’s birthplace in #Tinghir, #Morocco #Elkayam developed an intimate dialogue with her ancestral memory, writing #lyrics through cyclic structures and repetition, and choosing her mother tongue—#MoroccanArabic—as the language of her #art. In close collaboration with #musical #producer Amit Hai Cohen, the #music was co-written and composed, taking shape through a blend of electronic and acoustic #instrumentation. Both trace their family roots to #Amazigh villages in Morocco..."

    harlemworldmagazine.com/neta-e

  12. "Arénas is a contemporary reimagining of #NorthAfrican #Jewish #music, where traditional #Moroccan textures meet electronics, horns, and sampling.

    Shaped by migration, memory, and the energy of the #diaspora, the #album draws on the #artistic worlds of #NetaElkayam and #AmitHaiCohen, alongside influences from #NewOrleans. Across seven extended tracks, Arénas unfolds as an immersive, trance-like listening experience.

    Echoing her grandmother’s birthplace in #Tinghir, #Morocco #Elkayam developed an intimate dialogue with her ancestral memory, writing #lyrics through cyclic structures and repetition, and choosing her mother tongue—#MoroccanArabic—as the language of her #art. In close collaboration with #musical #producer Amit Hai Cohen, the #music was co-written and composed, taking shape through a blend of electronic and acoustic #instrumentation. Both trace their family roots to #Amazigh villages in Morocco..."

    harlemworldmagazine.com/neta-e

  13. "Arénas is a contemporary reimagining of #NorthAfrican #Jewish #music, where traditional #Moroccan textures meet electronics, horns, and sampling.

    Shaped by migration, memory, and the energy of the #diaspora, the #album draws on the #artistic worlds of #NetaElkayam and #AmitHaiCohen, alongside influences from #NewOrleans. Across seven extended tracks, Arénas unfolds as an immersive, trance-like listening experience.

    Echoing her grandmother’s birthplace in #Tinghir, #Morocco #Elkayam developed an intimate dialogue with her ancestral memory, writing #lyrics through cyclic structures and repetition, and choosing her mother tongue—#MoroccanArabic—as the language of her #art. In close collaboration with #musical #producer Amit Hai Cohen, the #music was co-written and composed, taking shape through a blend of electronic and acoustic #instrumentation. Both trace their family roots to #Amazigh villages in Morocco..."

    harlemworldmagazine.com/neta-e

  14. "Arénas is a contemporary reimagining of #NorthAfrican #Jewish #music, where traditional #Moroccan textures meet electronics, horns, and sampling.

    Shaped by migration, memory, and the energy of the #diaspora, the #album draws on the #artistic worlds of #NetaElkayam and #AmitHaiCohen, alongside influences from #NewOrleans. Across seven extended tracks, Arénas unfolds as an immersive, trance-like listening experience.

    Echoing her grandmother’s birthplace in #Tinghir, #Morocco #Elkayam developed an intimate dialogue with her ancestral memory, writing #lyrics through cyclic structures and repetition, and choosing her mother tongue—#MoroccanArabic—as the language of her #art. In close collaboration with #musical #producer Amit Hai Cohen, the #music was co-written and composed, taking shape through a blend of electronic and acoustic #instrumentation. Both trace their family roots to #Amazigh villages in Morocco..."

    harlemworldmagazine.com/neta-e

  15. ⚡In April 2026, the #Moroccan 🇲🇦 government held social dialogue meetings led by Head of Government Aziz Akhannouch, focusing on wage increases, tax adjustments, and reforms to pensions and social protection in both the public and private sectors. Follow for the latest updates

  16. ⚡In April 2026, the #Moroccan 🇲🇦 government held social dialogue meetings led by Head of Government Aziz Akhannouch, focusing on wage increases, tax adjustments, and reforms to pensions and social protection in both the public and private sectors. Follow for the latest updates

  17. ⚡In April 2026, the #Moroccan 🇲🇦 government held social dialogue meetings led by Head of Government Aziz Akhannouch, focusing on wage increases, tax adjustments, and reforms to pensions and social protection in both the public and private sectors. Follow for the latest updates

  18. #Tunisia: #CEPEX is hosting a #Moroccan buyers delegation in agri-food, cosmetics & medical device sectors, on March 25, at the Maison de l’Exportateur, in partnership with the Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Services of #Casablanca. #TAP_En
    (@TapNewsAgency)

    nitter.net/TapNewsAgency/statu

  19. #Tunisia: #CEPEX is hosting a #Moroccan buyers delegation in agri-food, cosmetics & medical device sectors, on March 25, at the Maison de l’Exportateur, in partnership with the Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Services of #Casablanca. #TAP_En
    (@TapNewsAgency)

    nitter.net/TapNewsAgency/statu

  20. This morning's #workout #music is from #Moroccan #vocalist Imane Guemssy - live in Brussels showing what a master of the #Gimbri can do. mesmerizing

    youtu.be/aBxCssPItjI
    #WomenInMusic #Gnawa #MoroccanMusic #bodyWeightTraining

    Also posting yesterday's #soundtrack from Irene Ketikidi from #Greece who has mastered twice as many strings.
    youtu.be/lXg0Efj4EW8
    #KettleBells #HardRock #BluesRock #InstrumentalMusic #guitar #WoPop

  21. This morning's #workout #music is from #Moroccan #vocalist Imane Guemssy - live in Brussels showing what a master of the #Gimbri can do. mesmerizing

    youtu.be/aBxCssPItjI
    #WomenInMusic #Gnawa #MoroccanMusic #bodyWeightTraining

    Also posting yesterday's #soundtrack from Irene Ketikidi from #Greece who has mastered twice as many strings.
    youtu.be/lXg0Efj4EW8
    #KettleBells #HardRock #BluesRock #InstrumentalMusic #guitar #WoPop

  22. This morning's #workout #music is from #Moroccan #vocalist Imane Guemssy - live in Brussels showing what a master of the #Gimbri can do. mesmerizing

    youtu.be/aBxCssPItjI
    #WomenInMusic #Gnawa #MoroccanMusic #bodyWeightTraining

    Also posting yesterday's #soundtrack from Irene Ketikidi from #Greece who has mastered twice as many strings.
    youtu.be/lXg0Efj4EW8
    #KettleBells #HardRock #BluesRock #InstrumentalMusic #guitar #WoPop

  23. This morning's #workout #music is from #Moroccan #vocalist Imane Guemssy - live in Brussels showing what a master of the #Gimbri can do. mesmerizing

    youtu.be/aBxCssPItjI
    #WomenInMusic #Gnawa #MoroccanMusic #bodyWeightTraining

    Also posting yesterday's #soundtrack from Irene Ketikidi from #Greece who has mastered twice as many strings.
    youtu.be/lXg0Efj4EW8
    #KettleBells #HardRock #BluesRock #InstrumentalMusic #guitar #WoPop

  24. The #Moroccan #FoodForest That Inspired an #AgriculturalRevolution

    These ancient forest gardens may be more relevant than ever.

    by Eric J. Wallace April 1, 2019

    "It was 1975 and Geoff Lawton was wintering with friends in Morocco. Camping on beaches north of Agadir, they’d been surfing for weeks when locals told them about Paradise Valley. Located along the Tamraght River in the High Atlas Mountains, it promised 5,200-foot vistas, blue-green waterfalls, and lush, rainforest-like vegetation.

    "Lawton, then 21, was on his first trip outside the U.K. 'Tourists had yet to ‘discover’ the area, so the culture was very much preserved,' he says. 'For me, it was like going back to Biblical times.'

    "The dirt road to the Valley climbed through a barren, arid landscape into rural hills studded with mud brick homes. Twenty kilometers in, the group stopped at the tiny village of Inraren for directions. Lawton went to relieve himself in a roadside wood.

    " 'I remember thinking it was odd that this lush, green forest should be bursting from the desert,' he says.

    "Stepping inside, things got stranger. The air felt cool, almost misty. Growing in the shade of tall date palms were trees, vines, and shrubs bearing bananas, tamarinds, oranges, figs, guavas, pomegranates, lemons, limes, mulberries, carobs, quince, grapes, and other fruits and nuts. Following a footpath through the grassy understory past groves of olive and argan trees, Lawton discovered a cluster of fenced-in vegetable and herb gardens—most about a quarter-acre in size. Here and there, goats were tethered to posts. Chickens clucked through the underbrush and roosted in trees. Gazing down a leafy corridor, he spotted a man leading a donkey. Its saddlebags brimmed with produce.

    " 'I felt like I’d wandered into some kind of ancient organism,' says Lawton. “I had goosebumps all over.'

    "Totaling about 65 acres, the food forest was a remnant of one of the world’s oldest #sustainable systems of agriculture. While its origins have been lost to history, scientists agree it is at least many centuries old. Some, including Lawton, date its establishment to 2,000 years ago. When asked about the forest’s age, villagers shrug.

    " 'I have no idea how old it is or when our ancestors first began gardening here,' says 45-year-old Abdelmajid Ziyani, a construction worker and member of a local argan and olive oil cooperative. 'But I know it has been here for centuries.' "

    Related video: "The 2000 Year Old Food Forest in Morocco - Discover Permaculture with Geoff Lawton"

    youtube.com/watch?v=wd-b_C7a_es

    Read more:
    atlasobscura.com/articles/what

    #SolarPunkSunday #ForestGardens #UndergroundSprings #Permaculture #AncientFoodForests #SustainableAgriculture #History #AgricultureHistory #Histodon #TraditionalAgriculture

  25. The #Moroccan #FoodForest That Inspired an #AgriculturalRevolution

    These ancient forest gardens may be more relevant than ever.

    by Eric J. Wallace April 1, 2019

    "It was 1975 and Geoff Lawton was wintering with friends in Morocco. Camping on beaches north of Agadir, they’d been surfing for weeks when locals told them about Paradise Valley. Located along the Tamraght River in the High Atlas Mountains, it promised 5,200-foot vistas, blue-green waterfalls, and lush, rainforest-like vegetation.

    "Lawton, then 21, was on his first trip outside the U.K. 'Tourists had yet to ‘discover’ the area, so the culture was very much preserved,' he says. 'For me, it was like going back to Biblical times.'

    "The dirt road to the Valley climbed through a barren, arid landscape into rural hills studded with mud brick homes. Twenty kilometers in, the group stopped at the tiny village of Inraren for directions. Lawton went to relieve himself in a roadside wood.

    " 'I remember thinking it was odd that this lush, green forest should be bursting from the desert,' he says.

    "Stepping inside, things got stranger. The air felt cool, almost misty. Growing in the shade of tall date palms were trees, vines, and shrubs bearing bananas, tamarinds, oranges, figs, guavas, pomegranates, lemons, limes, mulberries, carobs, quince, grapes, and other fruits and nuts. Following a footpath through the grassy understory past groves of olive and argan trees, Lawton discovered a cluster of fenced-in vegetable and herb gardens—most about a quarter-acre in size. Here and there, goats were tethered to posts. Chickens clucked through the underbrush and roosted in trees. Gazing down a leafy corridor, he spotted a man leading a donkey. Its saddlebags brimmed with produce.

    " 'I felt like I’d wandered into some kind of ancient organism,' says Lawton. “I had goosebumps all over.'

    "Totaling about 65 acres, the food forest was a remnant of one of the world’s oldest #sustainable systems of agriculture. While its origins have been lost to history, scientists agree it is at least many centuries old. Some, including Lawton, date its establishment to 2,000 years ago. When asked about the forest’s age, villagers shrug.

    " 'I have no idea how old it is or when our ancestors first began gardening here,' says 45-year-old Abdelmajid Ziyani, a construction worker and member of a local argan and olive oil cooperative. 'But I know it has been here for centuries.' "

    Related video: "The 2000 Year Old Food Forest in Morocco - Discover Permaculture with Geoff Lawton"

    youtube.com/watch?v=wd-b_C7a_es

    Read more:
    atlasobscura.com/articles/what

    #SolarPunkSunday #ForestGardens #UndergroundSprings #Permaculture #AncientFoodForests #SustainableAgriculture #History #AgricultureHistory #Histodon #TraditionalAgriculture

  26. The #Moroccan #FoodForest That Inspired an #AgriculturalRevolution

    These ancient forest gardens may be more relevant than ever.

    by Eric J. Wallace April 1, 2019

    "It was 1975 and Geoff Lawton was wintering with friends in Morocco. Camping on beaches north of Agadir, they’d been surfing for weeks when locals told them about Paradise Valley. Located along the Tamraght River in the High Atlas Mountains, it promised 5,200-foot vistas, blue-green waterfalls, and lush, rainforest-like vegetation.

    "Lawton, then 21, was on his first trip outside the U.K. 'Tourists had yet to ‘discover’ the area, so the culture was very much preserved,' he says. 'For me, it was like going back to Biblical times.'

    "The dirt road to the Valley climbed through a barren, arid landscape into rural hills studded with mud brick homes. Twenty kilometers in, the group stopped at the tiny village of Inraren for directions. Lawton went to relieve himself in a roadside wood.

    " 'I remember thinking it was odd that this lush, green forest should be bursting from the desert,' he says.

    "Stepping inside, things got stranger. The air felt cool, almost misty. Growing in the shade of tall date palms were trees, vines, and shrubs bearing bananas, tamarinds, oranges, figs, guavas, pomegranates, lemons, limes, mulberries, carobs, quince, grapes, and other fruits and nuts. Following a footpath through the grassy understory past groves of olive and argan trees, Lawton discovered a cluster of fenced-in vegetable and herb gardens—most about a quarter-acre in size. Here and there, goats were tethered to posts. Chickens clucked through the underbrush and roosted in trees. Gazing down a leafy corridor, he spotted a man leading a donkey. Its saddlebags brimmed with produce.

    " 'I felt like I’d wandered into some kind of ancient organism,' says Lawton. “I had goosebumps all over.'

    "Totaling about 65 acres, the food forest was a remnant of one of the world’s oldest #sustainable systems of agriculture. While its origins have been lost to history, scientists agree it is at least many centuries old. Some, including Lawton, date its establishment to 2,000 years ago. When asked about the forest’s age, villagers shrug.

    " 'I have no idea how old it is or when our ancestors first began gardening here,' says 45-year-old Abdelmajid Ziyani, a construction worker and member of a local argan and olive oil cooperative. 'But I know it has been here for centuries.' "

    Related video: "The 2000 Year Old Food Forest in Morocco - Discover Permaculture with Geoff Lawton"

    youtube.com/watch?v=wd-b_C7a_es

    Read more:
    atlasobscura.com/articles/what

    #SolarPunkSunday #ForestGardens #UndergroundSprings #Permaculture #AncientFoodForests #SustainableAgriculture #History #AgricultureHistory #Histodon #TraditionalAgriculture

  27. The #Moroccan #FoodForest That Inspired an #AgriculturalRevolution

    These ancient forest gardens may be more relevant than ever.

    by Eric J. Wallace April 1, 2019

    "It was 1975 and Geoff Lawton was wintering with friends in Morocco. Camping on beaches north of Agadir, they’d been surfing for weeks when locals told them about Paradise Valley. Located along the Tamraght River in the High Atlas Mountains, it promised 5,200-foot vistas, blue-green waterfalls, and lush, rainforest-like vegetation.

    "Lawton, then 21, was on his first trip outside the U.K. 'Tourists had yet to ‘discover’ the area, so the culture was very much preserved,' he says. 'For me, it was like going back to Biblical times.'

    "The dirt road to the Valley climbed through a barren, arid landscape into rural hills studded with mud brick homes. Twenty kilometers in, the group stopped at the tiny village of Inraren for directions. Lawton went to relieve himself in a roadside wood.

    " 'I remember thinking it was odd that this lush, green forest should be bursting from the desert,' he says.

    "Stepping inside, things got stranger. The air felt cool, almost misty. Growing in the shade of tall date palms were trees, vines, and shrubs bearing bananas, tamarinds, oranges, figs, guavas, pomegranates, lemons, limes, mulberries, carobs, quince, grapes, and other fruits and nuts. Following a footpath through the grassy understory past groves of olive and argan trees, Lawton discovered a cluster of fenced-in vegetable and herb gardens—most about a quarter-acre in size. Here and there, goats were tethered to posts. Chickens clucked through the underbrush and roosted in trees. Gazing down a leafy corridor, he spotted a man leading a donkey. Its saddlebags brimmed with produce.

    " 'I felt like I’d wandered into some kind of ancient organism,' says Lawton. “I had goosebumps all over.'

    "Totaling about 65 acres, the food forest was a remnant of one of the world’s oldest #sustainable systems of agriculture. While its origins have been lost to history, scientists agree it is at least many centuries old. Some, including Lawton, date its establishment to 2,000 years ago. When asked about the forest’s age, villagers shrug.

    " 'I have no idea how old it is or when our ancestors first began gardening here,' says 45-year-old Abdelmajid Ziyani, a construction worker and member of a local argan and olive oil cooperative. 'But I know it has been here for centuries.' "

    Related video: "The 2000 Year Old Food Forest in Morocco - Discover Permaculture with Geoff Lawton"

    youtube.com/watch?v=wd-b_C7a_es

    Read more:
    atlasobscura.com/articles/what

    #SolarPunkSunday #ForestGardens #UndergroundSprings #Permaculture #AncientFoodForests #SustainableAgriculture #History #AgricultureHistory #Histodon #TraditionalAgriculture

  28. The #Moroccan #FoodForest That Inspired an #AgriculturalRevolution

    These ancient forest gardens may be more relevant than ever.

    by Eric J. Wallace April 1, 2019

    "It was 1975 and Geoff Lawton was wintering with friends in Morocco. Camping on beaches north of Agadir, they’d been surfing for weeks when locals told them about Paradise Valley. Located along the Tamraght River in the High Atlas Mountains, it promised 5,200-foot vistas, blue-green waterfalls, and lush, rainforest-like vegetation.

    "Lawton, then 21, was on his first trip outside the U.K. 'Tourists had yet to ‘discover’ the area, so the culture was very much preserved,' he says. 'For me, it was like going back to Biblical times.'

    "The dirt road to the Valley climbed through a barren, arid landscape into rural hills studded with mud brick homes. Twenty kilometers in, the group stopped at the tiny village of Inraren for directions. Lawton went to relieve himself in a roadside wood.

    " 'I remember thinking it was odd that this lush, green forest should be bursting from the desert,' he says.

    "Stepping inside, things got stranger. The air felt cool, almost misty. Growing in the shade of tall date palms were trees, vines, and shrubs bearing bananas, tamarinds, oranges, figs, guavas, pomegranates, lemons, limes, mulberries, carobs, quince, grapes, and other fruits and nuts. Following a footpath through the grassy understory past groves of olive and argan trees, Lawton discovered a cluster of fenced-in vegetable and herb gardens—most about a quarter-acre in size. Here and there, goats were tethered to posts. Chickens clucked through the underbrush and roosted in trees. Gazing down a leafy corridor, he spotted a man leading a donkey. Its saddlebags brimmed with produce.

    " 'I felt like I’d wandered into some kind of ancient organism,' says Lawton. “I had goosebumps all over.'

    "Totaling about 65 acres, the food forest was a remnant of one of the world’s oldest #sustainable systems of agriculture. While its origins have been lost to history, scientists agree it is at least many centuries old. Some, including Lawton, date its establishment to 2,000 years ago. When asked about the forest’s age, villagers shrug.

    " 'I have no idea how old it is or when our ancestors first began gardening here,' says 45-year-old Abdelmajid Ziyani, a construction worker and member of a local argan and olive oil cooperative. 'But I know it has been here for centuries.' "

    Related video: "The 2000 Year Old Food Forest in Morocco - Discover Permaculture with Geoff Lawton"

    youtube.com/watch?v=wd-b_C7a_es

    Read more:
    atlasobscura.com/articles/what

    #SolarPunkSunday #ForestGardens #UndergroundSprings #Permaculture #AncientFoodForests #SustainableAgriculture #History #AgricultureHistory #Histodon #TraditionalAgriculture

  29. Ok... compare and contrast a slow cooked vindaloo for 9 hours at low, with a 2 hour cook on a tagine on low gas (Ok, I had to move it to the oven because it started to catch on the bottom). My son said the slow cooked version was "Ok... but its fibrous, stringy. I liked the tagine better". The rest of the recipe was the same.
    I still maintain that the tagine is magical. #tagine #cooking #parenting #moroccan

  30. Ok... compare and contrast a slow cooked vindaloo for 9 hours at low, with a 2 hour cook on a tagine on low gas (Ok, I had to move it to the oven because it started to catch on the bottom). My son said the slow cooked version was "Ok... but its fibrous, stringy. I liked the tagine better". The rest of the recipe was the same.
    I still maintain that the tagine is magical. #tagine #cooking #parenting #moroccan

  31. kaftan dresses and tunics,home dress,resort dress,holiday #kaftans, bohemian decor, #Moroccan poufs,handira blankets, ...

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