The Hidden Treasures of Oman
When I was a kid, occasionally Leonard Nimoy’s
mug would pop onto my Sunday evening television
and take me to a world of unsolved mysteries
with strange and unusual occurrences. In
his 22-episode “In Search of” series, he looked
at places and situations that defied explanation
and understanding—Bigfoot, Stonehenge,
UFOs—and provided "a possible explanation
for the phenomenon being examined.”
Since then, I’ve been on my own search for people,
places and cultures that challenged the norm. Something away from the coastal
lifestyles and experiences that defined my
own existence in the boroughs of New
York, Seattle’s waterfront, and the suburbs
of Los Angeles. Often when I am cooped
up in my office, I do what millions of other
vacation-bound travelers do: search for
the magical place, loved by Mother Nature,
untouched by Father Time and not
ruined by tourism that tramples the land
and disrupts the atmosphere.
I stumbled across a webcam on a
weather Internet site showing live feeds
from Muscat in Oman. This particular
camera is perched above a white sand
beach on the southeast coast of the Arabian
Peninsula just a stone’s throw from
the United Arab Emirates. I clicked on to
see the morning sun rising above the
calm of the Gulf of Oman and casting
shadows on the palms that line the
beachscape. The day’s earliest risers take
a stroll with their morning coffee, while
others kayak in the calm waters.
It is easy enough to place myself
across 12 hours of time zones and conjure
the emotional pleasure of breathing
pure air and then donning a dishdasha—
aka the national dress for Omani men,as
I head off to work. It is a simple anklelength
gown with long sleeves; a muzzar—
a turban of finely woven cotton
fabric wrapped around an embroidered creatcap
known as kummar; and comfortable
leather sandals.The Oman I’ve come to
know is not some repressed society
where women are bottled up and illiterate
or where dirt paths serve as infrastructure.
It is the vision of His Majesty
Sultan Qaboos Bin Said, who took power
nearly 40 years ago from his father.
Oman now stands as a picture of peace
and prosperity. Forty years ago, this
country’s outlook wasn’t as bright. It was
a medieval land where the twentieth
century barely infringed upon daily life.
With only three continuous kilometers of
paved highway in the entire country, talk
was more about the civil war in the south
and countrywide tribal tension than how
Oman could recapture its stature as the
primary and historic seaport in the region
and capitalize on its treaties and trade
agreements with Great Britain and the
United States. In 1970, its single major
hotel, the Muscat Intercontinental, was
known as the “hotel in the desert,” surrounded
for as far as you could see with
nothing but desert. There were 3 schools
with 900 students and now there are
1,000 schools with 65,000 students—over
50 percent of which are women. Indeed,
it’s not His Majesty’s father’s Oman.
The Sultanate now belongs to this visionary
ruler, who saw and understood
the intrinsic value of 2,700 kilometers of coastline. I find it ironic that Dubai and
all of its well deserved publicity is derived
from manufacturing over 1,000 kilometers
of beach to add to its coastline and
to build its man-made islands and marinas
when Oman possesses so much
coastline. All of it (it seems) uncommercialized
and sublime. Oman is the direct
opposite of capitalistic Dubai, in touch
with its heritage, now progressing naturally
and all the while happy for it.
When I arrived in late summer, with
my wife, I came there to find myself like
some wayward worker, worn from the rat
race of meetings, memos and blackberries.
I felt the grind and needed a total
reversal and found it my first morning.
Now I walk along Boushar beachfront
where the crystal Gulf waters mirror images
of glorious mountain ranges, creating an oasis of mysticism and luxury. The
magic I was searching for surges through
me, taking over as if being drawn again
by one of those clever Pixar animators.
We’re greeted by passersby with the allpurpose,
ahlan wa salan! (welcome). I return
the greeting without thinking, as if
I’ve said it all my life.
Although a lot has changed since
1970, that welcoming hospitality remains
despite growing tourism, mainly from
Germany, Great Britain and Australia.
“It’s good that more people are coming,”
says Saif Hamad, owner of a small
shop in the Old Muttrah Souk. Oman’s
oldest souk is reminiscent of Cairo’s
Grand Bazaar, except that the frenzied
negotiation and cajoling is practiced by
experts in Egypt. Here old world charm
hugs you and invites you to shop and experience.
Saif sells two things, muzzars
and kummars. There are lovely cashmere
muzzars that sell for 15 riyals ($45 USD),
silk ones that go for 10 and touristy ones
for a couple of riyals. The merchandise is
for locals and tourists alike. He’ll even
teach you to wrap it hurr. Gratis. Free.
“There are people who come across many oceans to Oman, and many don’t
even know where they are,” Hamad says.
“Sometimes when people say ahlan wa
salan, it hurts my ear.”
The concept of acceptance implied
by the term has come to mean everything
and anything here, and sometimes
nothing at all. “For Omanis, ahlan wa
salan is not just some hollow tourist slogan
you say to make the next sale or give
yourself some false sense of cultural
pride,” Hamad says. “We are still living
it day by day.”
This may be. But the real ahlan wa salan is always easy to find in Oman,
whose transformation is on full display
and not masked by a pretentious show
of fancy props and billion dollar resorts
that hide the real face of the land.
Oman’s greatest asset is Oman, itself, in
this version of Earthly Paradise. Actually,
nature’s perfect pentagon thrives in
Oman. Lush mountains. Arid deserts. Exotic
marine and animal life. Tropical
oases and the aforementioned beaches.
They are all there ready to be enjoyed,
although it is indeed at odds with the
ambitions of those who promote tourism
here. After all, with only 9,500 hotel
rooms in the entire country, even a small
bump in tourist growth would illustrate
the need to fast track the plans on the
board to increase lodging capacity.
In the next issue ALO
travels down south in
Oman to see the sublime
simplicity of Salalah and
goes off road to see what
few have discovered.
One result of the country’s renaissance
and modernization is that the
readily available adventure guides are
equipped with handy GPS systems and
well planned itineraries. In Oman, I love to scout a new spot and make plans for a
three-day getaway. Our favorite is a
desert trek through Hatta and then crossing
the northern Hajar Mountains of
Oman over 3,500 meters above sea level.
I love to wake up before sunrise, slip on
my hiking boots, canyon shirt and my
convertible pants and dive into the day,
hiking, idly getting a feel for the culture
and traditions of the local mountain people
Jebalis. This is a trek of variety, making
our way through sand dunes, dry and
wet wadis and challenging mountain
tracks. I have spent entire mornings in
the desolate camel country, pausing to
inspect a massive caravan of the migrating
humpbacks, then passing an afternoon
with the Jebalis, who typify ahlan
wa salan with offers of Arabic chai and
unlimited stories of days past. (When
walking through their idyllic villages it’s
helpful to have a guide to translate their
unique language.)
On this trek, my ambition might be no stronger that to spend the night stargazing.
In Oman, it was the first time I really
saw stars. My mind screamed. As a young
man growing up in Seattle, I remembered
seeing stars, but never like this—
millions of tiny lights struggling to
outshine one another. As they succeeded
in illuminating the deep, dark night sky, a
surge of emotions filled my body along
with the cool breeze originating from the
fresh rainfall that had settled in the
nearby wadi. I couldn't have stumbled
upon a more romantic place on earth,
and there I was spending it with my wife
and soul mate. For the first time in our
lives we communicated without uttering
a word. It is here that we hid from the obligations
of the world and connected
through our love of the terrestrial world.
Surely others have seen the untouched
beauty of Oman. It is my hope
that those to come will leave it as I first
found it in my search for the magical
exploration.
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