- Sahara with Michael Palin
Infobox Television
bgcolour = #D6B97A
show_name = Sahara with Michael Palin
caption = DVD cover
format =Travel
camera =
picture_format =HDTV
audio_format =
runtime = 50 min
creator =
developer =
executive_producer =
starring =Michael Palin
narrated =
opentheme =
endtheme =
theme_music_composer =
country =United Kingdom
network =BBC
first_run =
first_aired = 2002
last_aired = 2002
num_episodes = 04
list_episodes =
preceded_by = "Michael Palin's Hemingway Adventure "
followed_by = "Himalaya with Michael Palin "
website =
imdb_id =
tv_com_id ="Sahara with Michael Palin" is a four part
BBC television series presented by British comedian and travel presenterMichael Palin , and first broadcast in 2002. In it, Palin travelled around theSahara Desert in Northern - andWestern Africa , meeting people and visiting places. The journey route included the following countries and territories:Gibraltar ,Morocco ,Western Sahara ,Mauritania ,Senegal ,Mali ,Niger ,Libya ,Tunisia andAlgeria .These countries and the entire Sahara area are vast. For example, Algeria is four times the size of France or three times the size of Texas. The Sahara Desert is roughly the same size as the United States, and the trip covered 10,000 miles (16,000 kilometres) and lasted three months.
A book by the same name written by Palin was published to accompany the series. This book contained both Palin's text and many pictures by
Basil Pao , the stills photographer on the team. Basil Pao also produced a separate book of the photographs he took during the journey,Inside Sahara , a large coffee-table style book printed on glossy paper.Episodes
The programme consists of four 60-minute episodes, as follows:
A Line in the Sand
The programme starts in
Gibraltar , shown to be a bit of Britain only a few miles fromAfrica . InTangier ,Morocco , Palin rides a camel on the beach, and then plays football with some youths and hurts himself. He's somewhat revived by visiting ahammam , a public bath house. He attends a church service at St. Andrews Anglican Church together with some Nigerians who are trying to gain access toEurope . He also visits Jonathan, an expatriate Englishman, and his petcockerel Birdie.To get to the Sahara it is necessary to travel over the
Atlas Mountains . Along the way Palin visits Fez and sees the old-fashioned way to dye leather. Then inMarrakesh he visits thesouk (market). In the mountains near Marrakesh Palin visits a Berber village, experiencing a "courtship dance". Before leaving the mountains he passes throughAit Benhaddou , an old town used as the location for many movies.Finally having reached the Sahara, in
Algeria , Palin visits theSmara refugee camp for people who fled fromWestern Sahara . A member of thePolisario Front shows him around and he sees their equipment, mainly old Russian tanks. After several days travel, Palin makes it toMauritania , to the town ofZouerat . From there he takes the iron ore train south to Choûm, then by road on to Atar, where he encounters the Paris - Dakar rally and talks to Dave Hammond, the only British entrant that year.In the closing credits, Palin mentions that Hammond had moved up to twelfth position before suffering an injury, from which he slowly recovered.
Destination Timbuktu
The episode starts with Palin crossing the
Sénégal River , leaving Mauritania and entering the town of Saint-Louis inSenegal . He has left Arab Africa and entered Black Africa, and the French influence, from the colonial past, is strongly felt here. He interviews the artist Jacob Yakouba and his soap-opera-star wife Marie-Madeleine, talking to them aboutpolygamy , which is prevalent here. Palin also visitsGorée Island , the main departure point for black slaves sold to America.Palin moves on to
Dakar and watches (and takes part in) a late-night wrestling match, and then talks to the owner of a jazz café. Then he takes the Bamako Express train toBamako inMali , talking to a native woman about polygamy along the way. In Bamako he talks to the musicianToumani Diabate .Palin visits the town of Tirelli on the
Bandiagara Escarpment where theDogon people live. The Dogons are a tribe of people who kept themselves isolated from the rest of the world until fairly recently, and have a culture unlike any other. While with the Dogons, Palin experiences getting gunpowder blown into his face from the Dogon hunter's oldblunderbuss , eats a meal in a sweltering 56 degree (134 degree F) location, witnesses a funeral dance, and is introduced to the blacksmith, whose secondary job is to circumcise the boys (his wife performsfemale genital cutting on the girls).In
Djenne Palin talks to a local man whose nickname is Pigmy and experiences the MuslimTabaski ritual of slaughtering a sheep, first at the huge mosque and later at Pigmy's house. At the town ofMopti Palin tries to get ferry passage up theNiger River , but the low water level makes this impossible. Taking a smaller and very primitive boat instead, Palin meets Kristin, a Norwegian Christian missionary who has lived in Mali for six years, and they talk about female genital cutting and Kristin's attempts to convert Muslims to Christianity. Then the boat runs aground, and it is unsure if and when Palin will arrive inTimbuktu .Absolute Desert
Michael Palin did make it to the mysterious Timbuktu, and this episode opens with views of the famous mosque built of mud. Palin talks to the imam, who shows Palin documents indicating that Muslim scholars had discovered that the Earth circled the Sun at least 100 years before Europeans figured it out.
After this Palin joins a tribe of
Wodaabe nomads on their way to Ingal (inNiger ) to participate in the Cure Salée festival. He talks to a young Wodaabe man named Doulla and to Céline, a young French woman who is also following along with the group. The subject of polygamy is again raised, and we see the unusual courting rituals of the Wodaabe. Here the young girls choose the man they would like to try out, while the young men stand in a line dancing and rolling their eyes and looking very feminine (by Western standards) with lots of makeup.At Tabelot Palin visits an
oasis , where a camel is used to raise water from a deep well using a long rope and a goatskin bucket. Palin visits the home of Omar and his four wives and 15 children. That evening there is a party before the departure of the camel caravan the next day.The rest of the episode follows Palin as he follows the camel caravan on its way across the
Tenere Desert , which the French had called "absolute desert". There is nothing here but sand, sand, and more sand. Finding a tree is cause for celebration. Palin shares conditions with the camel drivers, walking with them and eating their food. He tries to talk to them, but they speak no English or French, and they end up attempting to teach each other their native languages. "Bottoms up" is a favorite expression. After five days Palin leaves the camel caravan, to return in the next episode...Dire Straits
This episode starts with Palin crossing the border from Niger to
Algeria , a desolate border with nothing but sand. A bit north of here are the Hoggar Mountains. AtAssekrem he gets up early to view the sunrise from 9000' (3000 m).Next he boards an Algerian passenger plane and flies north to Hassi-Messaoud, an oil extraction and refining town; a man-made luxury oasis in the middle of the desert. From here the trip jumps to
Libya , normally closed to western TV crews. To gain entry Michael Palin and his team have joined up with a British veteran's tour, and he mingles with the 80-year-old former "Desert Rats" who reminisce about the Battle of Tobruk. He also visitsBenghazi and the ruins of Apollonia, once a Greek port, and the ruins ofLeptis Magna , once a Roman city.Leaving Libya, Palin arrives in
Tunisia . He joins an octopus fishing crew on a small boat atDjerba , visits a family who live in caves atEl Haddej (the scene of his crucifixion in "Life of Brian") and tries smoking ashisha (a large water pipe) in a café inSousse . Then it's back to Algeria, traveling along the northern coast. Here the security is so tight (Palin is always accompanied by armed police) that there's not much chance for spontaneity.The last two days are spent in
Ceuta visiting an EU-operated detention facility for Africans trying to reach Europe, and talking to a woman on a Spanish beach about the illegal immigrants who die trying to make it across the "dire straits" to the "promised land". A final shot shows Palin back in Gibraltar, philosophizing about the Gibraltar situation (Spain vs. Britain) and the impoverished 3rd world vs. the rich West.External links
* [http://www.palinstravels.co.uk/static-128 Palin's Travels - the official web site]
*imdb title|id=0329919|title=Sahara: Michael Palin
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