Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Tidbit Tuesday: Welcome to Mauritius

I promised that when my heroine would land in Mauritius, I'd bring you here too! Well, today's the day. Everyone says Mauritius is a paradise on earth. Beautiful beaches, amazing scenery, rainbow nation where every culture/religion under the sun lives in harmony.

Yes, all this is true. For someone who lives here, lol, no, it's not exactly seventh heaven, but it comes close. True, people are people. When in a land where so many cultures and ways of life mix and collide, friction is bound to exist - hence the nagging old aunties, nosy biddies, neighbours who know your every business before you even think said business through...

But for all the pitfalls, I think life is well worth living here. To find out more of what I'm talking about, *hint, shameless hint* pick up my works!

Most of you wouldn't know how the island even came about its existence. The place is a tiny speck of land in the Indian Ocean, south of the Equator, east of Africa and Madagascar. Discovered in the 16th century by Dutch sailors, who named it after their prince Moritz, the Dutch left somewhere in the 17th century, and the French took hold of the island (especially because of its proximity to then island colony Bourbon and still today French colony, Reunion Island). In 1810, the English made an out and out war bid for the Ile de France, as the place was known. Britain won, and Mauritius it was renamed.
From the French settlers to the British governors (Catholics and Anglicans, amongst others); from the African slaves pre-1835 and the abolition of slavery, to the indentured Indian labour (Hindus & Muslims) brought to work the abandoned cane fields post-1835; from the Chinese, Tamil and Muslim tradesmen and craftsmen who came to the British colony in and towards the end of the 19th century, Mauritius ended up being peopled by every race and religion of the world.

Attaining independence in 1968, and becoming a republic in 1992, Mauritius has built upon its foundation as colonies and brought its people together as a diverse and dynamic melting pot of what constitutes today the Mauritian people.

I spent most of the morning on YouTube trying to find the perfect video to show you what my island is like and what it is about. I found this video that makes a perfect entree into the topic! The second shows more snapshots of the island. Check it out - this is what my heroine sees when takes a first glance from the plane, and this is what I want you to see too.

Now, Mauritius is just not the same without its sounds! That's the sega, our local music. Derived from ancestral African tradition, with lyrics sung in the mother tongue of Creole, this is the sound and beat adopted by all Mauritians alike.

The first and second videos are of the island, the third is the music. I couldn't find one that melded them well, so watch the second with the music of the third playing!

And yes, the comment of 'Mauritius inspired heaven itself' is a quote from Mark Twain! Find it here, since embedding is disabled... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3p2uwMWttg0&feature=related

Enjoy!





From Mauritius with love,

Zee

3 comments:

Bronwyn said...

Z, to say I'm jealous would be the understatement of the century!!! I just finished evening shift and its about 5C degrees outside and in. The sun has barely made an appearance since the beginning of winter and I'm whiter than ever from the complete lack of rays! Damn, I wish we could trade places for a bit...

Thanks for sharing this! Even if I am mentally counting the pennies to see if an overseas trip can be done =)

Bronwyn.

Zee Monodee said...

Lol Bronwyn!

Sadly, it's winter here too, though on the coasts you don't feel the bite of the cold so much.

Thanks for coming over!

Hugs

Unknown said...

Now, I live close to beaches but that water is just incredible. You really wanna make me visit. A cousin of mine, I discovered, came to Mauritius on her honeymoon and loved it. I hope to get there one day. x