Tag Archives: Timbuctoo

Timbuctu Is a Travel Dream. Mali is Reality.

Timbuctu, Mali
Timbuctu, Mali, photo by Elin Reitehaug

The legendary Timbuktu stands in the African country of Mali.  When travelers daydream, one of the things they daydream about is Timbuktu. But in recent years, revolution has brought the country Mali to a standstill.  One of the things that stands in the way of a stable country is the high illiteracy rate.

You can do something about that.

Building a school in Mali
BuildOn.org Building a school in Mali

You may recall that Passports with Purpose had a goal of $115,000 to help the organization buildOn construct schools in Mali. They raised a very respectable $84,000. That awesome accomplishment  (which builds two schools plus providing adult literacy programs in one of the poorest countries in the world) makes me happy. But it isn’t quite the original goal.

Today is the big day when Passports with Purpose notifies the people who won some loot in their fund raiser for schools in Mali. 

But the people who contributed to Passports with Purpose efforts to help buildOn.org are WINNERS, even if they don’t get loot.

The deadline for winning that “loot” is past.

If you missed the deadline, and you still think it is a nifty idea to build schools in Mali, there’s good news for you. You can still donate. Just go to the Passports with Purpose donate page. 100% of your contribution goes to buildOn, the group who works with locals to provide schools and literacy programs.

I would be doubly thrilled if the hard work of the travel bloggers behind this project wound up raising enough money to fund ANOTHER school in Mali, wouldn’t you? Every little bit helps, so if you have not yet contributed to Passports with Purpose, please give yourself the gift of feeling really good about helping people who REALLY need the help.

Book Cover--Timbuctoo, Mali
And if you’re still dreaming the traveler’s dream of Timbucktu, read my review of Timbuctoo, by Tahir Shah– a historical look (in fictional form) at the search for the exotic Timbucktu. But if you’d like a look at the real Mali, read Jessica Voigt’s review of How to Make a Quilt in Africa.

The Ultimate Exotic Journey: Timbuctoo

British Lion

Destination: London and Africa (1810)

Book: Timbuctoo (NEW July 2012) by Tahir Shah

Picture an African El Dorado where the only known metal is gold! Storehouses overflow with it, and coffers are brimming with it.  Roof tiles and cobblestones, cups and plates, buckets and bedsteads all are fashioned from that most intoxicating yellow ore!

William de Witt, British businessman, addressing the Royal African Committee in the novel, Timbuctoo

Contrary to popular belief, the roofs are not tiled in gold, nor is there a wealth of any kind, that is, what we might comprehend to be wealth.  Most of the jewellry is made from shells, taken from the river, or made from camel bone.  The houses are crafted form blocks of mud, and the majority of the townsfolk live a most squalid existence.

Robert Adams, the American, addressing the Royal African Committee in the novel Timbuctoo Continue reading The Ultimate Exotic Journey: Timbuctoo