Carthage

Having previously been to many major archeological sites across North Africa, I was under-whelmed by Carthage and the Anonin baths. Due to the repeated destruction of the city, very little remains of the original. The baths were the best preserved, but even they were only foundations of what was once a truly massive complex. Luckily, the museum at Carthage provided adequate maps and drawings recreating what was once a mighty city.

It was interesting seeing many of the same artifacts in the museum and on the ground as I have seen at Roman and earlier sites in Egypt and Morocco. Of particular interest were the oil lamps. In Egypt at an unexcavated ruin at the shore of what once was a huge inland lake where now the Faiume Desert sprawls, I uncovered identical pottery oil lamps of the “Aladdin” style. One of the expatriates working for an oil company in Egypt that accompanied me on the visit to this dead city in Egypt collected several of the oil lamps I found and is using them again in his home, at least 1500 years since they originally burned!

Another interesting note was the absence of the open design oil lamps – which take several wicks at once – at the sites I’ve visited in Egypt and Morocco. Of course, as any good archeologist knows, the absence of an artifact doesn’t mean that they didn’t use them; however, I hadn’t seen this particular design before. Maybe this was an original Phonetician design as opposed to the Roman “Aladdin” design? I’m afraid I don’t have access to my Archeological reference library in Tunisia, but when I return home, I’ll dive deeper into the subject.

I’m curious where the necropolis for the city lays. In previous sites that I’ve visited, the cemetery has always been on a hill opposite the town, generally to the west, in the direction of the setting sun. The skeleton in the museum reminded me of the Necropolis in Egypt at the old lake-shore site. The old lake created an island out of a large hill where the town buried its dead. The hill was riddled with catacombs and crypts. Eroding out of the ground were a good ten or twenty skeletons that hadn’t been buried very deeply. Again, none of the catacombs had been explored by archeologists. We didn’t go in as there was recent evidence of collapse.

The materials used in construction of the baths piqued my interest. At sites in Morocco, Egypt, and in Europe, I’ve seen similar construction techniques where a rock foundation is laid with mud-rubble on top of that to form walls. Houses even today in the high Atlas Mountains of Morocco are still constructed using the same techniques. The rough walls are smoothed over with plaster and generally painted white. Most likely, that’s what the Anonin baths were like in their heyday. It’s really neat to look at a wall and see history dating back even further than the wall itself. As I recall, that’s how the Rosetta stone was found in Egypt. Hopefully I’m right on the Egypt part. If I remember correctly, an archeologist was walking by a wall that a farmer was tearing down and observed the tablet being unearthed.

The drainage system for the Anonin baths was impressive. At the lowest reaches of the building, a series of sewers were laid into the foundation to promote good drainage to the ocean. I wonder what the sea levels were like at the time of the high point of the baths. It’s possible that they were designed in such a way that the tide would come in under the baths every day to wash out all of the filth and detritus dropped through the latrines above. Now that’s good plumbing design!

The scale of the excavated sites at Carthage was not all that great compared to some places I’ve been before, but the amount of history that has taken place there is amazing. Many a book refers to Carthage and the Phoenicians. Later, with the Roman presence, a whole different chapter of history was written from the top of the hill. The port at Carthage for many hundreds of years shaped the Mediterranean basin. Standing in such history gives me a moment to pause and think of those that came before us, what they left behind, and what our civilization is leaving behind as a memorial to our passing into the dark and dusty annals of history.

CEMAT and AMEN Bank

Our trip to CEMAT was mainly to show us where the building was located. The building itself has quite the history. Originally an Italian household, it was taken over by the French and finally by the Tunisians. Now it’s on permanent lease to CEMAT. CEMAT stands for something along the lines of Center (for) Magrib Studies at Tunis. It’s a point of entry for researchers and scholars from the USA headed to North Africa. I’ll need to go back at some point to look up information on GCT.

The real point of interest on the outing was Amen Bank and our talk with several of the bank goons on the roll of a private bank in Tunisia. In the end, we found out that their motivation is purely one of profit. It’s not surprising, as it seems all businesses focus more and more on the bottom line as they get bigger and bigger. I was very interested in the way the bankers sidestepped our questions trying to pin them down on loans to the agricultural sector and small businesses. There is one bank in Tunisia, backed by the government, which is making small loans, but that’s not Amen bank! I never got around to asking my question to see if the bankers think that the growth Tunisia has seen since independence is sustainable and what sector of the economy will be the hottest in ten years.

It’s interesting to see that Amen Bank is giving priority to the service sector, even over the industrial sector now. They are actually reducing their holdings in industry in favor of services. It appears that Amen Bank thinks Tunisia will go the way of America, focusing on the services sector to the detriment of agriculture, real estate, and industry.

The only other thing of interest was the trophy of real-time banking which the goons so proudly displayed. Since I started my first savings account over 15 years ago, all of my banking has always been electronic and instantaneous. In Tunisia, this is the first foray into the world of digital banking and the death rattle of the banking paper trail. Long live 1’s and 0’s! Death to paper! Or so it seems the goons want us to believe. It’ll be interesting to see if Tunisians accept paperless banking and the seeming unaccountability of the system. Statistically, fewer errors are made with the computer than on paper, the traceability of transactions increases, and money flows much faster. Of course, its not the same as having a physical record which someone has to pull from a big file cabinet and write something in. Banking in Tunisia will never be the same.

All in all, it was a good visit. I hope we get the chance to visit a government controlled public bank before we leave to contrast between the two. Surely the public bank must look out for the best interests of the country rather than solely be motivated by profit. Right?

CITET

At CITET we were shown around the various labs and facilities at CITET’s disposal. We also were treated to a short presentation of CITET’s activities. It was particularly interesting to see the disproportionate number of women working in the labs and administration of CITET. I wonder if CITET has particularly progressive hiring practices or is mandated to hire a certain percentage of women to be shown off as a trophy agency that demonstrates the parity between men and women. More than likely the second is true. However, I will continue to believe the first.

The most interesting part of CITET for me was the five different demonstrations of sustainable and renewable technologies. Among them there was one to treat waste water, another to treat the byproduct of olive oil production, another to generate electricity from biogas created from vegetable market waste, two windmills and a solar array to generate power, and others. The ones that caught my eye the most had moving parts and were shiny. As any good engineer knows, shininess counts!

CITET is a very interesting agency. It doesn’t have any regulatory or other such power. The agency isn’t designed to protect the environment. Rather, it helps industry comply with environmental regulations and laws, monitors the coastline for other agencies and ministries, and monitors industry for violations of laws. The general public never sees the direct effects of CITET. Instead, other agencies fine companies and close beaches. CITET is for science – not for bureaucracy. I wonder how independent CITET is from the rest of the government and outside influence. If they were to find a gross violation of the environmental law from a company such as GCT, would it be reported or would such findings be kept quite for one reason or another?

The possibility of working for such an agency is appealing, especially with its large pool of highly talented employees. I feel slightly inadequate in my knowledge base compared to the researchers and technicians at CITET. Would I actually make a difference for CITET and for Tunisia if I took an internship there? It’s hard to say. I think that it’d not be as good compared to GCT or another firm to learn Arabic at. It appears that most scientific work is done in French, not Arabic. I would be interested to see which is spoken and used more within CITET as compared with other internship prospects.

All in all, I’m impressed that Tunisia has taken such a forward thinking view on the environment compared to other North African countries. Indeed, other countries are even calling upon CITET to train their people in the ways of sustainability. Were it not for colonization attempts on the Magrib, maybe there wouldn’t have been a time where the communities in question went from sustainable to unsustainable. With the help of CITET, I think that the pendulum will swing the other direction to make Tunisia and all of the Magrib sustainable once more.