
Dear Reader (2025-11-13 – posted simultaneously to FB)
In today’s post you and I have a last look at Ghardaia, and then stop briefly in Tindjillet. As you know, I like to give you a bit of a context for the images I share. Today, I have nothing for you about the abandoned ruins and caves of the mud brick village called either Tindjillet or Grotto d’Ighezar. The internet failed to provide any usable historical notes. All I can tell you is that the abandoned town is near Timimoun (post: Algeria – 14). You know you are off the beaten track when the interweb draws a blank.
Notes on Photos
~ 01 to 07 – Ghardaia
~ 07 – The pool at the guest house where we stayed for a couple of nights.
~ 08 to 12 – Tindjillet
~ 08 – Captured with permission of the seller of scarves for creating a litham. A litham sometimes pronounced lifam is a mouth-veil which Tuareg men have traditionally used to cover the lower part of their face (1). The Tuareg are an ethnic group of Berbers. All Tuareg are Berbers, but not all Berbers are Tuareg.
Footnotes
~ (1) – Adapted from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Litham.












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