‘Bittersweet’ …. Sudan’s Favorite Drink during Ramadan

Sudan's Ramadan favorite helo-murr is a thirst-quenching amber liquid. (AFP)
Sudan's Ramadan favorite helo-murr is a thirst-quenching amber liquid. (AFP)
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‘Bittersweet’ …. Sudan’s Favorite Drink during Ramadan

Sudan's Ramadan favorite helo-murr is a thirst-quenching amber liquid. (AFP)
Sudan's Ramadan favorite helo-murr is a thirst-quenching amber liquid. (AFP)

As generations of Sudanese have done before her, Wissal Abdel Ghany crouched next to a fire to prepare a traditional drink, a thirst-quenching favorite enjoyed during the fasting month of Ramadan.

In Sudan, the arduously made "helo-murr", which means "bittersweet", is a drink synonymous with the Islamic holy month.

It can be found on almost every table across the northeast African country at the end of the day's fast.

"Without it, our table feels empty," said Abdel Ghany, wearing a bright orange headscarf.

She sat in a small room in the village of Om Eshr, on the outskirts of the capital Khartoum, which teemed with a small force of women busily scraping and spreading a mixture before serving the beverage in clear glasses.

The drink has satisfied thirsty fasters for decades and recipes are "inherited from our mothers and grandmothers," the 43-year-old said.

Corn is harvested and left to dry in the sun before being ground and mixed with spices such as fenugreek, cumin or even hibiscus -- Sudan's other essential Ramadan beverage.

This mixture is then soaked in sugar and water for several days.

Abdel Ghany spread a layer of the thick brown paste over a grill plate above the coals of a wood fire, cooking it into a thin, leather-colored film.

The resulting crepe-like layer is then peeled away and stored -- ready to be soaked in the final step to create the beloved drink.

Served as cold as possible, the drink is one of many ways that fasting Sudanese cool off, a significant challenge in one of the world's hottest countries.

The brew is so identified with Ramadan that even the US embassy took to Twitter to promote its staff making it, with diplomats wielding wooden spoons over embers and sipping the amber liquid.

Abdel Ghany said preparing the drink is a collective effort, bringing "together our sisters and friends".

"We make it together to share among ourselves", she said.

In Sudan's cities, she added, some people don't make it themselves.

"But they still have to offer it for dinner, so they buy it ready-made," she said.

For Abdel Ghany, the preparation of helo-murr and the holy month cannot be separated.

"All it takes is a whiff of the scent coming out of a home to know that Ramadan is here," she said.



Rare Mummy Reveals Women’s Important Role in Oldest Center of Civilization in the Americas


The 5,000-year-old remains of a noblewoman at the sacred city of Caral (Peru’s culture ministry)
The 5,000-year-old remains of a noblewoman at the sacred city of Caral (Peru’s culture ministry)
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Rare Mummy Reveals Women’s Important Role in Oldest Center of Civilization in the Americas


The 5,000-year-old remains of a noblewoman at the sacred city of Caral (Peru’s culture ministry)
The 5,000-year-old remains of a noblewoman at the sacred city of Caral (Peru’s culture ministry)

Archaeologists in Peru announced they found the 5,000-year-old remains of a noblewoman at the sacred city of Caral, in an area which for decades was used as a garbage dump.

The new discovery revealed the important role played by women in the oldest center of civilization in the Americas, researchers said.

“What has been discovered corresponds to a woman who apparently had elevated status, an elite woman,” archaeologist David Palomino told AFP, according to CBS News.

The mummy was found in Aspero, a sacred site within the city of Caral that was a garbage dump for over 30 years until becoming an archaeological site in the 1990s.

Palomino said the carefully preserved remains, dating to 3,000 years BC, contained skin, part of the nails and hair, and was wrapped in a shroud made of several layers of fabric and a mantle of macaw feathers. Macaws are colorful birds that belong to the parrot family.

The woman's funerary trousseau, which was presented to reporters at the culture ministry, included a toucan's beak, a stone bowl and a straw basket.

“This is an exceptional burial due to the preservation of skin, hair, and nails, a rare condition in this area, where usually only skeletal remains are recovered,” Peru's culture ministry said in a statement.

Preliminary analyses indicate that the remains found in December belong to a woman between 20 and 35 years old who was about five feet tall, and wearing a headdress - made with bundles of twisted threads - that represented her elevated social status.

Palomino told reporters the find showed that while “it was generally thought that rulers were men, or that they had more prominent roles in society” women had “played a very important role in the Caral civilization.”

Caral society developed between 3000 and 1800 BC, around the same time as other great cultures in Mesopotamia, Egypt and China.

The city is situated in the fertile Supe valley, around 115 miles north of Lima and 12 miles from the Pacific Ocean.

It was declared a UN World Heritage Site in 2009.