Every Safar journey culminates in a bespoke typewritten journal, crafted by local artisans
The electric motorbike hummed softly as we wound through the Berber villages. Fatima, our guide, stopped at a small settlement where her sister Aisha waited with an ancient Remington typewriter. "Tell me what you felt," she said, and as I spoke, her fingers danced across the keys, preserving my impressions in ink that will last generations.
Under a canvas of stars, the women of the village taught me the art of henna. They spoke of their dreams, their struggles, their hopes. Tonight, these stories find their way onto paper, pressed by hands that have carried these narratives for centuries.
This journal is more than paper and ink. It is a bridge between worlds, a testament to connections forged across cultures, and a promise that 40% of what I paid goes directly to the women who made this journey unforgettable.
Each journal is typed on restored 1940s typewriters by local women artisans