One of my great 
pleasures while sharing the Tuareg’s harsh Sahara and Sahel lives was to watch 
them ceremoniously prepare their steaming hot and foamy syrupy green tea and 
then drink it with them. Three little glasses of it. The first one, somewhat 
bitter. The second one, after renewing the water, just right. The third one, 
lighter and sweeter. It surprisingly calmed thirst better than cold water. And 
so said the Tuareg.  The last time I sat among my nomadic friends was the last 
time I enjoyed tea. I could not repeat its preparation. And without their warm 
humanity and extraordinary environments it would have been a disappointment 
anyway.
For most tribes, 
heavily sweetened tea was the only luxury they knew, and not always available, 
or even affordable. Besides some occasional dates from the palm trees of very 
distant oases, when business took them there, it was the only sweet thing the 
Tuareg knew. When staying with them, I always offered plenty of tea and of big 
sugar loaves.
In 1965, when 
for a couple of weeks I rode a camel with a Tuareg man from camp to camp around 
the central Sahara’s Ahaggar Mountains, that companion always added to our 
tea mint leaves he had picked along the way. When our day ended without spotting 
any mint he pulled from his robe a small can of Vicks VapoRub, a decongestant 
meant for external use, and dished some of it in our tea because of its menthol 
content. No, it did not make us sick.
In this 1970 
photo taken in Niger’s Sahel, under a tent out of a blinding sun, Radwane is 
pouring tea for three, including his nephew Abookabook and me. Radwane was one 
of the sons of Mohammed, then the leader of  the powerful and wealthy noble 
Iullimiden tribe,
In 1972-1973, 
when I brought my wife and kids to meet the Tuareg (http://victorenglebertphotography.blogspot.com/search?q=+trans-african ),
this time by 
jeep, Mohammed wanted to buy our brand new vehicle. He could have afforded 
several. His family owned thousands camels, zebus, sheep, and goats. The family 
lorded over an army of vassal Tuareg tribes and servants to herd and water the 
animals for them. It also controlled great numbers of artisans who produced all 
the articles they needed for a comfortable nomadic life. This included spears, 
swords, and knives, camel saddles, wooden mortars, leather cushions and bags, 
and silver jewelry.                          
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