Globe Trekker

|

Video on Demand

 |

Forum

 |

Site Map

 |

eNewsletter

 |

Search

Destination Guide Middle East & North Africa
Home TV Shows Destination Guide Music Community Company * Globe Trekker Shop
*
*

You are here: Home : Destination Guide : Middle East And North Africa : Syria Jordan And Lebanon : Taxis

*
*
* * * * *
 
 


Pilot Shop

Middle East DVD $19.95 buy now
Middle East (2 discs) DVD $29.95 buy now


Pilot Shop

Beirut  DVD $19.95 - click here
DVD: Beirut $19.95 buy now

* * *

Travel: Syrian Taxi Cabs (an attraction unto themselves)

 

Catching a Cab

Taxis are your best bet to get around Damascus. They are cheap and fortunately they are everywhere!

Syrian cab drivers for the most part, seem to be an extremely honest lot, and will not take more than the required fare even if you shove a handful of crumpled bills at them in complete confusion as to how much you need to pay. They will take the required fare, plus a modest tip. The standard fare is the number on the meter, plus half of the fare above that for a tip. Don't be afraid to ask that the meter be reset when you get in the cab, if you notice it's not - while they drivers tend not to cheat you on the fare, "forgetting" about the meter is sometimes attempted.

Highway Hijinks

What you see on the highways while riding around in cabs may amaze and amuse you. In one lane, straddling the dividing stripe, is an army truck with soldiers balancing in the back, standing on top of the pickup truck door, and clinging to the canvas roof - hurtling down the road at 60 mph! In another lane three guys wedged into two seats of a windshield-free vehicle that looks like a go kart. There are even push bikes on the highway, not to mention the donkey and horse carts. People crossing with their children, hands held, little legs running as fast as they can; aman in a flapping head covering driving a motorcycle while his wife rides on the back, not hanging onto the bike, but clutching their child in her arms...Inshallah! A truck with Kuwait license plates, cabs with wheels wobbling like crazy - into the whole mess, you'll see a brand new spotless huge Mercedes or BMW speeding along. Families often picnic on the grass-covered and fairly wide median strips, while the exhaust fumes swirl around them. Wash hangs out of city apartment windows, gray with dust. Everything in Damascus is filthy with exhaust, the clouds of it may make you nauseous for a few days until you get used to it! Seriously, people with asthma or other respiratory ailments should take adequate precautions - the air is very dirty.

Cabbie Culture

The cabs themselves are sociological museums unto themselves. Most drivers work long hours, so the cab becomes their sitting room, religious shrine, family room and foyer. Some carry their families around with them, for a little quality time in the evening. Many of them are personalised to a hilarious degree. The decor of the cabs is in a world of its own - maroon fake fur all over the dashboard, a mirror stuck to the front shelf of the dashboard and a tiny iridescent disco ball hanging from the mirror. Everything is usually filthy with road dust and exhaust. Many cabs are decorated with extremely sentimental decor - red fluffy fur hearts pasted to the rear view window, on the dashboard is a porcelain hand figurine with roses on it holding another red fluffy fur heart. Another porcelain white horse figurine holds yet another red fluffy fur heart. The rear window is covered with swoopy, glittery red Arabic calligraphy stickers with more hearts incorporated into the calligraphy. Syrians are quite sentimental and full of love!

Many times, cab drivers will display paraphernalia which divulges their religious affiliation. You may see prayer beads hanging from the rear view mirror, "hand of Fahimi jewellery (metal hands with blue beads on them), stickers with "Allah" calligraphy which suggests the driver is probably Muslim. Christian looking items may suggest Christian or Coptic Christian, and Stars of David suggest the driver is Jewish. A five pointed white-green-red-blue-yellow star identifies the driver as Druze. Syria has tremendous freedom of religion, with people of all sects and affiliations living together in apparent harmony. Hailing a cab will enter you into a new sphere and allow a fascinating window into Arab culture. Forget the manic New York yellow taxis, forget shifty and dangerous London mini cabs - enter a cab and make a cultural discovery!

The Road to (and from) Damascus

If you wish to take a quick jaunt to Beiruit, Lebanon or Amman, Jordan - recommended - you can hop in a cab! The fare starts out at around US $20, and goes down depending on how many people are able to squish in for the ride. You'll see cabs driving around on the street that say "Beirut" or "Amman" on the stickers, in English - these are the cabs that go out of the country. If you do take a short trip, be sure to have your passport with you, as well as your Syrian entry card you got at the airport. If you forget your entry card, you'll have to purchase another Syrian visa on your return to Syria - usually only US$16, but it saves time if you do bring it. The cab driver will usually know what to do at the border and will sometimes collect your passports and handle the inspection. The border entry process is not that time consuming. It's interesting, if you go to Beiruit, as soon as you leave Syria, you see the signs pop up for the Western brands - KFC, Pizza Hut, Starbucks et al. If you're using a world band cell phone, that too will spring to life at this point.

You can even take cabs into the tiniest, narrowest streets of Old Damascus - where the rear view mirrors on both sides of the cars scrape the walls. Drivers, in general, in Damascus are fearless! You may hear the cars gently scraping against each other in the roundabouts you see at some busy intersections. Most of the vehicles you see in the city bear the scratches of dozens of encounters with other cars - peaceful battle scars.

Take heart in the idea that even if you get hopelessly lost in Damascus, which is fairly easy to do, the likelihood of getting back to your original destination is easy, as long as there is a cab swooping by to rescue! Cabs are a great, safe way for all travellers to get around Damascus, especially women. Most drivers will be happy to give you a tour of any area you want - you only have to suggest!

...Or Hop on a Microbus

There are other public transit options in Damascus if you're very adventurous and can read Arabic. There are small white microbuses that zip all over the city. These buses display several destinations - neighbourhoods in Damascus - on signs in the front of the bus - however, these are all written in Arabic. They have no published schedules, routes that meander confusingly and random drop off points - you pretty much just shout to the driver when you want to exit the bus. The fare is extremely low, about US 10 or 20 cents, and people pack the buses to capacity. Women and men do sit separately, however, and the people are quite polite about this. Women foreigners who are brave enough to attempt these buses should sit next to other women on the bus, unless the bus is utterly full - your innocent mistake could possibly be misinterpreted if you sit next to a man. There are also local buses - larger school bus size - which are crazily coloured and encrusted with ornamentation. These too, have schedules known apparently only to the locals, with no drop off points or routes published anywhere. If you remember, though, that a cab can get you back to most any part of Damascus where you feel familiar, riding a couple stops on these buses might be a fun adventure!

Guide Written by Erika Linden Green-Rafeh

   
 
Copyright 2008 Pilot Productions
Advertising Contact Legal About Bookmark