Cafés offer women respite
TRIPOLI: Fashionable cafés springing up in Libya’s capital are shutting out single men and catering for women looking for a break from tensions – political and personal – crowding in around them.
The cafés with European names and bright décor seem a world away from the city’s traffic-clogged and still violent streets. In a socially conservative society, they also offer privacy and protection from unwanted advances.
“If I go with my friends, we chat about our problems and change our mood,” said 27-year-old Haneen, eating a late breakfast in the busy La Rambla café. “A family place is more comfortable… There’s no harassment or flirting.”
For owners and managers of the businesses marketing themselves as “families-only” cafés, it’s also a welcome change from the traditional clientele – hundreds of other rowdier eateries across Tripoli are packed with young men, tables spilling out onto the streets and giant screens broadcasting soccer matches.
“Family cafés are great,” said Abdulhameed Ghreetly, manager of At Home café, which looks out on to the Mediterranean. “They are less of a headache than the cafés for young guys… You know, young guys and their quarrelling.”
Most of Tripoli’s economy has been in freefall since major battles between rival factions in 2014 left the country divided, with competing governments.
The female clients are offering some respite – managers say they spend more on fancy coffees and juices than the espresso-sipping men.
“The guys just ask for coffee and water,” said Mohamed Abdurrazak, La Rambla’s owner. “The women come to eat.”
The menus offer pastries, pancakes, waffles and milkshakes, along side the popular “oriental breakfast”, which includes shakshouka (poached eggs in a spicy tomato sauce) and ful (fava beans with herbs and spices).
Prices are higher, too. A coffee in a regular café costs two Libyan dinars (R20.76) and five or six dinars in a family café.
The new businesses are also flourishing in Benghazi, Libya’s second city, which suffered extensive damage during more than three years of fighting.
Customers come to relieve the daily stress, said Saad al-Farjani, the owner of the Coffee Factory.
“All the time you hear of new family cafés opening. There are about 20 and there could be more.”
Some see the cafés as heralding a return to relative normality – their owners say they have had little trouble from armed groups known for extortion and theft.
Upmarket shops, some with international brands, have opened in smarter neighbourhoods.
Opinion is split on what the cafés say about Libyan society.
For some they are a sign of increasing openness – Libyan women have little chance to socialise outside the home.
For others they are a reminder of the limits on women in a country where outdoor public spaces are dominated by men.
“I consider coming to the café like travelling, a change of atmosphere,” said Ghada Mohamed, a 37-year-old customer at Coffee Factory. “I hope the cafés become like cafés abroad… With seats outside.”