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Tunisians throw off the lockdown blues with an energetic return to post-iftar nightlife

▶ Despite tighter budgets, cafes are packed and spirits soar as family and friends socialise during the holy month

- ERIN CLARE BROWN Tunis

Just after 9pm every night during Ramadan, crowds of people climb the steep hill that cuts through the sleepy seaside village of Sidi Bou Said to reach the terraced cafes overlookin­g the Gulf of Tunis.

Groups of young men, freshly caffeinate­d, sing jubilant fight songs for their local football clubs; parents with small children muscle prams over the slick cobbleston­es while their toddlers munch on fried doughnuts and older men relax at their favourite cafe tables under fragrant blossoming orange trees.

For the first time in three years, post-iftar nightlife has returned to Tunisia, and people of all ages are eager to soak it up.

“The last two years have been terrible,” says Amar Yousef, who runs a shop selling vividly painted ceramics on the village’s steep central road.

“Between lockdowns during Ramadan and a lack of cruise ships and tourists, everyone – cafes, vendors, everyone – has barely scraped by.”

In the early months of the pandemic in 2020, a near-total lockdown kept Tunisians indoors day and night, including during the holy month.

By spring last year, despite waves of cases, much of daily life had returned to near normal and many hoped for a reprieve from the loneliness of celebratin­g in isolation.

But shortly before Ramadan began last year, the government issued an evening curfew that kept many from breaking the fast with friends and families – and caused the country’s vibrant post-iftar nightlife to fizzle out.

“People still found a way to see each other,” says Meriam Hamadi, 28, who lives in the medina. “You just had to get creative. Lots of times it wasn’t just iftar together, it was an afternoon cooking, then eating iftar and spending the night sleeping on a friend’s couch.”

But the country’s cafes, many of which have their best month during Ramadan as families indulge in sweets, shisha and a day’s worth of coffee or tea after sundown, suffered when people stayed indoors. Some closed altogether.

Although revellers have returned this year, many have less disposable income with which to indulge.

An economic crisis gripping the country and squeezing the middle class particular­ly hard has only deepened since the start of the pandemic.

“The customers are back, but they aren’t spending as much,” says Amine, a waiter at a popular cafe in Sidi Bou Said.

“People spend three hours at a table with just one coffee.”

Despite the tighter budgets, Tunisians continue to revel in the return of Ramadan’s latenight social life.

At the crest of the hill in Sidi Bou Said, long queues formed around two tiny food stalls selling bomboloni – fresh, deepfried doughnuts coated in sugar or chocolate sauce for about 30 cents apiece.

Men in tidy blue and white uniforms churn out thousands of the sweets each night for those looking for a treat on a budget.

Friends greeted each other with a jubilant “Lebes!” and kisses on the cheek while deftly holding their doughnuts aloft to avoid spilling sugar on each other’s shoulders.

At Cafe des Delices, crowds packed on to the expansive terrace, as waiters flitted about delivering trays laden with coffee or fluted glass cups of assida zgougou, a black pine pudding that is a Ramadan delicacy.

A group of friends played the card game Uno at one table, while a couple enjoyed spending time together. Laughter drifted out into the night.

“It’s just nice to have a chance to go out and see friends,” says Noor Bouanani, 19. “You forget how lonely it was the last two Ramadans, and that’s nice.”

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 ?? Erin Clare Brown / The National ?? Above, sand-brewed coffee at Cafe des Delices in Sidi Bou Said is a post-iftar treat; left, the cafe in the seaside village is packed again after years of Covid-19 lockdowns
Erin Clare Brown / The National Above, sand-brewed coffee at Cafe des Delices in Sidi Bou Said is a post-iftar treat; left, the cafe in the seaside village is packed again after years of Covid-19 lockdowns

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