The Denver Post

Beyond borders: A deep dive into the nomadic way of life

- By David Farley

Nomads have gotten a short shrift in history. As Anthony Sattin writes in his new book, “Nomads: The Wanderers Who Shaped Our World”: “People who live with walls and monuments, who have written most of history, have failed to find meaning in or to recognize the value of the lighter, more mobile, less cluttered lives of those who live beyond borders.”

Through Sattin’s research, which includes years of travels with modernday nomadic peoples, he aims to correct that oversight by showing how nomadic people have contribute­d to human progress and developmen­t. He does this by tracing their history from 12,000 years ago to the present day, focusing on Scythians, Persians, Mongols, Turks, Huns, Mongols and Arabs, as well as the Maasai and Bedouin of today.

In a recent phone conversati­on, we discussed the inspiratio­n for his new book and how certain aspects of traditiona­l nomadic cultures relate, however loosely, to contempora­ry travelers and digital nomads.

The following has been edited for length and clarity.

: What caused you to undertake such an ambitious project?

A: I saw black goat- hair tents when I was a teenager traveling in the Middle East and even then, I realized that although I had studied history, I had heard almost nothing about nomads. But in places like Syria and Jordan, they were still part of everyday life. My book came into focus years ago, around the same time as millions of people were fleeing the Middle East, when Britain was voting to close itself from Europe, and when I was trying to change my own life. I wanted to write something that would tell another side of history and that would also celebrate movement, open borders, a more open world.

Q: Where did you travel to do research?

A: In the 1990s I stayed in Kenya with Wilfred Thesiger — his whole life was spent among nomads. Since then, I’ve had conversati­ons about and with nomads in many places in the world, and I wrote different sections of the book on the move around Europe.

But the most important journey I made spec i f i c a l l y for thi s book was to I ran, where I stayed with the Bakhtiari, a nomadic tribe that winters on the Mesopotami­an plains, near the Iraqi border. In late spring, when all the grasses dry up, the nomads take their flocks, families and tents up into the Zagros Mountains, and that was where I first found them, on a high plateau where the snow had melted and the valleys, carpeted with irises and dwarf tulips, had excellent grazing for their sheep and goats.

Q: In the book you write that “nomads are important to the way we settled people live, just as the way they are crucial to the way we understand ourselves.” Can you say a bit more about this?

A: Humans began to settle and learned to domesticat­e crops and animals around 12,000 years ago. The process took a long time, but has been immensely successful given that most of the 8 billion of us are now settled and over half of us now live urban lives. That success has now become problemati­c — our cities, like much else in our world, are in crisis. The need for a new way of living and of thinking has never been more necessary. Yet most of us are entirely unaware of our nomadic heritage, because it is not in our history books. And those of us who find it challengin­g to live in one place, or at least find that settling down makes huge demands on us, can find solace in the knowledge that they might still be “wired” to live on the move.

Q: How did immersing yourself so thoroughly in the lives and histories of nomadic groups change your philosophy of travel?

A: I wish I could tell you that I have learned to travel lightly, but unfortunat­ely that didn’t rub off on me! But the journey of writing this book has changed me in many ways. Perhaps the most important is the recognitio­n of my dependence on, and my place in, the natural world. It’s easy to forget when you live in a city. So now when I travel, I look and listen and even smell harder, forcing myself to pay more attention to where I am.

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