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Garden in Tozeur, Tunisia
French vintage postcard

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Capaci Grande: the maritime heart of Little Sicily in Sousse
The area of Capaci Grande, locally pronounced “Gabadji el-Fougani”, was the historical home and maritime heart of Italian immigration to Sousse during the colonial period. It stretches slightly uphill toward Sidi Bou Jaafar beach, and took its name from the town of Capaci near Palermo, Sicily, from where the majority of the families who settled there originated.
Inhabited almost exclusively by Sicilian fishermen and Maltese sailors. Daily life there was marked by a lively atmosphere, with the rhythm of the narrow streets governed by the cycles of the sea: the return of boats, the repair of fishing nets, and the drying of fish under the sun on doorsteps.
Although the French colonial authorities mockingly nicknamed it “Brigand-Ville” (“Bandit Town”), the neighborhood was in reality a space of solidarity and integration. Sicilian immigrants lived side by side with the Tunisian Muslim population, sharing the same precarious economic conditions, which led to a unique cultural blending. One of its most notable expressions was the emergence of a hybrid language mixing Tunisian Arabic and the Sicilian dialect, which transformed the Italian name “Capaci” into its Arabicized form “Gabadji.”
After the Second World War and Tunisia’s independence, most of the Italian families left.
Note: The neighborhood began to be established between 1895 and 1905.
Jewish women from Tunisia
French vintage postcard
Infantry on the streets of Bizerte, Tunisia
French vintage postcard
Church of the Immaculate Conception / Saint Mary of Gabès - Tunisia ( Église de l’Immaculée-Conception / Sainte-Marie ) - 1903

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Stelles dedicated to the goddess Tanit. Museum of Louvre
Post Office in Tataouine, Tunisia
French vintage postcard
View of Tunis, Tunisia
French vintage postcard
Jews of Djerba. Blue Bride, by Keren T. Friedman (Djerba, Tunisia, 1983)
The Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life
Tea room of the Tunisia Palace Hotel in Tunis, Tunisia
French vintage postcard

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Tataouine, Tunisia, 2024.
Photo by Jack Gray.
Tunisia. A Tunisian bride from Souss wearing traditional attire and jewelry during the third day of her wedding, 1932.
Jeanne Jouin.
Tunisia. Old Kasbah od Tozeur, 1944/1947.
Thérèse Le Prat.
Tunisia. Tunisian jewish men praying inside the Djerbian Ghriba synagogue, 1944/1947.
Thérèse Le Prat.

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oh my god 2025 Tunisian baklava stamp
[id: a diamond postage stamp with an illustration of a plate of baklava and some of the ingredients in baklava, like honey and pistachios. end ID]
baklava is like one of my favorite desserts, this is so awesome
a 1959 Tunisia stamp from a series on daily life in Tunisia
[id: a postage stamp with a stylized illustration of a camel and its rider who gazes at the viewer. in the background is a white building and a tree. end id]