Are lengthy tarmac delays happening more often? It certainly feels that way, with several frustrating incidents having gone viral in recent times in which passengers were stuck on planes for hours before their flights were eventually canceled.
21.07.2023 - 08:08 / roughguides.com
With the world in the grip of the Covid-19 pandemic, you’re sure to have heard plenty of advice on how to protect yourself. Face masks, self isolation, social distancing… these are all important, but one of the most vital tips is also one of the most basic: wash your hands regularly. It may have taken something of a back seat in recent government communications, but cast your mind back to March, and you’ll no doubt remember hearing the advice that you should wash your hands for as long as it takes to sing Happy Birthday – twice. Recent studies have suggested that regular hand washing could help to curb a pandemic by nearly seventy percent – but also that about thirty percent of people don’t wash their hands after using the toilet. In airports, it’s thought that only twenty percent of people have clean hands. Perhaps it’s no surprise that coronavirus spread so quickly.
So washing your hands is an important step towards reducing the spread of infection – but have you ever wondered about what you’re actually washing your hands with? We’ve all grown up with soap as a pretty omnipresent substance, so it’d hardly be surprising if you haven’t. If you want to learn more, though, you could do much worse than paying a visit to the idiosyncratic Museum of Soap in the Lebanese city of Sidon.
Lebanon's Sidon Castle © Denis Kabanov/Shutterstock
Sidon, or Saida, is a city with a history that stretches back to biblical times, when it was a major port for the Phoenician civilisation. It’s thought to be the place from which St Paul set sail to Rome, while in the Old Testament it receives several mentions as a place of commerce and production of goods. Though cedar timber was the principal product at the time of the Bible, by the 17th century Sidon was beginning to branch out into another industry: soap.
It’s not clear exactly when soap as we understand it today was invented – it could date back as far as 5000 years ago in Babylon – but certainly during the Middle Ages European soap was a nasty and smelly substance derived from animal fats. However, in the Islamic Middle East – particularly Syria – fragrant soap, infused with the scent of herbs such as lavender, was being produced, and it was from this tradition that Sidon’s soap industry developed.
Wall of soap, Museum of Soap in Sidon © Owen Morton
Housed in an elegant 19th-century building that was a soap factory until the outbreak of the Lebanese civil war in the 1970s, the Museum of Soap makes for a surprisingly fascinating visit. Here, you’ll learn about the history of soap production in Sidon and the rest of the Islamic world, traditions and etiquette in the hammam baths, and of course the manufacturing process that turns the raw materials (olive oil, alkali and
Are lengthy tarmac delays happening more often? It certainly feels that way, with several frustrating incidents having gone viral in recent times in which passengers were stuck on planes for hours before their flights were eventually canceled.
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