Bari Vecchia is salt and light and stone, and the hum of open doors. The levante moves through the alleys like a familiar song, the same wind that crosses the sea to cities I’ve loved on the other shore. It carries the scent of food, the warmth of voices, the rhythm of a life lived in mutual connection, close to the street.
So there it was, that strange mix of nostalgia and recognition, as if Bari were a memory I’d forgotten I had. The light, the sounds, the way people speak. All of it echoes other beloved places like Jaffa, Beirut, Jerusalem.
Really makes you wonder if this idea of a “Western” world was ever real. The Mediterranean doesn’t divide us; it connects us. It’s one long conversation between shores, carried by the same wind, told in different accents.
In Bari Vecchia, with a heart still heavy woth thr wounds of the Middle-East, I could hear it again.







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