On April 6, the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad declared an independent state in northern Mali, the first assertion of Tuareg control of Timbuktu, their old capital, since 1591
By ADAM GARFINKLE
What do you think of when you see or hear the word
“Tuareg”? Most Americans, I think, are left utterly blank by the sight and the
sound of this noun. Those who do find some association with the word probably
tend to think of a car, specifically a Volkswagen of recent vintage, but spelled
“Touareg” for some no doubt very sensible Germanic reason. Most Americans do
not read a newspaper or consult any other serious news source on a daily basis,
so their heretofore blank Tuareg slates are unlikely to have been marked by the
recent copy in the New York Times, Washington Post, and Associated Press
dispatches in a host of other papers and electronic news sources. That copy, if
read, arrests attention—or should.