The Hoggar Massif lies in the north-central part of the Sahara desert. The Sahara is a 7 million kilometer square desert bounded
by the Atlas mountains and the Mediterranean Sea on the north, Egypt and the Red Sea on the east, the Sudan and
the valley of Niger River on the south, and the Atlantic Ocean on the west. The Sahara has a central mountainous
system which includes the Tibesti Massif in Chad, the Air Mountains in Niger, and the Hoggar Massif in Algeria.
The Hoggar has a mean altitude of about 900 meters above sea level, its highest point being the Tahat mount 3003
meters (2,953 feet) above sea level. It comprises a series of plateaus, such as the Tassili Immidir or the
Tassili N'Ajjer etc. (tassili means plateau), as shown in the map. The physical features of the Hoggar are
varied. For instance, the Atakor area is made up of hundreds of towering organ-pipes looking monoliths composed
of volcanic rock; the indigenous nomads
(the tuareg) call this region the assekrem ('the end of the world'). The Tassili N'Ajjer looks like a series of
steep-sided valleys, shaped by lake and river fluvial action for thousands of year; some plateaus are strewn with
'stone forests', rock formations resulting from sand-laden wind erosion. Very little rain falls on the Hoggar
(mean annual rainfall is about 30 mm), but there a5e subterranean sources of water. The temperature range is
extreme, extending from freezing to more than 54 C (130 F).
Humid micro-climates have allowed the preservation of a few flora species. The Hoggar and Tassili mountains host
cypress, wild olive and myrtle flora elements, which grow at the bottom of wadis, beside gueltas, travertine
dams, or waterfalls.
The fauna contains a large number of spiders, insects, reptiles, Tilapia fish, and mammals such as Barbary
sheep, Dorcas gazelles, Roan antelopes, caracal, and cheetah. The last crocodiles were killed in the 1940s in
the Oued Imirhou.
Migratory palaearctic birds also use the Hoggar as a resting station (golden eagles, herons, white storks etc...)
The Hoggar is a site of a rich cultural heritage. The Tassili N'ajjer has been classified as a Natural World
Heritage Property by UNESCO. Its pre-historic remains comprise rock engravings of man and large fauna (elephant,
rhinoceros, hippopotamus ), rock paintings of the same, stone monuments, neolithic remains from the 6000 to 2000
BC period such as pottery, grinding instruments, enclosure walls, sculptures etc. There are series of ancient
cave paintings some of which are arranged in chronological sequence. These depict stylized figures, dancers,
scenes of weddings, banquets, pastoral life, moufflon hunting,
chariots, etc., and inscriptions in Tifinagh characters, an alphabet that is used by the Tuareg to this day.
Altogether, it is estimated there are about 15000 drawings and engravings representing the evolution of human
life, climatic changes and animal migrations from 7500 BC
to the first centuries of the present era. The indigenous inhabitants of the Hoggar are the Tuareg (plural of Targui
- also known as Kel Tamachek or blue men of the desert). The nomadic and sedentary Tuareg are a proud and freedom-loving people.
Traditionally, the Tuareg were organised politically under a confederation set-up involving the Hoggar, N'Ajjer,
Tadamakat, Udalan, Adagh and the Aïr. French colonialism dismantled this confederation despite a fierce
resistance which earned the Tuareg a reputation of indestructibility in the eyes of the French military. This
state of affairs was perpetuated even after the French lost North Africa as the Tuareg were kept divided between
the political borders of Algeria, Niger, Mali, Burkina Faso, Nigeria and Lybia. This partition has provoked the
falling apart of families and the weakening of Tuareg society and culture. The Tuareg are also experiencing a
marginalisation, and denials of their social, political, and cultural rights in all these nation states. But the
most ominous persecution of the Tuareg has been the recent genocidal massacres of several thousands of Tuareg in
Niger (Tchin-Tabaraden in May 1990) and Mali (Foita, Gao, Gossi, Goundam, Kidal, Lere, Menaka, and Timbuktu
between 1990 and 1994), prompting mass exodus and waves of refugees into Algeria and Mauritania, some of whom
died from epidemics, starvation and cold.
The Tuareg are a Muslim people and have a unity of language, known as Tamajaq or Tamashaq , which is a Berber
dialect. In the social structure of the Tuareg, women have powerful influence in family affairs and social life.
The Tuareg have had queens as rulers (called Tamenokalt - the most famous was Tin Hinan whom they regard as 'our
mother' to the present day). Tuareg women are well renowned for their poetry. Historically, the Tuareg played
the role of bridge between the North and the West of Africa. The Tuareg are suffering to this day from the
loss of this historical capacity and position, dismantled by French colonialism, and perpetuated since by the
concept of nation-state. They are a people struggling to re-invent a better future.
In the words of a Targui woman: 'I want only to wander freely in my country, only in my country. I want to be a
taxi of freedom, which is guided and led solely by the wind of freedom. Through the freedom of the air, I want
to criss-cross the country, to go from east to west, from south to north, just like the wind of freedom. But to
become a taxi of freedom in the desert of my country, there are many steps and struggles ahead to get back our
truth.'