Meteor Airlines, a Moroccan Amazigh band, introduced its latest project, the AGDAL album, crafted collaboratively with the Community Heritage Exchange Initiative (CHEI) in anticipation of the Amazigh year 2974. This joint venture is in association with the U.S. Department of State Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation and StoryCenter.

The Amazigh word, Agdal is defined as a time-honored silvopastoral resource management system, rooted in the rich traditions of the Amazigh people nestled within the Atlas Mountains.

Pictured, AGDAL’s Meteor Airline’s album cover art

The AGDAL album commemorates the ancestral environmental wisdom of Morocco’s Amazigh communities. Through a harmonious blend of music, poetry, and visuals, the album illuminates Morocco’s ecosystems and biodiversity vulnerabilities and resilience, spanning from oases to water resources. Serving as a poetic call for climate action, it underscores the imperative of safeguarding the nation’s diverse cultural and environmental legacy.

The musical compilation immerses itself in the intertwined concepts of conservation and endurance within the context of climate change, shining a spotlight on the increased susceptibility encountered by the Amazigh communities in Morocco. These communities, entrusted with the safeguarding of pivotal environments like Agdal, communal oases, and argan forests, confront escalating hurdles.

The album endeavors to stimulate contemplation and proactive measures, underscoring the imperative to fortify their adaptive approaches and fortitude amid the intensifying climate crisis.

“As we delve into the sounds of “AGDAL”, it highlights the silent yet persistent endeavors of the Amazigh communities in Morocco, who have been the unsung heroes of environmental conservation, intertwining their daily lives with sustainable practices that preserve and respect the natural world,” said Rachid Ennassiri, manager of Meteor Airlines and expert on climate energy transition policies.

The group, Meteor Airlines, hails from Tinghir, the southeastern region of Morocco, and was established in 2016, crafting music in their native language, Tamazight. The band’s musical repertoire spans from serene acoustic melodies to more robust sounds, falling under the genre they’ve coined as Amazigh Rock. Their music integrates themes rooted in Amazigh history, values, and customs.

“We are proud to be including this Meteor Airlines project as part of the CHEI because it’s adding the element of cultural transmission through music to the goal of making traditional sustainability practices relevant to contemporary and urgent efforts to mitigate climate change. The AGDAL album is a beautiful integration of storytelling culture and environmental activism,” said Amy Hill with StoryCenter.

Community Heritage Exchange Initiative (CHEI) aims to spotlight both past and ongoing projects supported by the Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation (AFCP), disseminate narratives of cultural heritage, and enhance the capabilities of communities to record and share their unique stories.