To save water, drought-hit Morocco is closing its famous public baths three days a week

Notice posters are shown outside at a Moroccan traditional bath, known as hammam, while it is empty of customers, in Rabat, Morocco, Monday, March 4, 2024. Climate change and a yearslong drought have forced Morocco's famous public baths to close a few days a week in an effort to save water. The posters in Arabic read, "Open from Thursday to Sunday, as per authorities decision." (AP Photo/Mosa'ab Elshamy)

RABAT, Morocco (AP) — For years, Fatima Mhattar has welcomed shopkeepers, students, bankers and retirees to Hammam El Majd, a public bath on the outskirts of Morocco's capital, Rabat. For a handful of change, they relax in a haze of steam then are scrubbed down and rinsed off alongside their friends and neighbors.

The public baths — hammams in Arabic — for centuries have been fixtures of Moroccan life. Inside their domed chambers, men and women, regardless of social class, commune together and unwind. Bathers sit on stone slabs under mosaic tiles, lather with traditional black soap and wash with scalding water from plastic buckets.

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