The Salt Caravans Still Move at the Speed of Trust
Across the Tibesti, trade runs on reputation, not contracts — and the old routes still teach us something about the virtue of waiting.
I arrived at the Borkou salt flats in late January, when the harmattan wind had stripped the sky to a thin white sheet. The caravan from Faya-Largeau was three days overdue, which meant nothing to anyone but me. Delays on the Faya–Tibesti corridor are measured in social weather, not mechanical failure. A driver named Tahir told me this over sweet tea in a mud-brick waystation: you don’t leave until the man you trust says leave.
The Weight of a Recommendation
On the old routes between the Tibesti massif and the shores of Lake Chad, the Toubou built a commercial system that European observers consistently misread as “informal.” It was anything but. The kanem-bu recommendation network — a chain of personal endorsements that could move goods from the Aozou Strip to N’Djamena without a single written contract — operated with the precision of a clearinghouse. Each endorsement carried weight proportional to the standing of the recommender. A bad recommendation could cost a trader years of rebuilding.