Classroom lesson · Oasis Dates · 🇪🇭 Western Sahara

Oasis Dates

Sweet fruit from the palm trees that make desert life possible

Bunches of golden dates hanging from a tall date palm in a green oasis

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

An oasis is a patch of green in the desert where underground water reaches the surface. Date palms grow wherever there is oasis water, and their sweet, sticky fruit - dates - have been one of the most important foods in the Saharan world for thousands of years. They are eaten fresh, dried, stuffed with nuts, or stirred into couscous.

Tell me more

A single date palm can produce over 100 kilograms of dates in a year, and the trees can live for over a hundred years. They need very little water compared to most fruit trees and actually thrive in the fierce desert heat. People say a good date palm tree needs 'its feet in water and its head in fire' - meaning deep roots near an underground stream and full blazing sunshine.

Dates are incredibly nutritious. They are packed with natural sugars for quick energy, as well as fibre, iron, and potassium. For desert travellers who might go days without finding other food, a bag of dried dates was the perfect portable snack - it does not spoil quickly, it gives energy fast, and it weighs very little.

In Sahrawi culture, dates are the traditional food of hospitality. Visitors are offered dates and milk as a welcome greeting before anything else. At the celebration of Ramadan and other special occasions, dates are the first thing eaten at the evening meal. Their sweetness is associated with kindness and generosity.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Dates have been a survival food for desert travellers for thousands of years. What foods do people today take on long outdoor trips, and why do they choose those particular foods?
  2. 02An oasis is a patch of water in the middle of dry desert. Why do you think oases were so important to desert trade routes?
  3. 03What fruit or vegetable is most important in the food culture of your family or community? Why?
Try this

Classroom activity

Taste three different forms of dates if possible (soft fresh, semi-dried, fully dried). Rate each for sweetness, texture, and how much you liked it on a scale of 1-5. Plot your results as a bar chart. Discuss as a class which was most popular and why.