Beauty secrets from Israel’s Desert Daughter

Beauty secrets from Israel’s Desert Daughter

  •   Beauty secrets from Israel’s Desert Daughter
  •    
    A modern Bedouin woman takes healing cosmetic recipes from her grandmother and turns them into a growing business based on plants.
  • The products ready for sale
     
    By Rivka Borochov
     
    Like many other Bedouin women from her generation, Mariam Aborkeek, now in her early 40s, was born in a tent and was raised under the heavy hems of her mother’s and grandmother’s Bedouin dresses. Unlike most, she was lucky to learn the trade secrets of being a medicine woman from her grandmother –– ancient natural Bedouin wisdom that Aborkeek has turned into an international beauty business from Israel called Desert Daughter.
     
    The company is based out of a series of old animal sheds that Aborkeek’s father gave her when he realized his daughter’s hobby had become a life passion. There, in the outskirts of Tel Sheva in the Negev Desert, a small crew of women makes and sells soaps, creams, lotions and potions derived from plants of the nearby desert.
     
    In the rooms are large baskets of drying herbs, twigs and strange fruits in various stages of the production process. The center is a lab, a storage house for raw materials, a kitchen, a storefront and a seminar and welcome space for people who come to learn more about Bedouin healing and the products that Aborkeek creates based on the ancient wisdom of her grandmother. There is even a small white donkey baying under an acacia tree in the dry desert garden out front.
     
    Better than name brands
     
    Aborkeek took her time finding her way in the natural cosmetics business. When she went to London to study marketing 15 years ago, she admired all the fancy name-brand cosmetic products. But after some time she found her skin was getting dry and flaky. On a trip home she went back to using her grandmother’s homemade products, such as soap made from camel’s milk. The skin problems cleared up.
     

    Cakes of newly made Desert Daughter soap
     
    Around that time her friends in London started requesting these natural products too and told her they were superior to the store-bought brands. With her compass pointed back home, Aborkeek returned to Israel and decided she would learn the trade from her grandmother. That was in the late 1990s.
     
    “When we lived together in the tent, I remember watching her cutting herbs,” says Aborkeek. “I realized she had so much knowledge, using no preservatives, only herbs and oils.”
    The official company Desert Daughter was established in 2005. Later that year, her grandmother died.
     
    Today, Aborkeek’s contributions to her own product line are important. While some of her grandmother’s treatments came from the same raw materials, applications were sometimes sticky and uncomfortable. Aborkeek says she has worked to find ways to distill the healing ingredients from the plants and herbs and put them into products that are comfortable and practical for the “rub in and go” Western way of life.
     
    Aborkeek employs local Bedouin women in her center. Working with Desert Daughter has given these women new opportunities. Tourists come through to sample and buy the products, and the staff helps prepare breakfast or brunch, providing a traditional Bedouin experience based on hospitality.
     
    Ancient beauty + healing
     
    Some of Aborkeek’s trademark products include camel’s milk soap, black cumin oil soap, and a joint relief oil that can also treat arthritis and back pain. The joint treatment is based on a strange desert fruit: the Citrullus colocynthis, otherwise known as the colocynth, bitter apple, bitter cucumber, desert gourd, egusi or the biblical vine of Sodom.
     

    Desert melon is one of Aborkeek’s ingredients
     
    Another favorite local ingredient sourced by Aborkeek is the herb Artemisia herba-alba, or white wormwood. The perennial shrub grows wild on the steppes of the Mediterranean. It is known as an excellent antiseptic and anti-spasmodic remedy.
     
    With Desert Daughter products come both healing and beauty aspects –– and that’s how Aborkeek sold the idea of going commercial to her grandmother, who at first opposed the idea of making money from the wisdom of the ancients.
     
    Most Desert Daughter products are sold through direct marketing rather than in stores. But Aborkeek does have a fan base of international buyers and is looking for ways to connect better with overseas markets interested in promoting fair trade and sustainable products from Israel.
    She says that the act of going out to the desert to pick the herbs and spices each spring is actually good for the plants, some of which are at risk. She learned from her grandmother how to pick so that the plants can regenerate and grow better in the coming year.
     
    And even though she’s dressed traditionally in Bedouin garb, with a headscarf and full dress, Aborkeek’s fancy Italian clogs give away her passion for fashion and appreciation for modern culture as well.
     

    Mariam Aborkeek in her workshop, outside of Tel Sheva
     
    Balancing both her worlds, she is considered quite unorthodox in her community since she never married. But she smiles it off, not talking about her personal life: This desert daughter still has some untold secrets that are only hers.
     
     
     
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