Sunday, October 31, 2010

A Room With A View


The team has arrived safely, without any lost luggage or mishaps.  Along with the GV Egypt personnel, we pile into a mini-bus for a five-hour drive south to El Minya, following the Nile the entire way.

Hundreds of empty buildings crowd the outskirts of Cairo; windowless red brick developments with dangerous looking prongs of rebar pointing northward on each corner. 

The unfinishedness of the houses, Egypt Style as it’s known, is preparation for the upper floors that will be built once sons and daughters are married. Land is often tenured, staying in the families for generations.  Because of this, Egypt builds up. 

This explains a lot of things, especially the fact that ancient Egypt was uncovered from years of windswept sands and towns built entirely of mud bricks that consistently collapsing onto itself, forcing the inhabitants and subsequent relatives to move on top.

Our local coordinator explains that most of the vast construction is being built by developers hedging against the market, using the economy’s decline to hire cheap labor and then hoping that it will surge again so that they can sell these spaces at a premium.

Structures closer to the city are part of a failed government initiative to provide affordable housing, but city officials didn’t count on the expense incurred by construction and thus, the pricing to purchase proved to be beyond the means of the people who actually need the housing. 

With 17, 000,000 in Cairo (that’s 200,000 per square kilometer), you can imagine the need for affordable housing.    Children are literally being kicked out of their homes since parents cannot afford to pay for both rent and mouths to feed, leading to a new statistic of 1,000,000 homeless children in the city itself.
*Just to give you a comparison, there are 10,000 people per square kilometer in New York City, population 11,000,000.

Pictures cannot accurately describe the sprawl that continues on and on throughout our drive, I try to think of ways to describe this vast acreage of empty windows that stare out like jack-o-lanterns and metal fingers stretching up towards the sky. 


At the Hotel Cleopatra, the front desk manager assures us that we have a beautiful view, but when we open the shutters and throw up the sash, I discover that our room faces two unfinished apartment buildings with a narrow alleyway leading down the bank.  “I want to see the Arno” I sigh, remembering Lucy Honeychurch’s words upon hearing that her room promises a view as well in E.M. Forester’s classic.   

We will be sequestered here for the three and ½ days, not a typical time frame for any Habitat build, but Egypt is unique in that the villages where we are working are combinations of Coptic Christian and Muslim, both religions having non-working holy days beginning Friday and ending on Sunday.

More so, however, Egypt remains a police “state”, and because of the terrorist bombing in 1995, requires all tourists to be accompanied by armed guards.  Tourism fuels a major portion of the economy, with 14,000,000 visitors expected this year alone.

With us at all times is the swankily dressed Omar, packing a Colt .45.  With a beam in his smile, he proudly tells us that he was on Obama’s detail when he spoke in Egypt last year.  I can tell that he’s picked up a thing or two from the Secret Service by the way he leaps off the bus while it’s in motion and clears the street before we exit. 

A Toyota truck with at least six armed soldiers on benches follows our bus to and from the hotel, although we never see these men until our last day when a gaggle of kids, home from school, crowd around the team wanting pictures and touching everyone; a bustle of noise rising to a hundred gleeful shrieks and giggles and causing much agitation to the soldiers and the village security men, clad in matching galabayas, who start waving long, thick canes in front of the children, causing them to scream and back off, only to return to their excited state a few seconds later.  Soon after, Omar orders the street cleared and we are on our way back to safety of the mini-bus and the long ride to Cairo.






9 comments:

Nancy said...

Nicely done, can't wait to read more! (I want to see the Arno, too.)

The Zen Drummer said...

Wow. Homeless children problem is crazy. I went to Egypt. Cairo is insane!

Anonymous said...

I love reading them, all I can say is WOW. Be safe+well my friend, love from K.

Vanessa said...

Ah, the conundrum of having so much to write about and so little time to do so-
good blog and great pics-
MORE MORE MORE I say-

We will catch up in LA!

V.

Anonymous said...

Wow, Kat!! Just plain WOW!! Not sure that I would like to be led by armed guards......makes San Diego seem peaceful......
Love and hugs,
mar

Anonymous said...

Yes, more more, my dear Kat, you leave me wanting to read more!

Unknown said...

great writing, Kathy... Great life!

Unknown said...

I am hungry for more, as many of the others have said. Great descriptions, would love more pictures of the area and the build, but I know they will come. You have a wonderful way of drawing me in to your adventures. I love you, MOM

David said...

so umm if you wanna go out to a bar you need to bring a guard? How does anyone...you know...

Shameless Crushes...

find life experiences and swallow them whole.
travel.
meet many people.
go down some dead ends and explore dark alleys.
try everything.
exhaust yourself in the glorious pursuit of life.
-lawrence k. fish

Yoga For Peace

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