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Cairo

 
The twin streams of Egypt's history converge just below the Delta at Cairo , where the greatest city in the Islamic world sprawls across the Nile towards the Pyramids , those supreme monuments of antiquity. Every visitor to Egypt comes here, to reel at the Pyramids' baleful mass and the seething immensity of Cairo, with its bazaars, mosques and Citadel and extraordinary Antiquities Museum. It's equally impossible not to find yourself carried away by the streetlife, where medieval trades and customs coexist with a modern, cosmopolitan mix of Arab, African and European influences.

 

Cairo has been the largest city in Africa and the Middle East ever since the Mongols wasted Imperial Baghdad in 1258. Acknowledged as Umm Dunya or " Mother of the World " by medieval Arabs, and as Great Cairo by nineteenth-century Europeans, it remains, in Jan Morris's words, "one of the half-dozen supercapitals - capitals that are bigger than themselves or their countries the focus of a whole culture, an ideology or a historical moment". As Egypt has been a prize for conquerors from Alexander the Great to Rommel, so Cairo has been a fulcrum of power in the Arab world from the Crusades unto the present day. The ulema of its thousand-year-old Al-Azhar Mosque (for centuries the foremost centre of Islamic intellectual life) remains the ultimate religious authority for millions of Sunni Muslims, from Jakarta to Birmingham. Wherever Arabic is spoken, Cairo's cultural magnetism is felt. Every strand of Egyptian society knits and unravels in this febrile megalopolis.

Egyptians have two names for the city, one ancient and popular, the other Islamic and official. The foremost is Masr , meaning both the capital and the land of Egypt - an ur-city that endlessly renews itself and dominates the nation, an idea rooted in pharaonic civilization. (For Egyptians abroad, "Masr" refers to their homeland; within its borders it means the capital.) Whereas Masr is timeless, the city's other name, Al-Qahira (The Conqueror), is linked to an event: the Fatimid conquest that made this the capital of an Islamic empire stretching from the Atlantic to the Hindu Kush. The name is rarely used in everyday speech.

Both archetypes still resonate and in monumental terms are symbolized by two dramatic landmarks : the Pyramids of Giza at the edge of the Western Desert and the great Mosque of Mohammed Ali - the modernizer of Islamic Egypt - which broods atop the Citadel. Between these two monuments sprawls a vast city, the colour of sand and ashes, of diverse worlds and time zones, and gross inequities. All is subsumed into an organism that somehow thrives in the terminal ward: medieval slums and Art Deco suburbs, garbage-pickers and marbled malls, donkey carts and limos, piousness and "the oaths of men exaggerating in the name of God". Cairo lives by its own contradictions.

This is a city, as Morris put it, "almost overwhelmed by its own fertility". Its population is today estimated at around eighteen million and is swollen by a further million commuters from the Delta and a thousand new migrants every day. Today, one third of Cairene households lack running water; a quarter of them have no sewers, either. Up to three million people reside in squatted cemeteries - the famous Cities of the Dead . The amount of green space per citizen has been calculated at thirteen square centimetres, not enough to cover a child's palm. Whereas earlier travellers noted that Cairo's air smelt "like hot bricks", visitors now find throat-rasping air pollution , chiefly caused by traffic. Cairo out-pollutes LA every day of the week: breathing the atmosphere downtown is reputedly akin to smoking thirty cigarettes a day.

Cairo's genius is to humanize these inescapable realities with social rituals . The rarity of public violence owes less to the armed police on every corner than to the dowshah. When conflicts arise crowds gather, restrain both parties, encourage them to rant, sympathize with their grievances and then finally urge: " Maalesh, maalesh " (Let it be forgiven). Everyday life is sweetened by flowery gestures and salutations; misfortunes evoke thanks for Allah's dispensation (after all, things could be worse!). Even the poorest can be respected for piety; in the mosque, millionaire and beggar kneel side by side.

Extended-family values and neighbourly intervention prevail throughout the baladi quarters or urban villages where millions of first- and second-generation rural migrants live, whilst arcane structures underpin life in Islamic Cairo. On a city-wide basis, the colonial distinction between "native quarters" and ifrangi (foreign) districts has given way to a dynamic stasis between rich and poor, westernization and traditionalism, complacency and desperation. The city's tolerance has recently been further strained by natural and man-made calamities. In October 1992, up to a thousand people died in an earthquake , when shoddily built high-rises and hovels collapsed across the city. Its image took a worse battering abroad after the shooting of seventeen Greek tourists in 1996 and the firebombing of a German tour bus a year later - although the tourists now seem to be making a cautious return. Every year its polarities intensify, safety margins narrow and statistics make gloomier reading. The abyss beckons in prognoses of future trends , yet Cairo confounds doom sayers by dancing on the edge.

Orientation
Greater Cairo consists of two metropolitan governorates: Cairo , on the east bank of the Nile, and Giza , across the river. The River Nile ( Bahr el-Nil, or simply El-Nil) is the prerequisite of their existence and fundamental to basic orientation. Bear in mind that it flows northwards through the city, so that "downriver" means north, and "upriver" south, a reversal of the usual associations. The city's waterfront is dominated by the islands of Gezira and Roda and the bridges that connect them to the Corniche (embankment) on either side of the Nile. There are four major divisions of the city:

" Central Cairo spreads inland to the east of the islands. Its downtown area - between Ezbekiya Gardens and Midan Tahrir - bears the stamp of Western planning, as does Garden City , the embassy quarter further south. At the northern end of central Cairo (beyond the downtown area) lies Ramses Station , the city's main train terminal. Most of the banks, airlines, cheap hotels and tourist restaurants lie within this swathe of the city.

" Further east sprawls Islamic Cairo , encompassing Khan el-Khalili bazaar, the Gamaliya quarter within the Northern Walls , and the labyrinthine Darb al-Ahmar district between the Bab Zwayla and the Citadel . Beyond the latter spread the eerie Cities of the Dead - the Northern and Southern Cemeteries.

" The Southern Cemetery and the populous Saiyida Zeinab quarter merge into the rubbish tips and wasteland bordering the ruins of Fustat and the Coptic quarter of Old Cairo , further to the south. From there, a ribbon of development follows the metro out to Ma'adi , Cairo's plushest residential suburb, and Helwan , the city's heaviest industrial centre. Except for stylish Heliopolis , the northern suburbs likewise hold little appeal for visitors.

" Across the river on the west bank , the residential neighbourhoods of Aguza and Dokki aren't as smart as nearby Mohandiseen or the high-rise northern end of Gezira island, known as Zamalek . The Imbaba district, just to the northeast, was once notable for its weekly camel market , but this has now moved slightly further out to Bil'esh. The dusty expanse of Giza (which lends its name to the west bank urban zone) is enlivened by Cairo Zoo and the nightclub-infested Pyramids Road leading to the Pyramids of Giza .


The City
With so much to see (and overlook, initially), you can spend weeks in CAIRO and merely scratch the surface. But as visitors soon realize, there are lots of reasons why people don't stay for long. The city's density, climate and pollution conspire against it, and the culture shock is equally wearing. Tourists unfamiliar with Arab ways can take little for granted, regular visitors expect to be baffled, and not even Cairenes comprehend the whole metropolis. The downside weighs especially on newcomers, since it's the main tourist sites that generate most friction. A day at Khan el-Khalili bazaar can feel like a course in sales resistance and baksheesh evasion. Generally, however, Cairenes are the warmest, best-natured city dwellers going. They have to be to live in such a pressure cooker without exploding. Their sly wit and prying render pretension and secrecy impotent; their spirited ingenuity transcends horrendous conditions. Potential riots are defused by tolerance and custom; a web of ties resists alienation. Once you have something of the measure of this, Cairo feels an altogether different and more enjoyable place.
 

 
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