My whirlwind visit to Cairo continues apace. It seems I'll never quite adjust to the temporal realities here (differences in time zone, work week, and latitude) before I return to the States. It's, um, Tuesday Wednesday already, but that realization comes through calculation and not intuition.
Kiki has continued to teach throughout my visit. We've still managed to find time to do things together -- attend a play and a reception, go to the mall, eat out or cook in. And there are always errands: food shopping most of all, but also arranging several arrivals and departures in the next few weeks: us to New York then Kiki back again; her brother Tom to Cairo just after Christmas, and then Kiki and Tom homeward just after New Year's.
Yesterday Recently I discovered for myself some of the constant frustrations of living in Cairo. None of them is earth-shattering, of course, and in the retelling they often sound rather picayune. I know they sound that way when Kiki reports them in our daily conversations over Skype. And my spousal obligation to be sympathetic to Kiki aside, it's hard not to pooh-pooh them when you hear them. Truth told I encounter them every day in New York too. That should argue for more understanding on my part. But sometimes you just have to walk in those proverbial moccasins ...
There are still some corners of Cairo I haven't visited yet, and "Old Cairo" was one of them. Old Cairo combines elements of earliest known Cairo, known as Fustat, with Coptic Christian Cairo. The biggest draws are the Basilica of St George (left) and the Coptic Museum. I took the Metro to Mar Girgis station, and promptly walked the absolute wrong way. I should have followed the school group marching in the right direction. My detour took me completely around the cemeteries behind the walled Coptic enclave. But it did put me close to the Ibn al-'As Mosque, the oldest surviving mosque in Cairo. Of course you'd be hard pressed to find any remants of the original (AD 647) structure. And what's there now is derived from a later structure anyway. But on this spot .... I did however get to be included in some cellphone group photos taken by a visiting school group.
Now firmly oriented I headed past the security check into the historic Coptic section. Of course I was drawn immediately not by the basilica and its outbuildings but the Christian cemetery. No trip would be complete without a cemetery visit, right? Most of the monuments featured one of my favorite mortuary elements, porcelain enamel photographs of the deceased. The iconography ran the gamut from traditional Christian (weeping madonnas, lots and lots of crosses) to ancient Egyptian (lotus-capped columns and winged birds). The inscriptions were mostly in Greek, but also Arabic, French, and Italian. The overall impression was a bit tumbledown, the ground around some crypts having settled and leaving them at precarious angles out of perpendicular. For all that there were still some very recent additions to the cemetery.
After visiting the basilica and the Coptic Museum (very nicely appointed, recently remodeled, but far more Coptic art than all but a specialist could possibly appreciate), I decided to take advantage of the location to visit the Nilometer on 'nearby' Roda Island. This entailed the flyover for the subway, a stroll through a totally behind-the-scenes neighborhood, crossing the perilous Corniche (mad traffic in both directions), a footbridge to the island, and a walk to the tip of the island. Unfortunately, I didn't study this walk beforehand, and ended up in a cul-de-sac in front of the entrance to the Umm Khalthoum Museum -- worth a visit in itself but not where I wanted to be.
I had an errand to run before I met Kiki for a late lunch. I retraced my steps to the Metro, boarded the next train (Hey, New York: here they come every four minutes!), switched at Sadat, got off at 'Attaba, followed the throngs to the exit where I was completely turned around and marched the wrong way twice, and at long last found my way to the shop where I completed my errand and set out on foot for the university.
I probably haven't mentioned much what it's like getting around Cairo on foot. Most people tend to avoid the sidewalks, and why not? They're narrow, lumpy, slippery, marked by hidden trip spots and holes and puddles, blocked by slow moving grandmothers arm in arm or two guys having an animated conversation, forcing you between tightly spaced parked cars into the street; on top of that you're constantly going up and down tall curbs. So you take to the streets, where you navigate between parked cars, double parked cars, cars parking or coming out of parking spots, cabs looking for fares, buses, donkey carts, oncoming pedestrians, sometimes three or four abreast, bicycles with riders balancing large racks of flat bread ... and this is until you get to the next intersection, when you have to focus on all this as well as crossing traffic. (How to cross streets in Cairo deserves a post of its own.)
My personal, Garden City favorite is going along the narrow curved streets at night, with barely room for one car and one pedestrian between the ranks of parked cars. (You don't want to think too much about how every car has lost its side-view mirrors.) Headlights are optional in Cairo, at least in practice, and while few cars are particularly quiet here, it behooves you to be alert to cars sneaking up behind you.
How did I get onto this? Oh yes, how it was that when I finally arrived at Kiki's office I had drunk my fill of Cairo for the day. It probably didn't help that I was doing all this on the strength of a modest breakfast alone. Kiki, bless her heart, took pity on me and steered me toward a nearby coffee shop for a late lunch, where I could decompress and steel myself for another sortie into the teeming city.
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