Cairo - Metropolis of miracles
Egypt

Cairo - Metropolis of miracles


MSNBC (Susan Hack - Conde Nast Traveler)
MSNBC Print Display format

This is a really excellent commentary on modern day Cairo. It introduces you to a world that you will never see as a swift pyramids-and-museum visit to the metropolis. It moves beyond a description of the city itself and takes the reader on a voyage into the impact of politics and religion on the inhabitants of Egypt. Highly informative and very enjoyable.

One day last February, near Cairo International Airport, I saw hundreds of people gathered around a tree beside an army watchtower. The crowd spilled into the road, stopping traffic, and drivers got out of vehicles to ask one another what was happening. "Has there been an accident?" I called out from my car to a man on the curb. "No," he answered. "It's something strange. They say a tree is talking."

I was surprised but not very, for many Egyptians embrace the supernatural. A thirst for miracles first sprang from the Nile; its annual flood enabled civilization to take root in the desert. The river's gift was not entirely reliable, and years of either low or excessive flooding could lead to famine, military weakness, and the collapse of dynasties. The completion of the Aswan High Dam and Lake Nasser reservoir, in 1970, finally guaranteed Egypt year-round water, agriculture, and electricity. Yet life in the thirteen-hundred-year-old capital remains far from secure.

Sprawling east and west from the Nile's green banks, Cairo today is a city on the verge, both megalopolis and village—a patchwork of modern high-rises, nineteenth-century palaces, garbage piles, shopping malls, herds of sheep, thousands of mosques, pharaonic ruins, and mile upon mile of informal brick housing seemingly held together with wire and string. Swelled by immigrants from the countryside, Cairo's population has tripled three times in the past half century and now exceeds 16 million, the largest urban agglomeration in Africa.


See the above page for the full story.

If you read it on the top link, it is arranged over seven pages. The Print Display link will automatically launch a Print dialogue box, but just click the Cancel option and you will be able to read through the entire article on a single page (without photographs or adverts).




- Extending Cairo
Construction Week Online (Sarah Blackman) Egypt is one of the few countries in the Middle East where history is the main attraction. It is known for The Nile, Egyptian Scrolls and the Pyramid of Khufu – one of the seven wonders of the ancient world....

- Cairo's Terrifying Traffic Chaos
BBC News Thanks to Tony Marson for this link. Life in Cairo is a do or die race, in which you trample or are trampled. The traffic here is so bad those of a faint disposition will not long survive the daily commute. The struggle with overcrowded roads...

- Travel: Reflections In The Nile
Reflections in the Nile blog Su Bayfield has been updating her blog recently with items from journals she has kept of her many visits to Egypt, creating an eclectic mix of photographs, insights and anecdotes. Very enjoyable. Here's a sample from...

- Travel: A Visit To The Cultural Treasures In And Around Cairo
VOA News Transcript of a radio show, which is also available to listen to in MP3 and RealAudio formats on the above page. For centuries, the buildings of ancient Egypt have captured the attention of historians, artists, and travelers. Transcript of radio...

- Travel: Tale Of Two Cities
http://abclocal.go.com/wpvi/story?section=local&id=4726568 "Modern Cairo is a city of 18-million people. Like many large cities, residents enjoy the conveniences of technology and availability of culture and nightlife, but struggle with dense gridlock...



Egypt








.