Notes from a Revolution in Egypt
By Jessica Lee



As the revolution unfolds in Egypt, a guidebook writer normally based in Cairo observes it from an emptied-out beach resort zone before she can return to see the aftermath firsthand.


Egypt protest

Sunset while standing on 6th of October Bridge, I watched disco-lit pleasure boats cruise upon the darkening Nile while tinny Arabic pop music rose up from the river. I strolled down Talaat Harb Street. The smell of freshly fried taamiya and charcoaled meat floated over Orabi Square. I sat down at a table and watched the men on the corner lay out their mats to pray.

"Welcome to Egypt," the waiter said as I sipped iced hibiscus juice and the Muezzin began the call to prayer.

"Welcome to Egypt." a man with a battered suitcase of fake Rolexes said as he approached my table to try to make a sale.

"Welcome to Egypt!" a couple of kids running past me yelled. "Welcome to Egypt. Welcome to Egypt."

As I walked home a thousand shisha pipes scented the air with apple-perfume. Five more passersby welcomed me to Egypt. I rolled my eyes and sighed.

***

I woke up. Dazed, I sat up in my hammock and stared out at the sea. Tiny rippling waves lapped on the shore. I walked over to my friend's hut to watch his TV. We sat silently as the powder-pink puff of the Egyptian Museum came into view. Pitched battles of sticks and stones and camels from the Pyramids charged across the nightmare screen. The reporter was standing on 6th of October Bridge. A friend in Cairo rang us crying. I mooched across the beach, shoulders slouched. One of the staff was raking the sand, erasing the remaining footprints of the last tourists to leave.

Egypt Sinai

Marooned upon a stretch of white sand at my friend's remote beach camp on the Red Sea I watched as a bland square in Cairo's downtown became headline news. Tahrir Square's traffic—all belching and burping out diesel and din—was nowhere to be seen. Our internet disappeared. Phone calls to friends in Cairo wouldn't work. The sun loungers on the beach emptied as the tourists fled. Soon it was just me left. I drank the camp dry of diet coke and finished the last of the muesli.

Egypt beach

"Now you eat like an Egyptian," my friend said and I swapped to lemon juice and fuul.

When the phone rang it was Radio New Zealand requesting an interview.

"What's happening? What have you seen?" the reporter asked.

"I don't think I can help you out," I said. "I'm in the Sinai and there's nothing happening here."

"Nothing at all?"

I looked out at the beach. A fisherman's boat bobbed lazily on the sea.

"Still no sniper-fire or tanks invading the beach yet," I replied.

Egypt tank

Bedouin women, cloaked in their embroidered niqabs, sacks of jewellery and scarves carried upon their heads, gave up their daily patrol along the beach. I tried to ration my cigarettes. We began to run out of fresh vegetables and my friend fretted about finishing the last of the generator's diesel fuel. Banks had shut. ATMs had bled dry. Transport to and from Cairo had been cut off. The mural of Mubarak outside the newspaper building on Ramses Street invaded my dreams.

"You see that man in the aviator shades, the one that looks like a mafia boss? Well that's our president." My friend Muhammad would tell tourists.

Egypt protester

Remember Cairo from an Empty Sinai
I thought of Cairo at midnight when the city streets shrugged off their blanket of heat and the hint of a cool breeze brought everyone outside. Crowds of girls with hijabs pinned and tied in mysteriously intricate ways, fabric floating after them like peacock tails, as they walked arms-linked down the street. Families gathering together on street corners, eating tubs of koshary. I would lie in bed and be rocked to sleep by Cairo's lullaby; somebody yelling and somebody laughing; screeching tyres and smashing glass; the dull thud of a car crash; the sound of children kicking a football against a nearby wall; and then the horns, always the horns.

Moonlight stretched its fingers through the bamboo roof of my hut and threw shadows across the web of the mosquito net. The light from my alarm clock told me it was 2am. I got up, turned on my torch, and padded across the cold sand to the bathroom. Somewhere on the beach a dog was barking. A truck rumbled across the highway, headlights briefly flashing down the road. Beyond it, the craggy silhouettes of the Sinai Mountains rose up like mythical beasts preparing to attack. The sea shimmered as the waves rolled in. I sat on the beach and had a cigarette. In the morning I watched the blackened beaux-arts facades of downtown reduced to a backdrop on the television screen.



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Books from the Author:

Egypt Handbook

Buy Lonely Planet Egypt at your local bookstore, or get it online here:
Amazon US
Amazon Canada
Amazon UK


Lonely Planet Morocco

Buy Lonely Plant Morocco at your local bookstore, or get it online here:
Amazon US
Amazon Canada
Amazon UK







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