Showing posts with label Egypt 2010. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Egypt 2010. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Christmas in Egypt Before the Revolution



The nightmarish Atlantic crossing and plane swapping from Houston to Cairo in coach class, passed in a sort of blur for me. I have no memory at all of my short layover in Frankfurt. I finally arrived in the Cairo airport at some time in the evening of the next day, only to meet with a ridiculous problem that had me screaming at an airport security man.
When you fly into Cairo International, as a foreigner, you have to buy a visa stamp for $15 US and then go through a customs line where an official attaches the visa stamp to your passport. There are several “banks” in this section of the airport that claim to give current exchange rates for currency and pretend to be international. There is one ATM. I hadn’t thought to get US dollars, because I don’t use them. I had $800 Mexican pesos, and I went to one of the banks to buy my visa stamp, only to be told that they don’t take pesos.
I went to the one ATM, to find that it was out of order.
I got a little scared then, and almost cried.
I asked a man at the bank, who told me to ask a policeman. The policeman took my passport as security and pointed me through a side-gate, bypassing the customs lines, and told me to go quickly to another ATM and get cash. I did, but the ATMs in the next section were out of order too, so I knew I would have to go out into the waiting lobby. I had to pass the final customs inspection lines to do this. I stopped the guard at the line and told him in broken Arabic and sign language, that I was going out for money and would be coming right back. He said “ok.” But he didn’t really look at me or listen to me.
Sayed was waiting outside in the lobby for me and he had somehow broken inside the gated area so he was standing alone. I was overjoyed to see him! Really. I was home again!
But, the emotional reunion was ruined by my frantic need to get US dollars and go back into the bureaucratic mess of the airport. I did find a machine that worked, got my dollars, and left Sayed in the lobby with my (uninspected) backpack and carry-on bags. I headed back through the last inspection point, only to be told by a complete jerk of a guard, that I couldn’t go through.
The guard asked for my passport and I said it was inside. He said, “No, everybody has to have a passport.”
I said, “Yes, I have a passport, but it’s inside where the guard is waiting for me to get my visa.”
He said, “Nobody comes in without a visa.”
I said, “Yes, I know. The guard inside has my passport and I am going back in to buy my visa.”
He said, “No, you can’t go through here. Nobody can go through here. Where is your passport?”
This sort of exchange went on for some time, with me repeating in English and Arabic that the police had my passport and I needed to get back to get it. We were getting nowhere, and other guards came over. I was getting louder and louder and starting to shake out of exhaustion and fear and the whole ridiculousness of the situation. At one point I tried to just walk on back, but two men stepped in front of me. They wanted to take me to another place and I flat refused. I will not be taken to any out-of-the-way offices by any Egyptian security men. Ever.
Finally, after we reached a point where we were all yelling at each other, another man came and said we could walk back through a different door. I went with him and was finally able to get back into the back, get the visa stamp, and go back out to the waiting arms of my happy husband. All’s well that ends well.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Giza with Sayed






We went to Giza to the pyramids!!!! It was Sayed's first trip there but it was my 4th so I felt like an expert :) But we did go into the burial chamber of the Khafra pyramid - something I had never dared to do before. We wanted to go into the Khufu pyramid but they ran out of tickets while we were waiting in line.
But the BEST part about this trip to the pyramids was that we had out marriage papers and I got to pay the EGYPTIAN price to get in. It rocked my world. 5EGP instead of 60EGP.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Sayed and Asharaf


This is Sayed with his brother Asharaf. They work together hauling tourists around Aswan in the feluca or the motor boat. Sayed built a house for Ahsaraf over the last couple of years and they are very close. Now Asharaf has to find somebody to marry. Sayed is not going to help him with that :)

More pictures of Sayed






Sayed had never really been to Cairo. Well, he did go once, 15 years ago. He hadn't been back since. But when he came with me he quickly became an expert. He had the metro system memorized after the first ride and now he advises people in his village about how to get to places in Cairo :)
Here we are on one of the bridges over the Nile. At a restaurant on a rooftop at the King Hotel in Dokki, and here is Sayed in our cheap but pretty hotel with a view of the museum behind the square.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Cairo Flat





Sayed found me a flat in Abdeen for the summer. It was a 20 minute walk from the museum and next to Abdeen Palace, in an "Egyptian" neighborhood - no foreigners living around there. So there were no western-style supermarkets and we were close to a nice street market. The rent was 2500LE (about $500) per month and had two bedrooms and one bathroom.

I'm such a slacker





I can't believe I haven't updated this in FOREVER! I spent this past summer in Egypt, working at the Museum and hanging with Sayed. I took him to Alexandria where he walked in the sea for the first time ever in his life and he ate seafood for the first time ever. We couldn't stay in the same hotel room because the marriage papers we got in Aswan at the lawyer's office weren't legal. But it was so cool showing him Alexandria! We went to the library there :)