Tourists return to Pharaoh’s kingdom

Published Apr 21, 2015

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‘Welcome to Cairo.” “Happy New Year!” “Where are you from? Germany?” “Happy Valentine’s Day!” “Welcome to Alaska!” “No? Welcome, America!” Egypt was delighted to see me. So overjoyed, in fact, that Egyptians couldn’t contain themselves.

They shouted greetings (some comprehensible, others befuddling) wherever I walked: along pinched lanes in the old Islamic quarter, inside pharaonic temples and tombs, in a Nubian village in Aswan, on the sandy shores of the Red Sea.

The pleasantries came from policemen on horseback, vendors pushing heavy carts of peanuts and men smoking shisha in outdoor cafes, their salutations released in plumes of scented smoke.

“Welcome, welcome, welcome!”

Thank you, it’s been a while. About four years, by most people’s count.

The calendar pages started curling on January 25, 2011, the start of Egypt’s Arab Spring revolution, which resulted in the overthrow of President Hosni Mubarak. The following June, elections ushered in Muslim Brotherhood candidate Mohamed Morsi. About a year later he, too, was gone. Next up: Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. The former head of the armed services will celebrate his first year as president in June.

“We will go for it and see what happens,” said Mohamed, my Cairo guide. “But we are happy with this man. With so many problems around, we need a man like this.”

The years of political tumult upended the country and spooked millions of international travellers. Tourism, which reached record-high levels in 2010 with 14.7 million visitors, tumbled weeks later. Cruise ships eliminated Egyptian ports of call. Tour operators diverted clients to other points on the map. Western governments warned their citizens to avoid travel there.

Since Sisi’s rise, travellers have struggled to form a precise picture of Egypt, especially as trouble bubble up in nearby lands. (Terrorist strikes in a Tunisia museum.) Though countries have downgraded their alerts, and cruise lines and tour groups are slowly returning, uncertainty persists. Many wonder: Is the country safe?

And, if so, will it last?

“Tourism is our religion, our food. We need it, our families need it,” a Cairo papyrus seller said. “The impression you have of Egypt is more important than buying.”

From Washington, I polled several experts on this topic, including an international risk-management analyst, a specialist in Egyptian travel and the country’s minister of tourism. They all told me the country was safe and stable. Calm had been restored. It was time for Americans to return.

So this American did.

The winds of travel regularly blow in the same direction, from north to south, or Lower to Upper Egypt. The majority of tourists follow the Nile’s blue streak from Cairo to Luxor to Aswan, then back up.

I was not going to break from tradition, though I did want to put my own independent stamp on my mid-February trip. Instead of flying or driving to Luxor, I planned to take the overnight train. I also wanted to observe - close your eyes, Mother - one of the “gatherings” that often form after Friday prayers. And - keep ’em shut - I hoped to visit the Sinai Peninsula.

My agent at Audley Travel flicked away my fancies with her guardian-angel wings. Brigitte quashed the train idea, because the tracks cut through some dangerous territory between the two cities. She also informed me that my guides had clear instructions to avoid any demonstrations. However, she did grant me my third request, as long as I stayed in a resort town along the Red Sea coast. (Note: The State Department urges caution for all parts of the country, especially areas in the Sinai beyond Sharm el-Sheikh.)

Overall, I had a long leash with few restrictions. I could freely walk around the cities and towns alone (following street-smart protocol, of course) and dress liberally (but not a la Kardashian). Depending on the company, I could broach topics (religion, politics, gender relations) often considered indelicate at company holiday parties. In return, I felt that many Egyptians were eager to share their opinions and recent experiences.

“The last few years in Egypt have been really hard,” Mohamed said as we waited for the car in the airport parking lot. “We had nothing and now we need everything. But it is getting better as people start seeing hope.”

The halo of optimism is expanding. In addition to steadying the country, Sisi has resumed projects started by Mubarak and developed new ones. Plans include building the Alexandria Underwater Museum, renovating the Grand Egyptian Museum at Giza, extending the Nile cruise trail to Alexandria and constructing more than 2 100 miles of roads. Tourism officials also hinted at reopening Queen Nefertari’s tomb in Luxor, which closed in 2003 to protect its fragile interior.

The pyramid field at Dashur, about 40km south of Cairo, has been around since 2600 BC. Pharaoh Sneferu was a pyramid perfectionist who tinkered with the design and materials of his afterlife crib. The Old Kingdom ruler is credited with creating the innovative triangular shape that inspired the scene-stealing monuments at Giza.

Despite Dashur’s historical significance, the government waited several millennia before inviting the public inside. The area, which also contains a military training camp, opened in 2005, though it lost several years to the revolution.

The Giza antiquities, including the Sphinx, attract droves of tourists. At the 73.76m Red Pyramid, though, I could count the people on three fingers. I passed Thumb, Index and Pinkie on the way up the north face. A man draped in cotton garments guarded the entry way and asked whether I planned to take pictures. I peered into the narrow gloom, felt the squeeze of claustrophobia and declined.

The descent resembled a mine shaft with cleaner air. I crouched down low, taking wobbly baby giraffe steps into the deep stillness. I arrived in a large tomb chamber with a soaring corbelled ceiling. The burial space aligns with the North Star, a fast lane to the heavens. While we mere mortals have to navigate the dizzying stairs, the pharaoh-god took the divine route out.

Throughout my travels, I often discovered myself alone (for example, Tombs of the Nobles, Howard Carter House, Valley of the Queens) or with small knots of people (Valley of the Kings). I came across the most robust crowds at the Mortuary Temple of Queen Hatshepsut, near Luxor. I was surrounded by Egyptian college students, many of whom found an American tourist to be as interesting a relic as the longest-reigning female pharaoh.

My Luxor guide said that during the golden age of tourism (6 000 people per day in 2010), folks often waited up to five hours to enter the three tombs at the Valley of the Kings. My record thumb-twiddling stretch: fewer than five minutes to see the tar-coloured King Tut mummy. The longest queue: the Mummy Exhibit at Cairo’s Egyptian Museum. “It’s busy, busy, busy,” my guide, Abdel, said before noon. “This line will remain with us till 3 or 4 o’clock.”

After the Luxor terrorist attacks in 1997, the country amped up its patrol forces, even establishing a tourist police. I grew accustomed to seeing uniformed men slinging semi-automatic rifles. I noticed them in airports, outside monuments, in the scrubby hills and along rural roadsides.

They were definitely watching. On the drive to Dashur, we stopped at several checkpoints to answer questions about our travel itinerary. At my hotel in Luxor, a guard would scribble on a clipboard every time we drove off. One afternoon, I saw him sharing the information with two men in a car marked “Tourist Police”. The exchange was friendly, as if they were discussing traffic conditions. Inside the Sofitel Winter Palace, all guests who entered the front doors had to step through an X-ray machine. However, the employee overseeing the scanner only smiled when I started walking around it.

The greatest build-up of security amassed in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, where the revolution’s flame burned white-hot. A line of police, some at ease in chairs, assembled along the main plaza, near the Egyptian Museum and several embassies. Behind them, hulking army tanks idled single file. Marksmen perched on top, ready for the unexpected.

Until my visit to Tahrir Square, I had only heard the stories. Now I saw the evidence. The National Democratic Party building, which protesters set on fire, was charred black and had peeled as if sunburned. Inside the museum, which abutted the party’s headquarters, a sign in the King Tut exhibit explained how on January 28, 2011, a wooden sculpture from his tomb was stolen and broken into two fragments. A search uncovered the artefact in a trash can on the western side of the garden. The pharaoh’s face, however, is still missing.

On the way out, I asked Abdel whether we could swing into the gift shop. Sure, except for one problem. He showed me the skeletal retail space with empty shelves and glass cases, the telltale signs of looters. More evidence.

Chef Anha minces garlic but never words. “Nothing,” she said emphatically, “will happen to you in Egypt.”

My first lesson at her House of Cooking school: Trust the matriarch of the kitchen on all matters. (When asked whether the revolution affected her Cairo business, she responded, “They still had to eat.” Can’t argue with that.)

The long-time chef teaches with her daughter, Mona. The pair of professionals take cooking seriously but not themselves. Anha is Lucy to Mona’s Ethel.

They hold classes in their sunlit Nasr City shop plastered with photos of grinning students posing with their homemade dishes. Mona handed me a checked apron, while Anha reviewed the “I Love Egypt” menu: orzo soup, sauteed veggies stuffed in saj flatbread (or shawarma for the meat-eaters), baklava with walnuts and a mango yoghurt drink.

To warm up the senses, Anha placed a platter of spices under my nose and quizzed me. I called out cumin, cinnamon, ginger, smoked paprika and allspice. I blanked on turmeric but still passed.

“Three things make your food taste better,” she said with conviction. “Spices, marinating and sauce.”

While I stirred the tomato base for the soup, Anha, who wore a headscarf and a name tag adorned with a heart, shared Egyptian dining traditions.

“People here love to eat,” she said. “Whenever we visit a friend, we bring something to eat. You don’t show up without something to eat.”

We talked about local dishes, such as pigeon stuffed with rice and giblets sauteed with onions, and comfort foods, including ful (a fava bean mash), falafel and koshari, a mix of rice, lentils and fried onions. She illustrated the cost of food by comparing the prices of chicken (cheapest), veal (most expensive), beef and camel.

I asked her about a dish I had watched a street vendor prepare in the Islamic quarter. He had fried dough in a pan and doused it with powdered sugar. She ordered Mona to look up “zalabia” online. Then she rattled off the recipe without looking.

During my wanderings through markets, I had seen many stalls crammed with large bins of aromatic substances. I asked Anha where she buys her spices; she answered, “New York”. But, she added, if I really wanted Egyptian spices, I should buy them whole. “The ground spices,” she explained, “are dirty with sand and dirt.”

When the first course was ready, we sat down at the table like family, chattering away between mouthfuls of pasta soup. But we didn’t relax for long.

Anha had me running between cutting board, stove top and blender, with brief interludes to refill my cup of mint tea. While my meal sizzled away, she filled my head with more information.

For flavour, never skimp on salt, pepper or turmeric. Buy olives in October, and onions and garlic in March. To prevent weeping while slicing onions, keep the root intact and light a candle. I followed her advice and blinked away the tears. I didn’t want her to see me cry.

For dessert, we made baklava Anha-style. Instead of layering the thin sheets, I folded and rolled the phyllo pastry as if I were making hummingbird nests. I sprinkled chopped walnuts into the tiny well.

“It’s like holding a baby with love and care,” she said as we placed our delicate sweets on baking trays.

After several hours, my guide arrived to collect me. But Anha would not let him leave. She told Mona to prepare him a plate and instructed me to bring some food to the driver, who was waiting for us in the car.

On the flight to Abu Simbel, the woman seated next to me excitedly whispered, “He’s a famous Egyptian movie star.” She pointed at an elegant head with short greying hair.

I whispered back, “Who is he?”

She murmured his name, “Hesham Selim.” But my lost expression didn’t deter her from crossing into first class (basically, parting the ratty brown curtain) and tapping the actor on the shoulder.

She introduced me - handshake across the border - and the three of us spent the short flight chatting about the strained relations between our countries, the recent Islamic State beheadings of 21 Egyptian Christians in Libya and our shared reason for flying to a tiny desert town near the border of Sudan.

Twice a year, the rising sun illuminates the inner sanctuary of Ramses II’s Great Temple. On February 22 and October 22, which signify the king’s birthday and coronation, the morning rays bathe four stone statues in shimmering light. On all other days, the sun stops short of the chamber sheltering the pharaoh and gods Ra-Horakhty, Amun-Ra and Ptah.

The event attracts hundreds of attendees who arrive by police-escorted caravans, aircraft, river boats and cars (sadly, no camels). My local guide, Moustafa, was a veteran strategist. He picked me up at my hotel at 2.30am for the 3am opening of the temple. (He wanted to beat the bus hordes.) The sun would start its eastern crawl at 6.21. He encouraged me to dress warmly and limit my liquid intake.

We shuffled into the temple with a Taiwanese tour group and a gaggle of Egyptian women. Dramatic shadows fell on carved images of a heroic Ramses battling the Nubians. We found an open space on the left aisle. I sat down on a hard ledge and leaned against a sandstone column from the 13th century BC. By my feet, visitors formed a lumpy rug on the cold floor. Some played games on their smartphones; others dozed off. Everyone spoke in hushed voices.

At 6am, the temple started to stir awake. Moustafa motioned for me to stand up and follow him. We walked down the corridor and rounded a corner, stumbling in the dark. I peered around a column to look at the main hall, squinting my eyes against the blast of golden light.

When it was my turn, Moustafa charmed the guards for a few extra seconds. I looked at Ramses’s sun-kissed face and swear he smiled at me. Or maybe I was just delirious. I took a picture that turned out blurry, much like my brief audience with the king.

Sights and sounds of the land of Pharaohs

If you go:

Where to stay:

Le Riad Hotel de Charme

114 Muiz Li Din Allah St, Cairo

www.leriadhotel.com

Boutique hotel in the old Islamic quarter with 17 Egyptian-history-themed suites with private balconies and exotic decor.

Sofitel Winter Palace

Corniche el Nile St, Luxor

www.sofitel.com

Five-star luxury hotel built in 1886 features opulent gardens and pool, stately bar, restaurants and ideal location by the Nile River, Luxor Temple and commercial district.

Sofitel Legend Old Cataract Aswan

Abtal El Tahrir St, Aswan

www.sofitel.com

Stunning property set in a 19th-century Victorian palace, with Nile views, pool, gardens, dining on the veranda, fitness centre and spa.

Where to eat:

Sofra Restaurant & Cafe

90 Mohamed Farid St, Luxor

www.sofra.com.eg

Casual and cozy restaurant serves Best of Egypt dishes, such as stuffed pigeon and the lentils-and-rice dish koushry.

Naguib Mahfouz Cafe

5 al-Badestan Lane, Khan al-Khalili, Cairo

Elevated traditional cuisine served in a serene setting amid the hectic market.

What to do:

The House of Cooking

29 Ezz el Din Taha St, Nasr City

www.thehouseofcooking.com

Cooking classes led by very entertaining and knowledgeable mom-and-daughter chefs. Various cuisines offered.

The Great Temple of Ramses II

Abu Simbel

The next sunrise event is on October 22. Book early - and go early!

Infromation:

www.egypt.travel

The Washington Post

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