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Quarantined in a Cairo Casino
Townhall.com ^ | April 22, 2020 | Terry Jeffrey

Posted on 04/22/2020 9:36:31 AM PDT by Kaslin

The first strange thing I noticed that morning as I came down the stairs from my apartment was that the "bowab" -- as they call doormen in Cairo -- was not at the door.

He was a conscientious man, and his absence was unprecedented.

The next thing I noticed -- as I walked out that unmanned door -- was how extraordinarily quiet it was in Cairo's usually cacophonous streets.

Then I heard the shouting.

"Hunak al-harb! Hunak al-harb!"

I turned to my right and saw the bowab running down the street straight toward me -- frantically waving his arms and shouting.

"Hunak al-harb!"

Did I understand him correctly? Was he saying: There is a war?

"Hunak al-harb?" I asked, as the bowab gasped for breath.

Before he could answer, two fighter jets screamed over our heads. They seemed to almost skim the rooftops -- and literally rattle the concrete beneath our feet.

"Al Israeleen?" I asked in utter puzzlement, considering that Israel and Egypt had been at peace for several years by then.

"La!" he said. "Al Misrayeen."

"Al Misrayeen" meant "the Egyptians." Was he telling me Egypt was at war with Egypt?

I thanked the bowab for this warning and immediately ran toward the front door of the Cairo Marriott, which was only a few blocks away. I burst into the lobby and noticed a considerable line of bedraggled tourists queuing up at the front desk.

I turned to the concierge.

"What's going on?"

"There is martial law."

"What?"

"You can't go outside."

"Do you have any vacancies?"

"A few."

Just then, a large bus pulled up to the front of the hotel. It started unloading another very weary-looking group of tourists.

I instantly took my place in the line at the front desk and succeeded in booking a room. I was ready for an indefinite stay in an overpriced hotel -- just blocks from my own apartment.

This was Feb. 26, 1986.

I had moved to Egypt in the fall of 1984 to study Arabic at the American University in Cairo.

In the intervening months, I had come to realize there was not one Egypt but two. One was the place that Western tourists saw; the other was where Egyptians actually lived.

The tourist version ran through posh hotels and occasionally detoured to one of the Pharaonic monuments Americans came to this country to see.

The other Egypt ran through dirty, narrow streets and overcrowded neighborhoods and then out into sunburnt fields where overworked fellaheen did backbreaking labor to produce agricultural goods that were sold overseas.

I soon learned -- as I hid out in the Marriott -- that there was a war going on between the small group of Egyptians who could enjoy the tourist version of their country and a group of angry young men from the other version.

In Egypt, you see, all young men are required to serve in the military. But they do not serve in the same military.

Young men who graduate from college -- the ultimate measure of the Egyptian elite -- serve in the officer corps. The least educated serve in the security police.

The security police in those days lived in barracks on the desert fringes of Cairo and were bused to various places in the city each day to serve their shifts, standing -- with rifles on their shoulders -- in front of public buildings.

"Rebellious paramilitary policemen fought pitched battles with troops in the capital today as the Egyptian government struggled to put down a revolt that began overnight in the luxury hotel section near the Great Pyramids," The New York Times would report of the day I checked into the Marriott -- which was not near the pyramids. "A round-the-clock curfew was ordered for Cairo and its suburbs."

"The policemen, thought to be mostly young conscripts, began rioting because of a rumor that their tour of duty would be extended to four years from three," said the Times.

After I secured my hotel room -- and learned the curfew had not yet officially started -- I ran back to my apartment and packed a bag of clothes. I was anticipating a long lockdown.

I turned to the concierge.

"What's going on?"

"There is martial law."

"What?"

"You can't go outside."

"Do you have any vacancies?"

"A few."

Just then, a large bus pulled up to the front of the hotel. It started unloading another very weary-looking group of tourists.

I instantly took my place in the line at the front desk and succeeded in booking a room. I was ready for an indefinite stay in an overpriced hotel -- just blocks from my own apartment.

This was Feb. 26, 1986.

I had moved to Egypt in the fall of 1984 to study Arabic at the American University in Cairo.

In the intervening months, I had come to realize there was not one Egypt but two. One was the place that Western tourists saw; the other was where Egyptians actually lived.

The tourist version ran through posh hotels and occasionally detoured to one of the Pharaonic monuments Americans came to this country to see.

The other Egypt ran through dirty, narrow streets and overcrowded neighborhoods and then out into sunburnt fields where overworked fellaheen did backbreaking labor to produce agricultural goods that were sold overseas.

I soon learned -- as I hid out in the Marriott -- that there was a war going on between the small group of Egyptians who could enjoy the tourist version of their country and a group of angry young men from the other version.

In Egypt, you see, all young men are required to serve in the military. But they do not serve in the same military.

Young men who graduate from college -- the ultimate measure of the Egyptian elite -- serve in the officer corps. The least educated serve in the security police.

The security police in those days lived in barracks on the desert fringes of Cairo and were bused to various places in the city each day to serve their shifts, standing -- with rifles on their shoulders -- in front of public buildings.

"Rebellious paramilitary policemen fought pitched battles with troops in the capital today as the Egyptian government struggled to put down a revolt that began overnight in the luxury hotel section near the Great Pyramids," The New York Times would report of the day I checked into the Marriott -- which was not near the pyramids. "A round-the-clock curfew was ordered for Cairo and its suburbs."

"The policemen, thought to be mostly young conscripts, began rioting because of a rumor that their tour of duty would be extended to four years from three," said the Times.

After I secured my hotel room -- and learned the curfew had not yet officially started -- I ran back to my apartment and packed a bag of clothes. I was anticipating a long lockdown.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: egypt

1 posted on 04/22/2020 9:36:31 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
When my husband and I lived overseas we visited MISR twice. We went on the Nile tour and the land tour.
People were so poor that some lived in the fancy mausoleums near the Nile.
I liked the Egyptians.

You are 100% correct in that there are two Egypts.

However, they keep the peace mostly and that's what's important to their tourist trade.

I also discovered that in other parts of the Middle East the tourists are always safe because more than one soldier had an uncle or in-law who owned a shop in town. Tourists were the source of their family income. SO, tourists were left alone.
Mind you, there was always the stray German group that went "where no man has gone before" and THEY might have gotten in trouble.

2 posted on 04/22/2020 9:44:57 AM PDT by cloudmountain
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To: Kaslin

If you ever want a thrill ride, take a taxi in Cairo at night.

Three striped lanes? That means you can drive five abreast.

Speed limits? Nope, that’s what traffic lights are for.

Headlights? Nope. Only used at intersections, they blink them to say where they are. Otherwise they think using the lights constantly will deplete their battery.

I loved my time in Cairo.


3 posted on 04/22/2020 10:06:57 AM PDT by datura
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To: datura

I can imagine.


4 posted on 04/22/2020 10:16:49 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: datura

Spent 3 years commuting and 3 yrs living in Cairo. Good times.


5 posted on 04/22/2020 10:36:28 AM PDT by rrrod (6)
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To: Kaslin

It’s fun to see the Marriot in the article - that’s where I stayed - what a beautiful place...


6 posted on 04/22/2020 10:40:59 AM PDT by datura
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To: rrrod

Three years? Wow, that’s excellent! Do you miss it there?

I don’t miss the flies, but I sure liked the people. I was stationed in the Sinai, and I truly miss the Bedouins.


7 posted on 04/22/2020 10:43:16 AM PDT by datura
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To: rrrod

Any memories you care to share?


8 posted on 04/22/2020 10:54:07 AM PDT by Rebelbase
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To: Kaslin

Wait a minute. So this guy says he was in front of his apartment when he learned of martial law, and then ran several blocks to a hotel.

And then complains that he has to book a room at the hotel?

Why? Did he need to place a bet at the sports book?


9 posted on 04/22/2020 6:17:12 PM PDT by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion or satire. Or both.)
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