Berliner Boersenzeitung - In Old Cairo, residents reconnect with their heritage

EUR -
AED 4.198746
AFN 72.027437
ALL 95.86206
AMD 431.78058
ANG 2.046593
AOA 1048.401651
ARS 1598.59809
AUD 1.629093
AWG 2.057931
AZN 1.946836
BAM 1.95299
BBD 2.306581
BDT 140.527788
BGN 1.954244
BHD 0.431609
BIF 3399.807863
BMD 1.143295
BND 1.465491
BOB 7.913613
BRL 6.101876
BSD 1.145252
BTN 105.710351
BWP 15.605613
BYN 3.388624
BYR 22408.579285
BZD 2.303186
CAD 1.56796
CDF 2580.416172
CHF 0.903826
CLF 0.026658
CLP 1052.620475
CNY 7.88485
CNH 7.890221
COP 4222.828168
CRC 538.827014
CUC 1.143295
CUP 30.297314
CVE 110.107044
CZK 24.460822
DJF 203.936547
DKK 7.471981
DOP 70.359065
DZD 151.640297
EGP 60.04596
ERN 17.149423
ETB 178.761853
FJD 2.540687
FKP 0.859503
GBP 0.862776
GEL 3.121081
GGP 0.859503
GHS 12.437104
GIP 0.859503
GMD 84.033056
GNF 10040.342872
GTQ 8.782401
GYD 239.595236
HKD 8.950958
HNL 30.314512
HRK 7.532942
HTG 150.159332
HUF 392.479443
IDR 19439.442529
ILS 3.586748
IMP 0.859503
INR 105.697035
IQD 1500.247787
IRR 1511121.400458
ISK 144.203925
JEP 0.859503
JMD 179.692219
JOD 0.810553
JPY 182.180041
KES 147.824753
KGS 99.98079
KHR 4592.371745
KMF 492.759942
KPW 1028.965312
KRW 1711.272575
KWD 0.351266
KYD 0.954331
KZT 560.655699
LAK 24539.688735
LBP 102552.832105
LKR 356.415579
LRD 209.569358
LSL 19.234523
LTL 3.375853
LVL 0.691568
LYD 7.307485
MAD 10.786179
MDL 19.978252
MGA 4755.178355
MKD 61.63634
MMK 2400.245131
MNT 4080.393301
MOP 9.232056
MRU 45.820067
MUR 53.436996
MVR 17.664024
MWK 1985.751297
MXN 20.413988
MYR 4.497148
MZN 73.068037
NAD 19.234607
NGN 1586.767474
NIO 42.139548
NOK 11.144552
NPR 169.136362
NZD 1.968262
OMR 0.439598
PAB 1.145152
PEN 3.949317
PGK 5.007794
PHP 68.540962
PKR 319.76907
PLN 4.270784
PYG 7388.368543
QAR 4.163028
RON 5.095547
RSD 117.422553
RUB 92.41403
RWF 1671.20254
SAR 4.29147
SBD 9.205487
SCR 17.02737
SDG 687.120342
SEK 10.786004
SGD 1.465069
SHP 0.857767
SLE 28.067799
SLL 23974.333974
SOS 653.362704
SRD 42.92844
STD 23663.895329
STN 24.464797
SVC 10.020625
SYP 126.362642
SZL 19.228331
THB 37.133099
TJS 10.976853
TMT 4.001532
TND 3.386841
TOP 2.752779
TRY 50.513259
TTD 7.766858
TWD 36.691537
TZS 2978.283153
UAH 50.502451
UGX 4305.804184
USD 1.143295
UYU 46.004004
UZS 13828.041733
VES 506.141923
VND 30040.072485
VUV 135.198356
WST 3.127157
XAF 655.017331
XAG 0.014233
XAU 0.000228
XCD 3.089812
XCG 2.063939
XDR 0.814631
XOF 655.01447
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.732354
ZAR 19.25994
ZMK 10291.026055
ZMW 22.290925
ZWL 368.140479
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.1100

    22.99

    -0.48%

  • BCC

    0.3800

    70

    +0.54%

  • JRI

    -0.2300

    12.59

    -1.83%

  • CMSC

    -0.1500

    22.99

    -0.65%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    25.57

    -0.43%

  • AZN

    -2.6000

    189.9

    -1.37%

  • NGG

    0.0900

    90.9

    +0.1%

  • GSK

    -0.8900

    53.39

    -1.67%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    34.14

    -0.12%

  • RIO

    -2.8700

    87.83

    -3.27%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    14.41

    +0.69%

  • RYCEF

    -1.1300

    16.12

    -7.01%

  • BTI

    0.0400

    59.93

    +0.07%

  • BP

    0.5100

    42.67

    +1.2%

In Old Cairo, residents reconnect with their heritage
In Old Cairo, residents reconnect with their heritage / Photo: Khaled DESOUKI - AFP

In Old Cairo, residents reconnect with their heritage

For most of their lives, children from historic Cairo's Al-Khalifa district only saw the mausoleums, mosques and madrasa schools that pepper their neighbourhood from outside heavy bronze doors.

Text size:

In one of the world's oldest Islamic cities, communities were becoming increasingly separated from the centuries-old buildings they lived alongside -- prompting architect and heritage management expert May al-Ibrashy to launch a programme to "foster a sense of ownership over this heritage".

Believing a sense of belonging is integral to protecting heritage, her "participatory conservation initiative" has included bringing the young through those once-closed doors.

"The first time we opened a heritage monument to children, they were ecstatic," Ibrashy said.

"Every day they had passed in front of this historic site, but had never been allowed inside".

The Athar Lina initiative, whose name means "the monument is ours" in Arabic, has carried out workshops, tours and summer camps in the Egyptian capital since 2012.

After years of slowly earning the neighbourhood's trust with the children's programme -- including play dates in the famous ninth-century mosque of Ibn Tulun, one of the oldest in Africa -- Athar Lina expanded the workshops to include adults.

In one of the first buildings Athar Lina renovated at the community's request -- an unfinished mosque that is now the Al-Khalifa Community Centre -- the sound of children playing echoes off ancient stone, while their mothers learn traditional embroidery skills.

- 'Lock and key' -

On the outskirts of the sprawling megacity of Cairo, ancient tombs, pyramids and temples hug the edge of the desert.

But the iconic domes and minarets of Islamic Cairo -- listed on the UN's World Heritage List for its "absolutely unquestionable historical, archaeological and urban importance" -- are embedded into the labyrinthine alleys of tight-knit working-class neighbourhoods.

However, since the 1980s, the authorities increasingly protected monuments by keeping "them under lock and key", said conservation and cultural heritage expert Omniya Abdel Barr.

"This idea is rooted in 19th-century beliefs that Egyptians don't deserve their heritage, that you have to erect fences or else they'll ruin it", she added.

Experts worried younger generations were growing alienated from their heritage.

"We noticed that the older generations knew a lot more about the monuments and had a much deeper connection to them, because they had all these childhood memories that today's children didn't," Ibrashy said, speaking from the Athar Lina office rooftop, framed by twin 14th-century minarets.

Abdel Barr said that supporting "living heritage" projects -- such as creating childhood memories and organising community events -- helps "make people feel like they belong to these spaces".

That, she argues, "is a better conservation strategy".

- 'Community is the soul' -

One example of the change is the 17th-century building of Beit Yakan, once known locally as "the dump".

The crumbling historic house, used by a butcher as a slaughterhouse, was condemned to be demolished.

But Alaa Habashi, professor of architecture and heritage conservation at Egypt's Menoufia University, bought the building in 2009 and spent a decade turning it into a community space.

Today its elegant restored courtyard, with a gentle breeze wafting through aromatic plants under intricately latticed "mashrabiya" windows, hosts locally led heritage crafts workshops and conservation awareness campaigns.

Such courtyards played "a key social and economic role" as community centres, Habashi said, a role he works hard to revive.

Under a half-Mamluk, half-Ottoman patterned library ceiling, Habashi said there were once around 600 historic houses with similar courtyards -- all built facing northwest to catch the cool wind -- but just 24 are protected as heritage monuments.

"The rest, those of them that are still standing, who knows what state they're in?" he said. "Every day, another one gets torn down."

Habashi warned the loss of such heritage would be irreparable.

"These buildings are only the body, the surrounding community is the soul", he said.

Public space is increasingly rare in crowded Old Cairo, often smothered in dangerous smog from traffic-packed streets, and sizzling summer heat rising amid global warming.

"There are very few places where people can come together, away from cramped apartments and congested streets," said Abdel Barr, who hopes the old houses could help solve modern problems.

"They can bring some peace of mind to the neighbourhood... I would love for these houses to become your local parks, where women can bring their kids and sit in the garden."

(A.Lehmann--BBZ)