istanbul!

istanbul, turkey

turkey is an amazing place! we arrived in istanbul on turkish independence day! our first course of action was a boat ride on the bosphorus. this place is so different from egypt – it is clean, prosperous, and everyone is dressed very stylishly. despite being 99% muslim, it is a hardcore secular state.

our second day in istanbul we went to koc university, an extremely nice (and very expensive) private university in the suburbs of istanbul. we had a lecture from a very well spoken professor there and then had a discussion with students about some current political issues. many universities are taught in english. i was struck by a vibe totally different from egypt – people actually think for themselves instead of repeating what they have been told, and they actually argued with each other instead of always agreeing on everything (especially regarding religion) like they did in cairo.

the turks have a very tolerant, western-friendly strain of islam. one of the leaders of this sufi/almost universalist hybrid between islam and the west is a guy named fethullah gulen. we went to the headquarters of his organization for breakfast and a discussion one day. the movement is extremely popular with turks, and it was on the extreme other end of the spectrum from islam in egypt. it struck me as rather shallow and vague from a theological standpoint, but hey, tolerance is better than extremism any day in this part of the world.

another day we went to the headquarters of the ak party, which is the ruling party in turkey right now. they are a “socially conservative” party as they like to say, but to the secularists they are “islamist” and have a religious secret agenda. one of the biggest issues right now is that the ak party has tried to lift a ban that currently does not allow women to wear headscarves in government buildings or universities. a lot of turks are religious and feel the need to wear them, so they have felt discriminated against since the establishment of secularism in the 1920’s. until 2001 turkey was ruled by an elitist secular class whose policies did not necessarily resonate with the majority of the population who are more rural and more religious than those in the cities.

in 2001 the ak party came to power with a platform of “expanding rights” of religion. thus, the political spectrum here is reversed from that of our conception in the west – the “conservative” religious party is seeking a more “liberal” agenda (eliminating the ban on headscarves, for example). we met with a couple journalists as well, and they presented the secularist position on the headscarf issue. the argument is that if they are allowed then social pressure eventually forces everyone to wear them, and turkey devolves into a fundamentalist state like the rest of the middle east. there is a good chance this would happen, so do you let people have their basic rights if it means that others are going to lose their rights in the future?

another huge issue here is that turkey is trying to get into the european union. it is still years away, but the reforms being implemented are great for the country regardless of whether they get into the club.

we also went to the american consulate in istanbul which was a great experience. it is a huge castle-like ediface on top of a hill, built this way for security reasons. the director of political relations there talked to us. another huge issue here is the debate about whether to call the discrimination that the turks had against armenians here during world war one “genocide.”  barack obama has pledged to pass a resolution to this end and the turks strongly resent this – to the point that there is a very noticeable lack of the “obama-mania” here that seems to be sweeping the rest of the world. interestingly, turkish visas for canadians are three times more expensive than for americans because canada has already passed a “genocide” resolution.

there are these really cool outdoor public exercise machines all over the place in istanbul – they are kind of pointless but we spent lots of time playing on them! there is also a massive covered “grand bazaar” in istanbul which is extremely crowded and is the largest bazaar in the world.

istanbul
istanbul
the grand bazaar, istanbul
istanbul
istanbul
istanbul
istanbul
istanbul
visit to ak party headquarters, istanbul
istanbul
istanbul
koc university, near istanbul
istanbul
istanbul
istanbul
istanbul
istanbul
istanbul
istanbul
istanbul
istanbul
istanbul
istanbul
walls of constantinople, istanbul
istanbul
istanbul
istanbul

topkapi palace, istanbul

topkapi palace, istanbul, turkey

tokapi palace in istanbul is a huge palace complex where the rulers of the ottoman empire lived. it also affords excellent views over the bosphorus.

topkapi palace, istanbul
topkapi palace, istanbul
topkapi palace, istanbul
topkapi palace, istanbul

last few weeks in cairo

view from our flat, agouza, cairo, egypt

we had some more interesting guest speakers during our last few weeks in cairo. we heard from a guy from the world bank, which is funding some great work and is quantifiably financially beneficial for all involved which is unique among international organizations. we also had young guy come show us a documentary he is making about the situation in the gaza strip which was very interesting. the Palestinians there are basically contained with zero economy and it is a time bomb waiting to explode.

we went to the arab league the other day, which is headquartered here in cairo, and met with the chief of staff for the secretary general. he is very important, we had to dress executively and all stand up when he came into the room. the arab league is basically like a miniature united nations just for the arab world, although that analogy could be strongly argued against only many levels – but i digress. it was interesting to hear him talk candidly about his recommendations for u.s. foreign policy – wouldn’t be too hard to satisfy actually. but if there is one thing to know about this region it is that nothing is ever as it seems.

we were reminded of that truth when we went to al azhar university to hear one of the deans there lecture to us about the tolerance of islam. al azhar is known as the most prestigious islamic school in the world and is quite fundamentalist but of course they put a positive spin on everything when we are there. we would ask direct questions and the guy would avoid them every single time. there was one point when the director of our program got really angry with the guy because he was continually flat out lying about how islamic leadership often treats people who convert away from islam. we were all sitting there just hoping this wasn’t the start of world war three. a while ago we also had a whole day where a bunch of coptic christian youth came to our villa and we talked faith and that was really informative. we also had a big discussion with some journalists from a religious news website called islam online. so we have been busy!

our islam and arabic classes are finished! arabic was really tough. islam was quite interesting, although our professor (a muslim) certainly glossed it over for us. but i guess we would likely do the same if we were teaching a class on christianity.

at the arab league, cairo
niema’s, the best shawarma in agouza

around luxor

temple of habu, near luxor, egypt

we saw many sights of ancient egypt in the area around luxor, such as the temple of habu, the colossi of memnon and the valley of the kings. the valley of the kings is where many pharaohs were buried in extravagant underground tombs in one random valley out in the desert so that tomb raiders wouldn’t find them.

temple of habu, near luxor
temple of habu, near luxor
temple of habu, near luxor
temple of habu, near luxor
temple of habu, near luxor
near luxor
valley of the kings, near luxor
valley of the kings, near luxor
valley of the kings, near luxor
temple of hatshepsut, near luxor. here, 63 tourists were gunned down in 1997, seriously damaging egypt’s tourism industry
temple of hatshepsut, near luxor
colossi of memnon, near luxor

luxor

luxor temple, egypt

we went to upper/southern egypt for a long weekend. we stayed in luxor, the main city in the region, which is about twelve hours south of cairo up the nile river. we took the night train, and played cards until about 4 am before getting a few hours of sleep. luxor is a tourist city filled with ancient egyptian temples and the atmosphere is totally different than cairo. everyone tries to rip you off at every opportunity so it gets really tiring arguing with every person you meet about prices before they give it to you. that said it was a wonderful weekend.

karnak temple is just outside the city, and luxor temple is right in the center of the city. we stayed at a very nice hotel in luxor with a swimming pool on the roof so that was amazing! it is starting to get cooler in cairo but it was very hot in luxor.

train from cairo to luxor
karnak temple, luxor
karnak temple, near luxor
karnak temple, near luxor
karnak temple, near luxor
karnak temple, near luxor
luxor
luxor
luxor
still uncovering undiscovered artefacts, luxor
luxor
luxor
luxor temple
luxor temple
luxor temple
luxor temple
luxor temple
luxor temple

the pyramids of giza!

the pyramids of giza, egypt
the pyramids of giza
the pyramids of giza
the pyramids of giza
the pyramids of giza
near the pyramids of giza
the pyramids of giza
the pyramids of giza
the pyramids of giza
the pyramids of giza
the pyramids of giza
the pyramids of giza
the pyramids of giza

al azhar park

al azhar park, cairo, egypt

thomas and i went to al-azhar park, a beautiful park (unexpected in cairo) funded by a liberal, social justice orientated islamic sect from india. it is an ideal place to watch the sun set over old cairo as thousands of separate mosques sound their call to prayer asynchronously.

al azhar park, cairo
al azhar park, cairo
al azhar park, cairo
al azhar park, cairo
al azhar park, cairo

homestay in garbage city

thomas and i with our host anwar, garbage city, cairo, egypt

each of us in the program spent one week living with a family in cairo.  my friend thomas and i were placed with a guy named anwar. he is in his late twenties and is a crazy cool guy. he is a copt and is basically the opposite of most egyptians, in that he loves george bush and continually reminds us how awesome he thinks particular american televangelists are. he states that he doesn’t like even talking to muslims. in fact, on the night when we all got picked up by our families for our homestays everyone was mingling and he requested that we sit in an empty classroom because he doesn’t like being in the same room as muslims. this is a bit more extreme than most copts here, but it is not uncommon for them to segregate themselves from broader society. sad, but perhaps somewhat understandable considering their constant persecution for two thousand years.

anwar lives in garbage city, one of the poorest areas of cairo. we walk up through these narrow, garbage filled alleys to get to his house. i love it. lots of taxis refuse to even taker us to that part of town. it reeks of garbage but you get used to it after five minutes of being there. we got some pizzas for dinner and they looked good enough, but the meat in them literally tasted like garbage. consuming it in its entirety without vomiting may have been the hardest thing i have ever done, but one has to be a good guest on a homestay. there are a bunch of extended family always hanging out in the apartment – sometimes they sleep there and sometimes they don’t. there is a baby in the home named nancy who is really cute. and a grandmother.

we did feel like an imposition, but at least our being there is interesting for all involved, and they signed up to host us. anwar was the only one in the family who spoke any english, but we played card games and backgammon with everyone else. it was interesting to hear my fellow mesper’s stories about the places they are living – some were great and some have horror stories. i enjoyed living the way these people live and having fun with them.

the second half of the homestay week went really well. the sister in our family, saheb, started to like us toward the middle of the week and started cooking us nice big meals (at the beginning of the week they basically just fed us twinkies and gross pizza). on the weekend we just slept in (that’s basically what they do everyday). anwar, our english speaking contact left midweek to become a tour guide, so the weekend was a little more challenging because we couldn’t communicate with anyone in the house. but it went well, and we had some really fun times despite no verbal comprehension for anyone involved.

homestay shinanigans, garbage city, cairo

homestay poster, garbage city, cairo
homestay clock (nonfunctional), garbage city, cairo
garbage city, cairo
garbage city, cairo
garbage city, cairo
garbage city, cairo

cairo’s city of the dead

city of the dead cemetery, near garbage city, cairo

the city of the dead is a cemetery inhabited by squatters, near garbage city in cairo. we walked through everyday to get from the khan el khalili market to our homestay in garbage city.

city of the dead cemetery, near garbage city, cairo
city of the dead cemetery, near garbage city, cairo
city of the dead cemetery, near garbage city, cairo