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alna
Joined: 04 Feb 2006
Posts: 252
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| Posted: Wed Jun 20, 2007 10:32 pm Post subject: Alexandria embraces Islamic fundamentalism |
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A white marble statue of a nude Aphrodite in a playful pose is on display in the antiquities museum of the Library of Alexandria. One story up, sociology major Dalia Mohammed, a devout Muslim covered head to toe, is studying for a spring term paper.
The ancient sculpture of the Greek goddess of beauty and the Egyptian student represent contrasting Alexandrias.
The statue, discovered at a spot close to the library, harks back to the Mediterranean city’s days as the center of enlightenment in the ancient world – and its 19th and 20th century past as a place where Muslims, Christians and Jews of different ethnic backgrounds lived in harmony.
Mohammed is a child of today’s Alexandria – a city that has divorced itself from its liberal traditions and easygoing ways and instead adopted religious conservatism, with Islamists holding sway.
It is the way most Egypt has gone. But given Alexandria’s fabled past, there may not be another place in this nation of 77 million people – mostly Muslim but with a significant Christian minority – where the change is more pronounced.
The only women in Alexandria who don’t wear the Islamic veil are Christians and a small minority of Muslims.
Women have long stopped wearing swimsuits on the city’s popular beaches. Those who wish to take a swim do so under the cover of pre-dawn darkness.
“Alexandrians have lost their traditional ties to the beach and sea,” lamented Mona Abdel-Salam, a 42-year-old independent journalist, who says she would wear a swimsuit only on exclusive private beaches or at the pools in luxury hotels.
Most of the city’s famous bars, restaurants and night spots are no longer in business, their owners long ago returned to Europe for good. Only a few – mostly elderly people – remain from the once prosperous and large expatriate community of Greeks, Cypriots, Italians, French and Armenians who once made Alexandria Egypt’s most cosmopolitan city.
The outlawed Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt’s largest Islamist group, has more lawmakers elected from Alexandria than from any other city. The city of 5 million people also has a large Salafi movement, a brand of Islam more extreme than the Brotherhood – its followers are recognized by their long beards and shorter than usual robes.
They preach a ban on contacts between Muslims and Christians, and residents blame them for violent clashes with Christians in recent years.
The city’s move toward fundamentalism has driven away the wealthy and secular middle-class Egyptians who once flocked to Alexandria in the summer for its beaches and nightlife.
It is a far cry from the Alexandria depicted in dozens of famous Egyptian movies dating back to the 1940s, in which young men and women found love while vacationing in the city.
Endless popular songs from the era laud the city’s cool sea breeze, the beauty of its women and how easy love flourishes.
Mohammed is more the model for the new Alexandria.
She says she avoids contact with men in her college, doesn’t go to the beach for reasons of modesty and has only Christian acquaintances, not friends, in her mixed neighborhood of Muharram Bey, the scene of Muslim-Christian clashes in late 2005 and early 2006 that killed six people.
“We cannot be close friends with Christians, but we can be civil to each other,” she said.
The older of two daughters born to a father working in the Gulf and a homemaking mother, Mohammed says she began wearing the veil out at the age of 16.
“I felt it was the right time for me,” said the slender young woman, although she wears the bright colors, tight tops and loads of jewelry popular among young women who strive to fuse Islamic modesty with being trendy.
“You cannot say that what I am wearing is strictly Islamic, but it will do for now,” she said with a smile. “I will wear loose clothes when I am older.”
What has influenced a young woman like Mohammed to become so conservative and insular is the story of Egypt, where authoritarian rule, chronic economic woes and a culture of corruption have pushed millions to find refuge in a strict interpretation of their faith.
President Hosni Mubarak has shown zero tolerance for militant Islamic groups, jailing thousands and endorsing the execution of dozens since coming to office 25 years ago.
At the same time, his government has sought to match the appeal of Islamist groups like the Brotherhood, cracking down on public shows of irreverence to religion and dragging its feet on granting women and Christians their full rights.
Combined, the spread of religious fundamentalism, economic hardships and the political exclusion of most Egyptians have built an increasingly intolerant society, resistant to change and suspicious of outsiders.
“You are lonely in Alexandria if you’re not religious,” said Malek Mustapha, a 29-year-old political blogger who makes a living designing Internet sites.
The departure of the city’s large expatriate community in the 1950s and ’60s, a time when revolutionary leader Gamal Abdel-Nasser pursued hard-line nationalist policies, dealt the first blow to the city’s cosmopolitan atmosphere.
Next came waves of migrants from Egypt’s conservative countryside in the 1960s. Later, many left for the oil-rich Gulf region for better incomes.
Tens of thousands returned to Alexandria, bringing back the Islamic conservatism prevailing in much of the Gulf.
“Every one of them brought a satchel full of conservative and antiquated patterns of behavior,” said Hosni Abdel-Malak, a 58-year-old Egyptology instructor.
Islamists boast of their gains in the city.
“There are no Muslim secularists in Alexandria. Only Christians,” said Osama al-Adawy, a microbiology professor at the University of Alexandria and a local Muslim Brotherhood leader.
In Muharram Bey, Mohammed’s mixed neighborhood, the Islamist influence is clear in the hundreds of leaflets plastered on homes, schools and storefronts, with slogans like, “Prayer is the backbone of your faith,” “Thanks be to God for he has shown me the way to the veil,” and “Whoever quits praying or drinks alcohol is a pagan.”
The $230 million Library of Alexandria was an attempt to revive the city’s past with a modern-day version of the destroyed ancient library.
Suzanne Mubarak, the influential wife of the president, has been in charge of the library and, in an address at its 2001 opening, described it as a “window for Egypt to the world and a window for the world to Egypt.”
But many Alexandrians say the ultramodern building has failed to spark a scholarly renaissance.
“Not a single step was taken toward realizing the library’s objectives,” Abdel-Malak said. “So far, it’s a prestige project that has become touristic.”
:arrow: By Hamza Hendawi |
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alna
Joined: 04 Feb 2006
Posts: 252
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| Posted: Wed Jun 20, 2007 10:38 pm Post subject: |
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Does this article reflect the way Alexandria has changed?
Quote: “We cannot be close friends with Christians, but we can be civil to each other,” she said.
Is it really the situation as it is today? Is this opinion shared by most of people? just a few? |
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Hoss
Joined: 20 Sep 2005
Posts: 2539
Location: Cairo, Egypt
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| Posted: Wed Jun 20, 2007 11:12 pm Post subject: |
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| I think that opinion isn't a true image of the Egyptian society...I can't claim to know how it is in Alexandria as I never lived there, but perhaps Seabird would be able to tell us about his observations as he has lived there for long... |
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moll
Joined: 03 Feb 2005
Posts: 7683
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| Posted: Thu Jun 21, 2007 9:20 pm Post subject: |
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| I really think that's pretty sad :cry: |
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