DAVE FULLER, QMI Agency
http://www.torontosun.com/2011/10/26/ancient-egypt-well-worth-seeing
http://www.torontosun.com/2011/10/26/ancient-egypt-well-worth-seeing
CAIRO - So, there I was, standing on the other side of the metal
detector at Cairo airport, waiting for my backpack to be released from
the X-ray machine when it vanished.
The more I searched, the more I was convinced it had been stolen. I
even had a suspect -- the porter loading luggage onto the conveyor belt
behind me.
"Impossible!" our GM Tours chaperone, Mohammed, bellowed at me. Then I
recalled the words of Fadi Thomas, general manager of our tour boat
(the Ra 2) during a four-day sail down the Nile River.
"In Upper Egypt, so many people make their living from tourism, they
won't let anything happen to a tourist. It would be like attacking
themselves," Thomas said. "Most Egyptian people are kind and generous
and consider you to be their guest in their country. They feel it's
their duty to make you happy."
Okay, but this is Cairo -- 20 million-plus people squished between
the Nile and the Egyptian desert -- even if everyone I met here,
including those seven folks I'd asked directions of during a solo walk
from the Cairo Marriott to the Ramses shopping centre, Tahrir Square and
Egyptian Museum were helpful.
While I fretted, Mohammed climbed inside the X-ray machine, where he
discovered my missing backpack, wedged between the conveyor belt and the
side wall. I should have known.
Moral of the story? If you're hesitant taking that once in a lifetime
trip to Egypt, don't be. Eight months after the overthrow of former
president Hosni Mubarek, life in Egypt -- jewel of the Nile and
spell-binding North Africa -- is pretty much back to normal. There have
been two deadly confrontations between protesters and the army since,
but both incidents were localized and none involved visitors to the
country.
Egypt is quite likely the safest country in the Middle East and
Africa. Tourism also is the country's second-most important industry
(next to the Suez canal).
Five million visitors arrived in Egypt in 2010, many lured by the
irresistible Red Sea resort towns of Sharm El Sheikh and Hugearta.
Others, like myself, came to see the great pyramids of Giza, the temples
of Luxor, Valley of the Kings, the Nile, eclectic Aswan, the Sahara
desert and so much else this diverse country has to offer. While tourism
suffered during the first six months following the revolution, numbers
are edging up again slowly.
"Egypt is strong," our river guide, Mahmoud Awad, explained. "and
tourism will recover, just like it did after the first Gulf War and
9/11. The advantage of coming now is there aren't as many lineups."
Egypt is the cradle of civilization -- so ancient that centuries
before the Greeks invented Zeus, Apollo and Aphrodite, the Pharaohs
already had erected gold temples to their gods: Amun (creator), Ra (Sun
god) and Isis (goddess of motherhood, magic and fertility).
And, while there are Roman catacombs in Alexandria and Greek ruins in
Cairo, the ancient world of the Pharaohs exists only in Egypt.
After eight, adventure-packed days in Egypt this September, here's what impressed me the most:
1. EGYPTIAN MUSEUM: If museum-strolling were a
sport, a visit to the Egyptian Museum in Cairo would equate with scoring
a seat to the World Cup soccer final. Nearly 200,000 visitors flocked
to the Art Gallery of Ontario a few years ago to view 100 artifacts
belonging to the Egyptian Pharaohs. Imagine, then, the drawing power of
this overwhelming collection. Built in 1902, this two-storey, 42-room
museum contains 120,000 ancient artifacts, including the mummies of 27
pharaohs, their gold thrones, coffins, jewels, art -- you name it --
plus the massive King Tut collection. While plans are afoot to relocate
the museum near the great pyramids of Giza, the move is not imminent.
2. NILE RIVER CRUISE: About 85 million people live
in Egypt, most of them in cities and towns hugging the Nile. It has been
this way forever, so a river cruise is easily the best and most
relaxing way to see historical Egypt. Just don't expect five-star
amenities. We sailed on the Ra 2, a typical flatboat with 75 cabins, a
small deck-top swimming pool, one restaurant (buffet) and three bars,
with not much in the way of entertainment. But when you're sailing down
the river of the Pharaohs, Cleopatra, Alexander the Great and Napoleon
-- nursing an Egyptian Stella (beer) -- what's not to like?
3. VALLEY OF THE KINGS -- TOMBS: There were at least
63 Pharaohs buried here, in private, multi-roomed tombs, complete with
elaborate story-telling murals and hieroglyphic script dating back to
1,700 BC. While grave-robbers emptied the first 62, Tut's tomb -- buried
underneath King Ramses VI -- wasn't discovered until 1922 and remained
untouched and over-flowing with priceless gold, jewelry and other
antiquities, most of it now on display at the Egyptian Museum.
4. ASWAN, HIGH DAM, PHILAE TEMPLE: Located near the
Tropic of Cancer, this city of 300,000 is home to the Aswan Dam, an
incredible feat of engineering that re-routed the Nile, but flooded
Nubian villages and several historic temples, including Philae. Philae
was reconstructed block by block while new homes were purchased for the
Nubians, many of whom make their living designing exotic, camel-bone
jewelry.
5. KARNAK AND LUXOR TEMPLES: Karnak Temple is the
largest in the world, as each successive Pharaoh felt obliged to add his
own rooms. Karnak was featured in the James Bond classic, The Spy Who
Loved Me, and is just down the road from the equally bewitching Temple
of Luxor.
6. COPTIC CAIRO DISTRICT: Here, on the banks of the
Nile, is where the baby Moses was discovered by the Pharaoh's daughter;
and where Joseph, Mary and Jesus hid out for three-and-a-half years.
Cairo, itself, is an acquired taste, but enchanting when lit up at
night.
7. THE GREAT PYRAMIDS/SPHINX OF GIZA: Amazing! The pyramids and sphinx are Egypt's most recognizable symbols and can't be missed.