Saturday, December 15, 2007

Countdown to Salvation



365 days, 5 hours, 14 minutes and 36 seconds to Salvation! This is my Salvation counter that resides on my desktop, reminding me everyday what I need to do to make it happen. I put it up today.

Today is 15th December 2007. I've been in this god forsaken city for 1 year 6 months and 5 days. I've started to move today, from the apartment I've been in since I came to this city all that time ago. Packing up was like opening a Pendora's box of buried memories. Memories of lives changed, of good things taken away, of friends lost, of hopes dead, of ambition failed, of people changed.

For the next 365 days, each day will be a step to salvation, each with a place, each with a small part to play in the bigger scheme of things, each to contribute to the effort towards a single minded purpose, all the way to the final goal, to salvation. What is salvation? Salvation is freedom from this place, from the memories of all that it took away, it is a move towards the better, the happier, till the two and a half years that I would have been here would fade away to a distant bad memory, a nightmare, that you forget once you wake up from it. 553 days gone, another 365 days, 4 hours, 44 minutes and 06 seconds to go.

15th December 2007 - Step 1: I've started to move from the apartment.

I will be out of this city by 15th December 2008. This is my promise to myself.

Sunday, December 02, 2007

of Egypt IV --- The Egyptian Museum and Closing Thoughts

On my way back from the Pyramids, I had gone on Thursday, the last workday of the week, I decided to go for the overkill and visit the Egyptian Museum too. Overcrowded is an understatement, there were literally queues of people both inside and out, shuffling behind each other looking at the displays. Kinda put me off but anyway, it is the world's single biggest collection of Egyptian artifacts afterall. Built 1897-1901, the museum was opened to the public in 1903. It is said to have over 27,000 ancient Egyptian artifacts, and if you spend a minute looking at each of them, you will need 10 months to see the entire thing! If you're visiting the museum for a few hours like me, there are a few things you should make the bee line for:

1. The royal mummy chamber. There are actually two seperate chambers, and there is a additional ticket for visiting these, on top of your museum entry ticket, 100 Egyptian pounds which equals to a little more than a 1000 Pakistani Rupees. The two chambers together have fifty four mummies, the highlight being that of the Ramses III

2. The treasures of King Tut. Tutenkhamen the boy-king of Egypt, died at the age of 19. He was married to queen nefertiti. His tomb in the Valley of the Kings remained safe from marauders throughout the centuries and was discovered untouched in 1920. All the treasuers in the tomb now lie in the Egyptian Museum. You get completely awe struck by their magnificence and the lengths to which the ancient Egyptians went to before burying their king. Important are the mask of Tutenkhamen. It is an 11 kg solid gold mask which was said to have covered the head of King Tut's mummy. Also for display, one of the two guilded coffins, The other still lies in the actual tomb in the Valley of the Kings and contained King Tut's body until only a month or so ago when the mummy was moved to a climate control chamber to prevent further damage through exposure to heat and humidity. There are a gazillion things more, jewelery, statues, thrones, chairs, beds, boats, crockery, clothes and what not. Definitely worth the visit. By the way the jewelery can put today's internationally famous top designers to shame.

Sadly no cameras are allowed inside, so I consoled myself by taking pictures of the exterior.


Host to all touristing humanity in Cairo, the place was crowded


I don't know what the Latin says but if you look closely the year of start of construction, 1897, is on the left, and the year of finish, 1901, is on the right. On the top are the Egyptian flag and the flag of chief archaeological body of Egypt


Yup this is what it looks like, a thriving Lily Pond in the middle of sweltering Cairo afternoon heat. looks amazing


A close up of the lily pond


After spending some three hours at the museum, I went to the office, the P&G office in Cairo is in the Nile City towers at Corniche El Nil, spent another four hours winding work up, then got into a cab and headed for the airport. Cairo traffic is infamous and my contact in Egypt bundled me off to the airport three and a half hours before the flight. As is bound to happen in such situations, the roads were relatively uncrowded and I made it to the airport with plenty of time to spare. Chatted the two hours at the airport away with a South Indian business intelligence professional based in Dubai, who was heading back to Dubai from meetings in Cairo and as usual was surprised to see a Pakistani girl travelling alone and that too on business. Heck, whats the big deal?!. Broke my fast at the airport as well. Got into the plane, had gotten my upgrade to Business Class (yay!) and slept my way back to Karachi, which was of course punctuated by an 8 hour transit at the Dubai airport.

Egypt is a place where you shouldn't go for a few days or a week, but for a month maybe more. Cairo is just barely scratching the surface, there are so so many things to be seen in Egypt: Memphis, Valley of the Kings, Abu Simbal, Aswan dam, Al Fayoum Oasis, Bab Zuweila, Beit ul Suhaymi, Souq al Gamaal, Citadel, Dahshur and I'm sure many many more.

of Egypt III --- Pyramids by Day, Light & Sound Show by Night (continued)

Going to the light and sound show doesn't at all mean you've seen the Pyramids, so naturally I headed there the next day in the morning. The pyramids were constructed by kings of the fourth dynasty, Cheops (the first and the largest pyramid, it is one of the seven wonders of ancient world), Chephren (second pyramid, the only one with some of its decorative limestone remaining at the tip) and Mykerinos, the third and the smallest pyramid. The pyramids are situated at Giza, outside the Giza city. The location actually has 11 pyramids, the remaining eight are much much smaller, grouped around their respective bigger pyramid and belong to the kings' mother or wife or daughter. The pyramids are flanked by temples (The Valley Temple and the Sphinx Temple), where the embalming process of the dead king was done by the priests and the entire area is guarded by the sphinx located in the centre right in front of Chephren's pyramid.


Cheops' Pyramid:Covering an area of 13 acres, the sides are oriented to the four cardinal points of the compass and the length of each side at the base is 755 feet (230.4 m). They rise at an angle of 51 52'14.3" to a height , originally, of 485 feet (147 m) but nowadays 450 feet (138 m). It was constructed using around 2,300,000 limestone blocks, weighing, on average, 2.5 tons each. Although some weigh as much as 16 tons. Until recently, relatively speaking, it was cased in smooth limestone but this was plundered to build Cairo.


Chephren's Pyramid:Built smaller than Cheops' Pyramid as a mark of respect, the height is 447.5 feet, length of each side at the base is 707.5 feet and the slope of the sides is 52 20'. Some limestone still remains at the top.


Mykerinos' Pyramid: The smallest of the three pyramids, it has a height of 204 feet, length of each side at the base is 356.5 feet and the Slope of each side is 51°


I don't think I've seen a white camel before


Left to Right: Cheops, Chephren, Mykerinos, and a few satellite pyramids. Cheops seems smaller as it is farther away


The North African Desert


The Sphinx


The Valley Temple, all the statues and artifacts have been removed to the Cairo Museum


The Valley Temple, another view


Final installment next ....

of Egypt, Part II --- Pyramids by Day, Light & Sound Show by Night

I will start with the light and sound show first as that happened first in chronological order. It takes place at the Giza pyramids. The show happens seven days a week, the first show of the day starts at 7:30 in the evening, and happens in different languages. Make sure you pick the English show or you will find out you are stuck listening to ancient Egyptian history that sounds like gibberish (unless of course you are fluent in French, Spanish, German and so forth). So like I mentioned the show is essentially about ancient pharaoh-nic history, presented via spectacular lasers and lights which are projected on the pyramids and the sphinx and accompanied by powerful narration. Take a good camera with you. My point and shoot cybershot completely failed to capture the magnificence of it. You will hear about all the four eras of pharaohnic kings, with key figures and their achievements highlighted. This is the place to brush up on your nephertiti and tutenkhamen facts. The show is preceded by the march of a band dressed in traditional Egyptian costumes. As always pictures:


Khufu's (also Cheops) pyramid on the right, it is the largest and the first pyramid, part of the seven wonders of the ancient world. On the left is Khafre's (also Chephren) pyramid, his successor's successor)



Pyramid of Khafre (also Chephren), the second pyramid, with his face projected on the sphinx in the front


From right to left, Chephren's Pyramid, Menkaura's Pyramid (also Mykerinos), Chephren's successor, it is the 3rd and the smallest pyramid. Also at the very left one of the smaller pyramids of Menkaura's wife/mother/daughter


The Sphinx, constructed by Chephren, with head of a man, and body of a lion, meant to keep marauder's away from the sacred burial ground



Later, the pyramids by day.

of Egypt, Part I --- First Impressions and Some Sight Seeing

I can't believe how quickly time passes away, yet when you think of the future, of the things to come, of the time till you get something you want, or the things you are waiting for, it feels like it will never pass, like my time to get out of Karachi e.g. ... anyway this post is about Egypt, which I was planning to write RIGHT after I got back, and believe it or not its been two months! Hence that little philosophizing about the nature of time.

To Cairo

One of the best things about my job is the traveling, not only because I want to, literally, see the entire planet, but also because its for free, and yes it gives me much much needed breaks from Karachi. To be away from here for 7-10 days is a blessing, even if part of it is spent in 8 hour transits at the Dubai airport. Helps me survive the next month or two. Anyway when the opportunity came not only to get out of Karachi, but to Egypt of all the places, obviously I couldn't be happier. Getting the visa was a hassle, apparently the fax machines in the Egyptian embassy in Islamabad don't work, so its impossible to get the 'invitation letter' by the company you're visiting in Egypt (which is by the way the requirement for a business visa) faxed to them in the first go. So after making numerous phone calls to both Cairo and Islamabad, my passport (with the visa) arrived at the Karachi airport the night before my flight to Cairo. Got picked up from there by a friend and delivered to my house. This is what it looks like (To think all this effort for a purple stamp, this brings me to a discussion about visas but thats for later)


Note the 'Brocter Wa Jaambal' written at the bottom left, thats Procter & Gamble for you in Arabic!


In Cairo

Cairo is a huge city by any standards. Home to about 70% people in Egypt. I landed at night, breaking my fast while in the plane (oh did I mention this was in Ramadan?). Much too tired to take blurry dark pictures from the moving car, I just chatted on my way to the hotel with this Finn who had come on the same flight from Dubai as me, and incidentally was staying at the same hotel, and had like me also called for the hotel meet & greet service. He was surprised to know that I was from Pakistan (something that has happened before to as people don't associate single women traveling alone on business with Pakistan), and then went into a reverie of how he has lived in Islamabad for 3 years and loves the city.

Anyway I was surprised to see how much more cleaner (and i hear safer) Cairo is as compared to Karachi, and you don't see a SINGLE beggar on the road, (maybe they hide them from people like us) and all the Egyptians I met were friendly (I had people telling me how bad Egyptians are) but that was maybe because I got mistaken for an Arab quite a number of times, which was good till people spoke to me in Arabic and I would be like 'wha?' And then they'd go "Oh I thought you were Arab"

Ramadan in Cairo is a festival. People literally stay up all night and just sit on the roadsides eating and chatting and smoking away. Its weird, seeing so many people on the road, very late in the night. The only time the roads are empty I guess is at Iftar (which they translate into 'breakfast' in English and had me confused for quite a bit). Oh and their word for Sheri is 'Suhoor', took a bit of time to figure that out as well.


The Nile


Sight Seeing

Though my work schedule turned out to be much more hectic than I thought, but going to Cairo and not sight seeing is I guess going to the moon and not getting any moon rock? So here goes, results of some hasty sight seeing:

Khan el Khalili & Jamia Al Azhar: Ancient egyptian bazaar in the heart of old Cairo, right next to the now derelict and abandoned, massive structure of Jamia Al-Azhar. The university is arguably one of the world's oldest, built as a mosque in 969 AD when Cairo was founded. The university now has moved to modern premises outside main Cairo where religious studies are augmented by modern education as well. The old Al-Azhar still serves as a mosque and a location for religious gatherings. Khan el Khalili is now the heaven for souvenir sellers, with a healthy spattering of traditional egyptian cafes, designed to attract the wandering tourist. Here are the pictures:


A shot of one facade of the ancient Jamia Al Azhar, wish I had more time to exlore it inside-out


"Khan el Khalili - The Quintessential Curio Street"


lil stuffed furry animals smoking mock shishas


yup thats a huge shisha


pyramids anyone?


beautifully crafted glass perfume bottles. Perfumary is one of the most ancient Egyptian secrets along with papyrus. Perfumes are sold seperately


lamp shop


A jeweled frog. This one is probably a pendant


Remember I was saying something about people sitting outside on the roads?


More later ...