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Monthly Archives: November 2013

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Rubies in the Rubbish – Day Two

12 Tuesday Nov 2013

Posted by noreennanz in Uncategorized

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Cairo, Christianity, Coptic, Copts, Egypt, Pilgrimage, travel

I had already been to Egypt twice before with my husband.  Once we had a wonderful cruise on the Nile, just after the January 25 revolution.  The sites were empty; we had Egypt to ourselves.  You can read about this trip at my old blogsite: http://noreen-masterpieceinprogress.blogspot.de/2011/11/shukran-means-thank-you.html is the first entry of that series.  It was wonderful and inspiring.  We wanted to go back.  We did, and I wrote a series about that trip beginning here:  http://noreen-masterpieceinprogress.blogspot.de/2012/02/if-youve-drunk-from-waters-of-nileday.html

That was a wonderful trip, too, but not enough for me.  I felt a strong need to come back to Egypt and do some sort of volunteer work, especially as an expression of my Christian faith.  I wanted to do something to help Egyptians to move on in their revolution, to somehow be of assistance in their journey to freedom.  And God did lead both my husband and me to a gathering of like-minded people who also had Egypt on their minds.  I heard about Sister Maria, who runs the Salam Center, I sent her an email asking if I could come, she answered saying yes, and the rest is history – the story you will read here.

*

The beginning stage in a relationship is perhaps the loveliest.  You smile a lot, and everyone is nice to each other.  Wouldn’t it be nice if relationships were always this way?  Here, I struggle with the words.  Of course, I can’t read them in Arabic, but I’m learning to say “good morning”, “good evening”, “see you later”, “what’s your name” and “my name is …”  I write them down on a notepad in my normal Roman script.  That is enough to keep me busy a whole day.  People smile when I attempt to speak Arabic.  They are indulgent with me.  Will we get past the beginning?

I have met Sr. Maria by now.  She sat with me last evening at the dinner table.  I asked her where in Cairo we are.  “We’re in the north of Cairo,” she said.  “This is one of the seven garbage dumping areas of the city.”

Today Sr. Marina takes me on a tour of the hospital and the other buildings connected to the Coptic Sisters’ Center.

My room is in the hospital building, and today I have already seen that there are also administrative offices on my floor.  Sr. Marina begins with surgery and admissions, on the first floor.  My first impression is of friendly chaos.  Today is a Sunday, officially a holiday, but that doesn’t matter here at the hospital.  Patients, visitors, I don’t know who all, are all sitting on the sandy stairs.  Since many of them are men and some are smoking, I figure they’re on the steps so that the men can smoke.  I see Muslims and Copts.  Everyone smiles at me, a woman in a black gallabia, her head completely covered except for her eyes peering through glasses, touches me on the shoulder and says in English, “Welcome”.  Her eyes are smiling, merry.  And suddenly I am inside the operating theaters.  There are five in this hospital.  There are also a few rooms where patients can stay as in-patients.  Those rooms are spilling over with visitors.  In one room I count nine visitors visiting a child.

SAMSUNG  SAMSUNG

Most of the patients here today seem to be children.  One is having an ENT operation.  I witness my very first caesarian in another room, where I see a woman lying on the operating table, blood flowing all around her.  Somewhere inside her belly, I hear the faint sound of a baby crying.

Upstairs, I look inside the neonatal clinic.  All the infants today but one are there because of jaundice.   A doctor and nurse are busy trying to insert a canule into the tiny foot of another infant, whose lung is underdeveloped.  I say a quick prayer for him.

neonatal station

neonatal ward

I see that all the equipment is sterilized, and that is reassuring.  I am also told that I have to put plastic covers over my shoes when I walk in the operating area.  The doctors are dressed in spiffy scrubs and would fit into any hospital in the west.  In all other respects, though, this hospital is unlike any I have ever seen.  In a corner of the each floor where operations take place there is an altar with burning candles, and plastic flower-framed pictures of a blonde Jesus, the now deceased Coptic pope Shenouda and other figures I don’t recognize.  Inside and surrounding the doors of each room thee is always at least one picture taped to the wall – of Mary, Jesus, Pope Shenouda or other holy figures in the Coptic church.

The hospital is bigger than I initially thought, occupying all five floors of this building.  I wonder if the part I’m living in isn’t designated for mothers who have run away with their children from their husbands.  Sister Maria told me yesterday that Egyptian law allows a husband to claim his wife back, even if he has been beating her and/or the children.  The wife has no legal recourse.  Here, the sisters shelter and hide them from their husbands.

Some of the upper floors are out-patient clinics.  One area is the emergency room.  I meet one of the ER doctors, Dr. Beshoy.  Sr. Marina asks him to help guide me through the complex.  Her English isn’t adequate to the task.  Still, it’s good enough to crack a joke.  “His English very good.  My Arabic very good,” she tells me.  I see an opthamology clinic, an X-ray area, an ENT clinic, an orthopedic clinic, a dental clinic, and much more.   All the equipment is there, but the tables or desks are all covered with printed oil paper.  And some of the equipment is a bit rusty.  Instead of gleaming stainless steel waste baskets, they have to do with those flimsy plastic ones you can buy at a one-euro or dollar store.  To ensure privacy for the patients, they have covered some of the windows with red transparent foil.  And everywhere there are pictures of Jesus, Mary, Pope Shenouda and other saints, taped onto the walls and doors.

Sr. Marina and Dr. Beshoy take me outdoors to other buildings.  I see a pharmacy.  Someone is buying medication on a Sunday.Hospital pharmacy

Hospital pharmacy

Behind the pharmacy is what looks to be a permanent home for children whose parents are unable to care for them, a sort of orphanage.  These children all appear to me to be mentally retarded.  One boy is obviously microcephalic, for example.   They run to the gate to greet us, and then Dr. Beshoy takes us inside.  They hug us, touch us, hold us by the arms.  They can’t get enough of us!  I begin taking photos of them.  They are enchanted, and each wants to see their photo immediately.

intellectually disabled boy

The pharmacy is at the edge of the compound, and a guard is sitting at a table there, letting people in and out.  I ask about this.  “It’s not very safe here,” says Beshoy.   Indeed.  That’s all I’ve been hearing before my trip.  “About a kilometer from here, some people threw Molotov cocktails into a cathedral and also poured oil on people.  About four were killed.”  I vaguely recall hearing something about this.  “But it’s all safe right now,” he assures me.

guard at the Salam Center

guard at the Salam Center

We greet Sr. Monika, who is instructing some workers working on the granite steps of the church building.  I tell her what Beshoy has told me.  “These workers are Muslims,” she says.  “Most Muslims hate what the extremists do.  Most Muslims like it here.”

We see the physiotherapy department, tucked into the corner of another building.  It is hard to tell how old the equipment is, but there are machines galore, crammed into a dusty room.  It reminds me of an English lesson I recently taught, where we listened to a discussion on a CD about buying equipment for a company gym.  “We’d better not buy used equipment,” one of the speakers says, “or we’ll have insurance issues.”

 physiotherapy departmentphysiotherapy department

Then we go to the nursery school.  It’s closed today, but the staff are there anyway, cleaning and organizing the school.  “We have both Christian and Muslim children who come here,” the sister who directs the nursery school tells me.  “They all love it here.”

And then I am taken into the former hospital.  Rather than tear it down, which would happen in Germany or anywhere else in the west, they have opted to make use of the space.  The stairs are partially broken through and plaster is crumbling everywhere, but there are plenty of rooms for an after-school program.  There seem to be no insurance issues here.  There are desks for each pupil, sometimes even a blackboard.  I wonder if I will be teaching English in these rooms during the next two weeks.  I have offered to do this.

stairs to the school

stairs to the school

classroom in the old hospital

classroom in the old hospital

I comment on the condition of the building.  “Why tear it down?” says Dr. Beshoy.  “You can see, it works.”

When I return to my room, I find it to be one of the cleanest, most luxurious rooms of the entire center.  But even here, in the bathroom, I have just encountered the biggest cockroach I have ever seen, climbing out of the floor drain.  Ah, well.  I stamp on it and throw the carcass down the toilet.

I hear deafeningly loud music outside, rhythmic, lively, surely not the kind of music Salafists would listen to.  I look out the window.  The gates to the compound are closed.

I spend hours this day in my room, catching up on sleep lost the night before, reading.  What are the sounds I hear?  The call to prayer.  Many times a day.  Children playing, fire crackers popping.  Birds chirping.  Roosters crowing incessantly, day and night.  Car horns beeping, but god only knows where their drivers drive.  I have seen the roads outside.  They are nothing but dirt paths meandering around and through a maze at the feet of a gigantic range of eight-story mountains.  The only things I can see are birds flying, and an occasional child or adult walking to or from the hospital.  I feel pretty safe between these locked gates, but I am also locked in.

Rubies in the Rubbish – Day One

11 Monday Nov 2013

Posted by noreennanz in Uncategorized

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Tags

Cairo, Christianity, Copts, Egypt, pilgrimages, travel

SAMSUNG

Coming back to Cairo always begins in the airport and then continues on the plane.  Today I meet Ellen, an outgoing, attractive granny who looks very un-grandmotherly.  She, like me, is an English teacher.  She tells me she has a mud house in Siwa, a waadi (oasis) in the middle of the Libyan desert.  This oasis, she tells me, is about 30 kilometers long and 8 kilometers wide.  It takes about four hours to get there from Cairo.  Or was it Alexandria?  “It’s easy”, she says.  “There’s a bus that leaves twice a day.  And ask for Ellen.  They’ll find me.”   I think she’s said she paid around €8,000 to the local sheikh for it.  She wanted a house in a warm climate, but couldn’t afford one in Tuscany, so she bought one for a whole lot less in the Egyptian desert.  She’s been living here for about five winters, but her children haven’t yet made it down here for a visit.  “Siwa is perfectly safe,” she tells me.  “It’s inhabited by Berbers, who have nothing to do with these Islamist issues, and they hire guest workers from South Sudan, very peaceful people.”

Each time I’ve been in Egypt (this is the third time), people have expressed admiration for my courage in coming here.  “Are you sure this is wise?”  they ask.  “Don’t you think it’s a bit too dangerous now?”  The other times I was with my husband.  This time I’ll be completely on my own.

They have a point.  This time, Morsi, the first democratically elected prime minister, has been deposed by a military coup, and the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafists are active in demonstrations, trying to get the power back.  Neither the Brotherhood nor the military is known for their gentle ways.  Recently over 1,000 people were killed in demonstrations.  I don’t intend to get caught in any demonstrations, I say.  But then my husband tells me about areas in Egypt where Islamists are painting, “A Christian lives/works here” on Christian homes and shops owned by Christians.  That sounds a bit off-putting.  Copts being targeted.  I’m going to be living with Coptic nuns for two weeks.

I find two Dutch-speaking women seated next to me on the plane, and we discuss where we’re from and why we’re going to Egypt.  At first they tell me they’re going to travel around Egypt.  Then I learn they are part of a film crew.  They lead me to believe they’re going to film nice places for people to go on vacation.  Then, when I tell them what I’m doing, they tell me they are doing a series on human rights on Dutch television.  They’re on their way to Al Minya, between Cairo and Aswan, where there has been persecution of Christians, particularly Copts.  The subject for this episode is “freedom of religion”.  I’ll be sure to watch it.  They tell me I can find it on the internet under http://www.uitzendinggemistnl, if I click “jij bent sterk”.  Much of the episode will be in English.

I look around the plane.  It’s full of people, and about half of them are Westerners, people with blonde little children, even Americans behind me.  I learn they work at the American University of Cairo.  Either I’m in very good company, or we’re all stark, raving mad.

At the airport, things look the same as ever.  I love this airport, so clean, modern and airy.  It feels almost familiar to be back here.  I know just what to do.  I walk right up to the exchange bank, exchange some Euros for Egyptian pounds and buy a visa sticker for my passport.  I see that the film crew has been sent back to buy a visa.  Even these experts don’t know the ins and outs like I do!

But then, when I leave the customs area, where people come to pick up their friends and loved ones, I find no one to greet me.  No matter, Ellen has become my good friend by now, and she’s friends with half the plane.  She’s just met a nice Egyptian family, Copts, she says, and she introduces them to me.  The wife, when she sees I am not being picked up, offers to phone someone for me.  She reaches Sister Maria, and I know now that for some reason, the person picking me up and I are not in the same place.  Sister Maria tells this woman she will phone my contact person.  A few minutes later, a woman dressed like a nun in a gray habit, holding a placard with my name, rushes over to me.  The Egyptian woman has described my clothing.  I meet Sister Ologaya, who ushers me to a car and a man she introduces as Rohmy.  Either the car, or possibly both the car and the man are Copts, judging from all the pictures of Jesus and all the crosses on the dashboard.

At first, we speed along the freeway.  No traffic jams today.  But then, the road becomes rougher and rougher, reminding me of vacation trips I took as a child with my family into the backwoods.  First a nice freeway, then paved, two-lane state roads, then narrow streets, and finally gravel.  I invariably got sick with asthma attacks after about a half hour of riding on these roads.  Today, the windows in the car are wide open.  We wind through the middle of an outdoor market, around garbage piles, children running, a dog running through a garbage mound, men sawing pieces of wood, women in headdress seated beside roadside stands selling trinkets or fruit, waiting for customers.  We pass a butcher shop with lamb carcasses hanging from the doorway.  I learn that the feast of Abraham being spared from having to offer up his son is still going on.  I thought it was only one day.  No, it runs an entire week.  It’s like having Christmas for an entire week, I hear.  As I sit here in my room typing this, I can hear the calls to prayer, incessant today, intermingling with firecrackers children set off.

I wonder how my lungs will hold out.  At times I smell dust, at others, the sweet scent of fruit, at others, the pungent smell of meat cooking.  My lungs will be fine, I tell myself.  In fact, in the past two months, I have weaned myself off of all asthma medication.  This is an experiment in faith.  I am so sick of being hoarse because of my cortisone inhaler, I want to be free of medication, at least the cortisone, and so I’ve weaned myself off it.  Not many ill effects.  I feel fine.  So I’ve also gone cold turkey with the other, less drastic medication, and felt no effects at all.  My lungs seem to be just fine!  Even after this dust explosion.

I see a building with a sign.  “Coptic Sisters…”  Are we there? I ask.  Yes, we just have to turn the corner, into a sort of gated area.  I’m not sure if I’m in a gated compound, but I know I’m in an area with several buildings, all belonging to the Sisters.  There is even a hospital here.  It is pleasant, as long as you’re not looking for a five-star hotel.  There is plenty of sand and dust here within the compound as well, but there are also palm trees, grass, a walkway with a pergola with flowers and grass on either side, a large vegetable garden, a hospital, and a church with a dining room in it.  First, I meet Sister Marina, who shows me to my room.  Room?  I have the entire floor to myself!  In my room I have a bed, a refrigerator where I can store the apples I brought with me so that I can eat something fresh most days, a table where I can write, and a wardrobe.  I even have a couch, where I can entertain visitors if I get any.  There is a ceiling fan, which Sr. Marina turns on.  It is hot in here, and we’re in the middle of October!

 My room

Sr. Marina’s English isn’t very good, so we don’t talk that much, but she walks me down several flights of stairs.  I see a sort of kiosk outside the building and lots of kids running around, women sitting around, one or two with babies, a man here and there.  I have no idea who these people are or what they are doing here.  I don’t know anything.  Sr. Marina leads me past an entry area to a building – the entry seems to be under construction.  “This is the church,” she says.  I see no sign of a church.  It looks more like an apartment building.  She walks me into a room with two long tables covered with printed plastic tablecloths, and points for me to sit down.”  I have already told her through sign language, waving my arms like wings, and pointing to my mouth, that I ate on the plane and that I am full.  But she says, “A little.”  And brings me a plate, a soup bowl, cutlery, a plate with a ring of rice mixed with vermicelli, a bowl of alphabet noodles and another bowl of what looks like a tomato/green bean soup.  “Eat,” she says.  She brings two pieces of chicken and water.  “Maya,” she explains.  I’m learning Arabic by necessity.  The water and all the food is delicious.

And now I’m on my own, in my room, with the sound of the muezzin and children playing downstairs.  I’m on my own until dinner, which will be served at nine.  In my email correspondence, I have suggested some things to Sister Maria that I could do to help, while here in Cairo.  Very nice, she wrote.  But I haven’t even met Sr. Maria yet.  The sisters are all very nice, but I don’t get the sense, at least on this first day, that they really need me for anything at all.  What will I be doing here?

Welcome back to Egypt, the immigration officer said to me.  I feel very welcome, but what will I be doing for the next two weeks?

Mileage Plus Pilgrim

11 Monday Nov 2013

Posted by noreennanz in Uncategorized

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I’m on my way.  Somewhere.  Sometimes I’m in the air, flying somewhere, higher than a kite.  At other times, I’m making the best of what life gives me on the ground.  Either way, I cover a lot of mileage.  Some of the time, I am conscious of what’s happening and where I’m going.  Sometimes I’m lost.  Either way, in this blog I want to record some of what I experience on this journey.

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