Times Colonist

Road work raises alarm for Cairo’s cemeteries

- LEE KEATH

CAIRO — For centuries, sultans and princes, saints and scholars, elites and commoners have been buried in two sprawling cemeteries in Egypt’s capital, creating a unique historic city of the dead. Now in its campaign to reshape Cairo, the government is driving highways through the cemeteries, raising alarm from preservati­onists.

In the Northern Cemetery, bulldozers demolished walls of graves this month, widening a road for a new expressway. The graves are from the early 20th century, including elaborate mausoleums of well-known writers and politician­s. The ornate, 500-year-old domed tomb of a sultan towers in the constructi­on’s path and, though untouched, will likely be surrounded on either side by the multi-lane highway.

In the older Southern Cemetery, several hundred graves have been wiped away and a giant flyover bridge swiftly built. In its shadow sits the mosque-shrine of one of Egypt’s earliest prominent Islamic clerics, Imam Leith, from the 700s.

As bulldozers worked, families rushed to move the bodies of their loved ones. Others faced losing their homes: though known as the City of the Dead, the cemeteries are also vibrant communitie­s, with people living in the walled yards that surround each gravesite.

Cairo’s governorat­e and the Supreme Council of Antiquitie­s underlined that no registered monuments were harmed in the constructi­on.

“It is impossible that we would allow antiquitie­s to be demolished,” the head of the council, Mostafa al-Waziri, said on Egyptian TV. He said the affected graves are from the 1920s and 1940s, belonging to individual­s who will be compensate­d.

But antiquitie­s experts said that’s too narrow a view. Among the wrecked graves are many that, though not on the limited list of registered monuments, have historical or architectu­ral value. More importantl­y, the freeways wreck an urban fabric that has survived largely intact for centuries. The cemeteries are included in a historic zone recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

“It goes against the identity of the location itself. They [the cemeteries] have been an integral part of the history of Cairo since its inception,” said May alIbrashy, a conservati­on architect who chairs the Mugawara Built Environmen­t Collective and has worked extensivel­y in the Southern Cemetery.

The government has carried out a furious campaign of bridge and highway building in Cairo and around the country. Authoritie­s say it is vital to ease traffic choking the city of some 20 million and better link regions, presenting the projects as part of a nationalis­t vision of a new Egypt.

That vision is solidly suburban. The bridges and highways mainly link up suburbs around Cairo, largely made up of upper-class gated communitie­s, as well as a new capital being built farther out in the desert.

Critics say the constructi­on at times has no regard for the neighbourh­oods of Cairo it passes through. In some cases, gardens and greenery have been torn down for bridges. One flyover was built almost the exact width of the street it runs down, and residents can literally step out of their upper-storey windows onto the expressway.

The constructi­on in the cemeteries, antiquitie­s experts say, is a blow to efforts to preserve what is unique about historic Cairo: not just monuments spanning from Roman-era Christiani­ty, through various Muslim dynasties to the early modern era, but also its cohesion through the centuries.

The two cemeteries extend north and south outside Cairo’s Old City, each at least three kilometres long. The Northern Cemetery first began to be used by nobles and rulers in Egypt’s Mamluk sultanate in the 1300s and 1400s. The southern, known as al-Qarafa, is even older, used since the 700s, not long after the Muslim conquest of Egypt.

Until now, both have remained untouched by major road-building. Large Mamluk mortuary complexes create a skyline of domes and minarets over a landscape densely packed with graves and tombs from many eras.

“It’s a city of the dead, but it’s a living heritage. This continuity is very valuable,” said Dina Bakhoum, an art historian specializi­ng in heritage conservati­on and management. “This urban fabric remained in place for a very long time,” as has its use and function — “you still have the hustle and bustle that you read about” in medieval texts.

Throughout history, people have lived in the cemeteries, and to this day people come regularly to sit at their loved ones’ graves. Sultans held sumptuous procession­s through the Northern Cemetery. During outbreaks of plague, Cairo’s population massed there for prayers pleading to God for relief.

In the 14th century, the ruler of the Malian empire Mansa Musa and his entourage lived in the Southern Cemetery during a stopover en route to Mecca, giving away such fabulous amounts of gold that Egypt’s currency plunged. Mamluk texts tell of nobles riding through the cemetery at night and having visions of holy men or poets who speak, then vanish. Medieval guidebooks describe itinerarie­s for pilgrims to tour tombs of beloved Muslim clerics and saints.

It is a testament to the cemeteries’ integrity that — seven or eight centuries later — al-Ibrashy could reconstruc­t those guidebooks’ itinerarie­s in her doctoral research. Graves have been rebuilt or replaced across the eras, but largely adhering to the same pathways, sometimes preserving the original names, sometimes losing them to time.

“The thing about the cemetery is there’s a lot of hidden gems that no one knows about,” alIbrashy said. “You find tombstones from the Ottoman period. You find a shrine that looks modern but is actually a site mentioned in the ancient guidebooks.”

In the Northern Cemetery, the new “Firdos,” or Paradise, Expressway, will cut across its northern edge.

“I’ve lived here for 41 years, I married my husband here,” said a woman in her 60s at the mausoleum of a prime minister from the early 20th century.

The mausoleum was intact, but bulldozers levelled its compound’s wall and the rooms that were her home. Her late husband’s family were the tomb’s guardians, and he was born and raised there. He is buried alongside the site’s owners in the mausoleum’s garden, shaded by mango and olive trees.

“We have a long connection to this place. They don’t respect the living or the dead,” she said, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.

In the Southern Cemetery, known as al-Qarafa, the new flyover plows through a nearly 1-mile swath once dense with graves. Underneath the span, the shrine of Imam Leith, a religious scholar who died around 791 is undamaged but now virtually hidden.

 ?? NARIMAN EL-MOFTY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Constructi­on workers knock down walls of family mausoleums to clear the way for a new highway running through the historic Northern Cemetery in Cairo, Egypt.
NARIMAN EL-MOFTY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Constructi­on workers knock down walls of family mausoleums to clear the way for a new highway running through the historic Northern Cemetery in Cairo, Egypt.

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