Watani International

Jesus’s ankle and wellspring

- D H E D P DI ED COPYRIGHT AND PROTECTED BY APPLICABLE LAW

It is a Biblical fact that the Holy Family—the Child Jesus, His mother Mary, and St Joseph—fled into Egypt to escape from Herod the King who wished to kill the Child. That much is mentioned in the second chapter of the gospel of Matthew, also that when Herod died, the angel of the Lord told St Joseph to take the Child and His mother back to the historical land of Israel, which he promptly did. The gospel says nothing, however, on the period the Holy Family spent in Egypt or their whereabout­s there. Tradition fills that gap, but it is a tradition backed by historical manuscript­s and documents.

D W

According to tradition, the Holy Family entered Egypt from its northeast border with Israel, heading southwest into the elta, the :estern esert at :adi al-1atroun, then eastwards to the site of present day Cairo from where they sailed the 1ile southwards to what is today Assiut some 0km south of Cairo. Some three years later they travelled back to Israel, crossing the same territory but in a slightly different route and resting at various stops. Their journey to and from Egypt is well charted, cited in old manuscript­s and steeped in Egyptian tradition it extends over , 00km, and includes 1 sites, eight caves or grottos, 1 water springs or wells, and 1 trees. Copts, and many Muslims, know these places very well and frequent them in pilgrimage as sources of blessings. These sites dot the Egyptian countrysid­e, towns, and even desert they lie amid present-day rural or simple urban communitie­s that live in traditiona­l lifestyles which go back centuries in time. The locals are friendly, generous, warm hearted people. Thriving monasterie­s or churches still in use today for regular worship stand on these spots. Each site has its own time honoured story of the poor family that took refuge there more than two millennia ago and lived an everyday life no different than any other family: nurturing the Baby and caring for Him, bathing Him and washing his clothes, cooking, baking, and moving around. But there was one difference, given that this was in fact no ordinary family: the Child Jesus worked many miracles wherever His family set foot.

HYH S J W H WH

Since the tradition of the Holy Family’s Egypt journey is hardly known outside Egypt, the Egyptian government spearheade­d the opening of the sites on the Holy Family’s trail to internatio­nal tourism, working closely with the Coptic Church to achieve that end. Even though the idea was introduced in 2000 to mark the second millennium on the Biblical story—it was then promoted by Culture Minister Farouk Hosny, Tourism Minister Mamdouh al-Beltagui, and the 1 2 1ational Egyptian Heritage 5evival Associatio­n 1EH5A —the project was interrupte­d owing to the political turmoil of the so-called Arab Spring in 2011. 2nce Egyptians were able in 201 to overthrow the Islamist regime that came to power on the wings of the Arab Spring, and to establish a secular State, matters settled down and in time the Holy Family project again took off.

According to Khaled al-Anani, Egypt’s current Minister of Tourism and Antiquitie­s, this effort necessitat­ed cooperatio­n and coordinati­on among several government authoritie­s: the ministries of Tourism and Antiquitie­s, and of Local evelopment also local government in the various governorat­es that include Holy Family trail sites.

The task was no simple one. 5oads to destinatio­ns had to be built or paved, tourist bus parking areas provided, infrastruc­ture had to be developed or installed, security provisions made, guide signposts and guest facilities were required, cleaning and restoratio­n efforts were necessary and, perhaps most important, local communitie­s had to be made aware of the expected tourist influx so they could deal with it graciously and also benefit from it.

P H WH

This year 2021 started auspicious­ly with the official opening of the first spot on the Holy Family trail in January. That was in Samannoud on the eastern branch of the 1ile elta some 1 0km northeast Cairo where the Holy Family is believed to have stayed for 1 days, and where the Holy 9irgin is said to have helped an old woman with her baking. The locals warmly welcomed the Holy Family, and gifted the Mother with a large , a granite trough that according to tradition she used to knead dough. That magoor still stands at the church of the Holy 9irgin and the Martyr Abanoub in Samannoud where there also exists a water-well which the Christ Child Himself hallowed.

The developmen­t project at Samannoud cost E 3 . million. Last March saw the opening of two more sites on the Holy Family trail following upgrades by the government and Church. These spots are in Sakha in Kafr al-Sheikh in the 1orth elta, some 1 0km north of Cairo and in Tell Basta in Sharqiya east of the elta, some km northeast Cairo.

, W HPE H D H S WH I W

Sakha is famous as a spot where the Holy Family spent seven days, and where a footprint of the Child Jesus was imprinted on a rock. That rock is today the pri e possession of a church built on the site and named after the Holy 9irgin.

The rock is 0 centimetre­s long and 1 centimetre­s wide it is of a sandy yellow colour, whereas the footprint is brownish.

As to Tell Basta, the site carries the notorious story of the fall of the idols of Egypt upon the coming of the Christ Child. The prophesy in Isaiah 1 :1 says “See, the Lord rides on a swift cloud and is coming to Egypt. The idols of Egypt tremble before Him”. 3resent-day Tell Basta is the site of ancient Bubastis, a name which derives from Bastet, the ancient Egyptian cat goddess. A great temple had once stood there in honour of the goddess. Today, however, not one relic stands the vast grassland site is strewn with remains of huge walls, columns and statues that must have weighed several tons each.

Coptic tradition holds that the Bubastis idols were spontaneou­sly destroyed upon the arrival of the Christ Child. 2bviously, the locals were hostile to the Holy Family which then quickly left the place and rested under a leafy tree outside. There the Child, who needed to drink, struck the ground, and water sprung up it is now a well. The entire area has been turned into an open air museum which was opened last March.

The two sites at Sakha and Tell Basta were opened on 22 March by Tourism and Antiquitie­s Minister Khaled al-Anani, and Local evelopment Minister Mahmoud Shaarawi, together with senior local government and Church officials.

W H W W

At Sakha, the two ministers were received by overnor of Kafr al-Sheikh eneral amal 1our Eddin who accompanie­d them to the Church of the Holy 9irgin to see the rock that boasts Christ’s footprint. At Tell Basta, the ministers were received by Sharqiya overnor Mamdouh horab later on the same day. Also at hand to welcome them at the open museum site was Anba Timotheus, Bishop of aga ig and Minya-4amh.

r Anani said how happy he was that the two-year effort started by the State to prepare the Holy Family trail in Egypt is finally bearing fruit. “Last January,” he said, we opened the site at Samannoud, and today we are opening two more sites.” At Sakha, he said that the Church of the Holy 9irgin was not listed as an antiquity site because a fire had destroyed the old church 1 years ago, and the one standing now was built on the same site in the style of the original one. “The church,” he said, “stands as witness to Egypt’s ancient history the place was capital of northern Egypt during the 1 th ynasty in 1 2 - 1 0BC”.

At Tell Basta, r Anani said that in 201 he had opened the Tell Basta museum and the site of the open museum, and that “now we are adding a spiritual aspect to this site and opening the site of the well sprung by the Holy Family.” The year 2021, the Antiquitie­s Minister said, should see the opening of other sites on the Holy Family trail, including churches in 2ld Cairo Mary’s tree in Mattariya, Cairo :adi al-1atroun in the :estern esert abal al-Teir in Minya and al-Muharraq and runka in Assiut. “It is very important to market these sites worldwide as tourist destinatio­ns,” he stressed.

DIH HI JH

eneral Shaarawi, Minister of Local evelopment, expressed how happy he was to see the fruit of the effort his Ministry did with the Tourism and Antiquitie­s Ministry in order to render the spots and surroundin­gs on the Holy Family trail fit to receive internatio­nal visits. “It is a miraculous trail,” he said, “which covered a large part of Egypt it was honoured and blessed by the Holy Family”.

For their part, the two governors expressed pride at the Holy Family sites in their respective governorat­es, and at the way these sites were developed. Sharqiya overnor Mamdouh horab said that Egypt had a history of providing asylum to the men of od it offered safe refuge to Abraham, Jacob, Joseph, Moses, and to the Holy Family. “In doing so,” he said, “Egypt was blessed with a spiritual seed that has grown and flourished through all times”. The Holy Family trail developmen­t project, Mr horab said, is receiving full official support since it has the strong potential of promoting tourism, and providing local job opportunit­ies.

Kafr al-Sheikh overnor explained the huge amount of work that went into upgrading the area around Sakha church, saying that it involved connecting the main road leading to the church to two other cultural edifices: the Sakha museum and Kafr alSheikh 8niversity campus, “the university being the pride and beacon of the governorat­e,” he said. eneral 1oureddin said that the roads directly leading to the church were turned into pedestrian promenades lined with trees and benches, and fitted with guideposts and active maps. The nearby public garden, he said, was replanted and upgraded so as to provide visitors with a pleasant lush space and shady ga ebos. A parking lot was built to accommodat­e tourist buses. The developmen­t work, he said, cost close to E 3 . million.

S W D W H DS

According to Adel uindy, general manager of the strategy administra­tion of the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquitie­s, and national coordinato­r of the project of the Holy Family trail in Egypt, the project is going on as planned. “Three sites have already been fully developed and opened,” Mr uindy told W , “and eight more are scheduled for opening this year. The Ministry has completed more than 0 per cent of the project’s investment plan, in preparatio­n for inviting the private sector and developmen­t 1 2s to participat­e in it.

“The Ministry of Tourism and Antiquitie­s is discussing the possibilit­y of merging other tourist products in the project of the Holy Family trail,” Mr uindy said. “In Sharqiya, this includes the village of al-4aramous close to Tell Basta the village is the mainstay of papyrus cultivatio­n and manufactur­e worldwide. There are also the annual camel racing events Sharqiya hosts, as well as the hunting lake the region is famous for.

“The Ministry,” Mr uindy said, “is not waiting for C29I -1 worldwide conditions to ameliorate, but has already been contacting tour operators to add the Holy Family trail to their travel itinerarie­s. :ith the psychologi­cal and mental torment caused by the pandemic, spiritual tourism is set to act as a direly needed soothing, therapeuti­c activity.”

Mr uindy was honoured by Sharqiya overnorate for his outstandin­g work on the Holy Family trail project.

J SW PH I YH

Local Coptic Church leaders were elated at the respective opening of the two religious sites. In warm, poetic language Bishop Timotheus said that Egypt, which was blessed by the Lord in Isaiah 1 : “Blessed be Egypt my people” has “since the beginning of history sung a melody of love on every inch of her land ... love which translated into heroic compassion that invited and protected all who sought refuge on her soil and among her people. This love is today manifested by the strong, peaceful bond between her Muslims and Christians.

“Most important” the Bishop said, “is for us to always realise that love is od Himself.”

Today, Bishop Timotheus said, Egypt continues to be a source of spiritual and cultural light that beckons the world to come and bask in the blessings bestowed on her by the Holy Family. He thanked Egypt’s “enlightene­d 3resident Sisi for his outstandin­g work for the welfare of Egyptians, work done with love and patriotism,” and Ministers Anani and Shaarawi for their ardent, meticulous, diligent, knowledgea­ble efforts in upgrading the spots on the Holy Family trail. He also thanked overnor horab for his wise leadership and understand­ing.

Bishop Timotheus said that Egypt was constantly in the Church’s prayers. “:e pray,” he said, “That od preserves her as the pillar of faith she has always been, lit by love and tolerance, and her perpetual renewal as a source of cultural and spiritual radiation.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Egypt