Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cairo clearing out storied houseboats of the Nile

- VIVIAN YEE AND NADA RASHWAN

CAIRO — Rowing up to the cheerful turquoise houseboat on the Nile, a fisherman saluted the white-haired woman swaying on its deck.

“How are you holding up?” he called to the woman, Ekhlas Helmy, 88, as his wife dragged back the oars. “May God bring down the bully!”

That encounter may have been their last on that particular stretch of the Nile, a narrow tract in central Cairo that, since the 1800s, has been lined with wooden houseboats — homes that double as living lore. The government has suddenly ordered Helmy’s houseboat and 31 others demolished, saying they were unsafe and unlicensed.

More than half of the 32 structures, connected to mainland Cairo by lush riverbank gardens, have already been destroyed or towed away for scrap, with at least 14 of them disappeari­ng Tuesday alone. The rest, including Helmy’s, are scheduled to be gone by early this month.

With them will fade the remnants of a glittering, fast-disappeari­ng history. Divas hosted debauched salons on them. Nobel laureate Naguib Mahfouz wrote a novel on one, and famous films were set on others. On the riverbank, life was peaceful, airy and private — nothing like the dusty, frenzied metropolis whose imaginatio­n the floating homes had captured for so long.

“I was born on a houseboat, and I can never be away from the Nile,” said Helmy, her pink toenails as bright as her turquoise houseboat, which she and her husband built about 20 years ago. Born and raised a few houseboats down, she briefly moved into an apartment when she married but soon hurried back to the river.

“I’d die if I had to live in a real apartment,” she said. “How could you imprison me between four walls?”

Although the government has offered little informatio­n about its plans for the riverbank, residents say authoritie­s have increasing­ly pushed in recent years to replace residentia­l boats with floating cafes and restaurant­s. That is in line with government plans to modernize — and monetize — much of Cairo by handing it over to private developers or the military, bulldozing several historic neighborho­ods to build new high-rises, roads and bridges.

But even in a country where the heavy hand of the state often comes down on ordinary citizens without warning, the houseboats have disappeare­d with disquietin­g speed.

For decades, successive Egyptian rulers have tried to move the houseboats, but the owners were able to negotiate with authoritie­s. Over the past five years, the government has raised fees or changed the regulation­s several times, residents said, and finally stopped renewing or issuing houseboat licenses two years ago.

A letter sent to residents last year indicated that the government would issue new licenses only to commercial boats. Still, prior experience made residents hopeful for a reprieve.

Now officials are using the lack of licenses to try to justify the demolition­s, even though, residents say, they refused to renew those licenses.

“They are just sitting there without any safety system,” Ayman Anwar, head of the Central Administra­tion for Nile Protection, said in a television phone-in Monday, warning that the boats could sink, hit something and kill residents. “They do not have licenses from a single government authority.”

He also suggested that one of the residents was affiliated with a political opposition movement, in what residents said was a bid to blunt public sympathy. Anwar did not respond to a call seeking comment.

“It’s kind of been brewing, but I never thought it would actually, actually happen,” said Ahdaf Soueif, a novelist from a prominent family of Egyptian intellectu­als and dissidents who last week received a demand for nearly $50,000 in back licensing fees along with the demolition order.

“I mean, things have been run one way for 40 years,” she said, “and now they’re turning around and saying this is illegal.”

Soueif bought and fixed up her cream-colored houseboat a decade ago, thinking it would be her last home.

“They’re a kind of romantic dream,” she said. “They’re so much a part of the heritage of Cairo, it was odd to be told you could just buy one of them.”

The heritage they represent is not necessaril­y the kind the government wants advertised, which may explain why authoritie­s, in trying to justify the demolition­s, recently hinted that the houseboats were used for “immoral” purposes.

Since the early 1800s, when rich, high-ranking Ottoman officials known as pashas were said to have used their houseboats to rendezvous with their mistresses, the boats have radiated a kind of louche, half-light glamor.

Set apart from Cairo’s hurly-burly, they were private spaces floating in plain, tantalizin­g sight, offering some Cairo residents a refuge where they could drink, drug and mix freely in the heart of a deeply conservati­ve city.

Outsiders got a glimpse in the novels of Mahfouz, who owned a houseboat near his apartment.

In “Adrift on the Nile,” disaffecte­d Cairo residents gather on a houseboat to smoke hashish and discuss the hypocrisy of the times; in the famous “Cairo Trilogy,” the stern family patriarch frequently spends his evenings with friends on a houseboat, enjoying the company of fictional singers Jalila, Zubayda and Zanuba.

According to local lore, government Cabinet meetings used to take place on a houseboat owned by Mounira al-Mahdia, a celebrated 1920s diva. The houseboat of another singer, Badia Masabni, was said to be so popular among Cairo’s elite that a rumor spread at the time that government­s were formed aboard it.

Back then, there were at least 200 houseboats up and down the Nile. But under President Gamal Abdel Nasser, many of the structures were moved to clear the river for water sports, said Wael Wakil, 58, who was born and raised in the houseboat he still lives on.

That left about 40 boats moored where they sit now, next to Kit Kat, a neighborho­od named after a local World War II-era nightclub popular among Allied soldiers.

During the war, British officers commandeer­ed many of the houseboats. Hungarian desert explorer Count Laszlo Almasy, made famous in “The English Patient,” was said to have installed a pair of German spies on one houseboat in the area — with the help, in some tellings, of a belly dancer.

Over the years, more and more houseboats were converted into businesses, and the banks of the Nile, once largely open to the public, became crowded with private clubs and cafes.

Authoritie­s have made clear that they want more of those. The houseboat owners say they have been told that they can pay more than $6,500 to temporaril­y dock elsewhere while they apply for commercial licenses to open cafes or restaurant­s in their former homes. But that, they argue, is hardly a fair or attractive option.

“They’re destroying the past, they’re destroying the present, and they’re destroying the future, too,” said Neama Mohsen, 50, a theater instructor who has lived on one of the houseboats for three decades. “I see this as a crime, and no one can stop it. They’re taking away our lives as if we’re criminals or terrorists.”

Today, some of the houseboats are owned by politician­s and businessme­n, others by bohemians, still others by middle-class Egyptians who know no other life.

Wakil said his family moved to their houseboat in 1961. He remembers growing up fishing off its deck. Whenever he dropped a toy in the Nile, he said, a passing boatman would rescue it.

Now Wakil, a retired finance manager, has packed up and is getting ready to move to an apartment his wife owns in the desert.

“But nothing will come close to compensati­ng for this,” he said.

From Soueif’s favorite place in the house, the dressing room where she gives her grandchild­ren baths, she can see a mango tree in her riverbank garden that has not fruited for four years.

Suddenly, this year, it produced what promises to be a bumper crop.

But this type of mango cannot be picked before mid-July. By then, if nothing changes, she and her houseboat will be gone.

 ?? (The New York Times/Heba Khamis) ?? Houseboats sit along the Nile River in central Cairo on Tuesday. All are slated for removal.
(The New York Times/Heba Khamis) Houseboats sit along the Nile River in central Cairo on Tuesday. All are slated for removal.
 ?? (The New York Times/Heba Khamis) ?? Ahdaf Soueif, a novelist, takes video of a houseboat being removed from its place on the Nile River in central Cairo. Soueif bought and fixed up her cream-colored houseboat a decade ago, thinking it would be her last home. Now the boat faces demolition.
(The New York Times/Heba Khamis) Ahdaf Soueif, a novelist, takes video of a houseboat being removed from its place on the Nile River in central Cairo. Soueif bought and fixed up her cream-colored houseboat a decade ago, thinking it would be her last home. Now the boat faces demolition.
 ?? (The New York Times/Heba Khamis) ?? Ekhlas Helmy, 88, packs up belongings Tuesday aboard the houseboat she built with her husband 20 years ago. “I was born on a houseboat, and I can never be away from the Nile,” she says.
(The New York Times/Heba Khamis) Ekhlas Helmy, 88, packs up belongings Tuesday aboard the houseboat she built with her husband 20 years ago. “I was born on a houseboat, and I can never be away from the Nile,” she says.

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