Capturing Cairo, the eternal city
What is a city except for our selective mapping of it? Cities may be described in general terms — loud, busy, crowded — but there is no essence to any city that crosses time and space, person to person.
Not only are cities in constant flux, being made and remade, but cities exist partly in our imagination, and it is the amalgamation of imagination and reality — born out of our unique experiences of the landscape — that creates “the city” in our portraits.
Needless to say, this leads to widely divergent portrayals of the same city in literature, film, and photography.
"Just asCairoconquered the old, it will probably conquer the new.Cairo’s story is far from over"
A city likeCairois exceptionally placed to produce discrete imaginations and realities. That was my main takeaway while reading and surveying the extraordinary photographs in Assouline’s new publication, part of the famed publishing house’s travel series.
Cultural strategist and visual art specialist, and Cairene, brings the Egyptian capital to glorious life through stunning images of boulevards and alleyways, mansions and apartments, cafes and markets, and, of course, the Nile and the Pyramids.
Through her lens, Eldib illustrates that whatCairomeans to its people probably varies a lot more than even what a city like New York means to different New Yorkers.
For starters,Cairois a deeply layered city, with one civilisation building on top of another and creating a mix of architectural styles.Cairois massive from one end to the other and home to a population roughly three times larger than New York. AndCairois sadly deeply unequal between a small affluent or middle class and an impoverished mass. Such disparities create enormously different lives in the same city.
Regarding the layers of history, the city was founded by the Fatimid dynasty in the late 10th century and has witnessed numerous rulers. The Ayyubid dynasty founded by Saladin followed the Fatimids in the late 12th century, then on to the Mamluks (13th-16th century) and subsequently the Ottomans (with a brief interlude by Napolean) and, finally, the British took over in the late 19th century.
For the first time since Ancient Egypt, native Egyptians would rule again after the 1952 Free Officers coup dethroned the Muhammed Ali dynasty (1802-1952) and ushered in a new era of massive public development in the city.
Cairoin Arabic — al-Qāhirah — means The Conqurer, and it is believed that the Fatimids so named their new capital because the planet Mars (the conquered star in Arabic) was rising above the new settlement. The tale might be apocryphal but it demonstrates how romanticism has always been interwoven inCairo’s appeal.
By way of a quick detour, it is worth noting that while Eldib and most observers placeCairo’s founding to the Fatimids, others argue that the original Islamic settlement of Fustat constitutes the origin point.
Romanticism imbues Eldib’s text and photography whereby the author focuses on key landmarks to showcase how space transcends time in the eternal city. Take the legendary Mena House Hotel in Giza.
In the nineteenth century, it served as a royal residency for Khedive Ismail (the grandson of Muhammed Ali). The lodge became a hotel in 1886 and has been the site of numerous historic events from a WWII meeting between Roosevelt, Churchill, and Chiang Kai-shek to a peace conference between Sadat and Begin in 1977 and a concert two years later headlined by Frank Sinatra. Ismail also built the erstwhile palace in Zamalek that now serves as a hotel and casino.
"It’s a cliche butCairodefies wholesale characterisation"
These two landmarks illustrate that inCaironothing stays static and the future often is built on top of or converts the uses of the past. It was Ismail who dreamt of creating a Paris on the Nile and the neighbourhood formerly called Ismailia (now DowntownCairo) is an embodiment of the French style of architecture.
His vision stands in stark contrast to the mass development under Nasser, whose goals were less aesthetically-minded and more concerned with creating public housing for the working class. Focusing on one neighbourhood or landmark inCairois perhaps the best way to understand it, bit by bit, rather than trying to understand the city as one whole place.
Flipping over and over through the photographs, I felt overwhelmed by the attempt to describe what is ineffable. It’s a cliche butCairodefies wholesale characterisation. Eldib ably writes about her version ofCairobut her photographs capture a canvas that reflects a city of overlapping universes. It is hard to fathom that all these people live in the same city —Cairois more than one place.
And what will become ofCairo? The city expanded tremendously in the late 20th and early 21st centuries and only the flat desert stands in the way of more expansion. “[Cairo] surges as the waves of the sea with her throngs of folk and can scarcely contain them,” the 14th-century Arab explorer Ibn Battuta wrote.
The Egyptian government has spent a reported $52 billion on a new administrative capital west of the city; meaning for the first time in more than a thousand years,Cairowill no longer be home to the Egyptian state. An Egyptian state headquartered elsewhere might further neglectCairoand divert resources to its new rebound.
Conversely, a new capital might be a blessing slightly freeingCairofrom the overbearing presence of an authoritarian government and its coercive apparatus.
It is, however, a safe bet thatCairowill recover its supremacy: Fustat is today a neighbourhood ofCairo, and just asCairoconquered the old, it will probably conquer the new.Cairo’s story is far from over.
Cairo Eternal is available at .
Maison Assouline– the luxury publisher’s global flagship store in Piccadilly – has an onsite bar, Swans Bar, which has crafted up a cocktail menu (including non-alcohol drinks) inspired by its famed travel series. Here, visitors can expect a chic library ambience – filled with the publisher’s books – tempered by a romantic dose of vintage nostalgia, provided through carefully curated jazz music, a glimmering back bar and bartenders in classic white blazers.
Khelil Bouarrouj is a Washington, DC-based writer and civil rights advocate. His work can be found in the Washington Blade, Palestine Square, and other publications