Naqib's Daughter

Naqib's Daughter
Location
North Carolina,
Birthday
November 11
Bio
Born and raised in Egypt, educated at London University, immigrated to the United States in the eighties. Author of two novels, The Cairo House, about growing up in a political family in Nasser's Egypt, and The Naqib's Daughter, about Bonaparte's occupation of Egypt in 1798. A collection of short stories, Love is Like Water, addresses in part Arab Americans post 9/11. Also published nonfiction on Islam, Egypt, women in Muslim societies, and terrorism. Have taught at university and in journalism. An editor of South Writ Large, an online magazine of stories, arts and ideas from the Global and US Souths.

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MARCH 5, 2011 1:10PM

Tahrir Square: Cairo tries to get back to normal, but...

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Who would in their wildest dreams have imagined that an Egyptian Prime Minister would have to tender his resignation as a result of condescending comments he made during a televised debate, in which he essentially apologized for not preventing the bloodshed by offering to send flowers and chocolates to the victims or their families? Faced with the indignant “he just doesn’t get it” reaction of the January 25th generation, the PM resigned. The new man, Essam Sharif, demonstrated that he got it the very next day of his appointment by going down to Tahrir Square and addressing the protesters directly, promising them that the day he would not be able to fulfill their legitimate demands would be the day he would be in Tahrir himself protesting.

Curfew is now midnight to 6 am, so Cairenes are finding that they must change their routine to socialize over brunch and lunch rather than dinners that start at 10 pm and go on till whenever. The army enforces curfew strictly.

On the other hand, the police are still not patrolling the streets, and the army is not or cannot always be responsive to calls for intervention: incidents of abuse are multiplying, magnified by rumor. A school bus was held up by robbers- none of the children were hurt, but parents are now terrified. A bank manager was roughed up and forced to sign his resignation by the employees he had tried to terminate. And so on.

Many of the people who demonstrated or supported their children demonstrating, have much to lose in the new Egypt they helped bring about. Business people are losing money. People who had nothing to do with the greed and corruption of the Mubarak regime, indeed who suffered from it, find themselves likely to be tarred by the same brush. Many are victims of fraudulent claims to redress non-existent past wrongs: one victim is a woman whose country house sits on land she inherited from her grandfather; she found it overrun by the neighboring villagers who are building shacks on the grounds and claim that she took this land from them by force.

The alarmists are beginning to evoke the French revolutions, both 1789 and 1848. But most Egyptians are willing to set their doubts aside, for now, and trust in the bright new day, the brave new world.  

 

 

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Comments

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The transition obviously won't be easy. There will always be opportunists who take things to extremes, but from what you say and from what can be seen on TV, there is still good reason for hope. My thoughts are with all Egyptians right now as they carve out their new nation for themselves.

Thanks for sharing your personal views with us here.