Stories from the land of Egypt
We will only understand our country when we walk its roads and deserts and move around its villages and cities, whether in the Nile Valley or further afield at its borders,” said Atef Moatamed, a geographer and writer, commenting on the many festive occasions that take place across Egypt such as the slaughter of sheep for the Eid Al-Adha or the end of Muslim fasting at the end of Ramadan and the Eid Al-Fitr or the celebration of Christmas or Easter.
* A version of this article appears in print in the 26 June, 2025 edition of Al-Ahram Weekly.
A professor of geography at Cairo University, earlier this year Moatamed saw the launch of his book Sawt al-Makan: Sayran ala al-Akdam fi Goghrafia Masr (The Sound of Place: A Walk through the Geography of Egypt), a 270-page volume published by Cairo publisher Al-Shorouk. It is neither an academic text on the geography of Egypt nor a traveller’s chronicle, however. Instead, it is a dedicated attempt to explain the impact of the diversity of the country’s topography on the cultural makeup of its people, including in the Nile Valley, the coastal cities, and at the borders.
The book does not cover the country’s entire 1,010,408 square km, of course. But it is representative of what could be called the “many profiles” of Egypt – profiles and not faces, Moatamed says, because he is convinced that Egypt’s diversity does not undermine its core uniformity. He reminds us that similarities are always there to qualify diversity in one way or another.
It is hard to overlook the imprint of ancient Egypt “as a culture and an identity” on the habits and practices of modern Egyptians, for example. Moreover, it would be hard to argue that the three Abrahamic religions are practised in Egypt in the same way they are elsewhere, he said, despite the fact that they vary “from one part of the country to another.”
“Today, there are many references to the word Kemet, which means the ‘Black Land’ or the fertile land where the ancient Egyptians lived in the Nile Valley,” Moatamed said. The name is not designed to reflect a sense of ethnic superiority as some might think today. “It is a sense of identity that comes from the geographical core of the country,” he stated.
Over the centuries, the geographical scope of the country has changed, mostly by expansion, allowing the introduction of neighbouring cultures “including the Nubians, the Amazigh, the Arab tribes, the African tribes, and others.”
This expansion and the closer association between the Black Land of the Nile Valley and the Red Land of the Desert to the east and west created new cultural rhythms, according to Moatamed. He argued that it is hard to underestimate the impact of incoming influences, especially that of the Arab Conquest, which introducing a new language – Arabic.
The impact of geography was also important in the choices made by invaders who have conquered Egypt over the centuries. “Both the Arabs and the Europeans, whether the Greeks in 300 BCE or the French and the British in the 18th century CE, came to Egypt via the north coast, where the city of Alexandria came to be founded,” he said.
But in the case of Arabs, who came in the seventh century, it was impossible for them to settle in Alexandria or to take it as their capital “because Alexandria is about the sea, and the Arabs who came from the heart of the Arabian Peninsula in the seventh century had no association with the sea. They knew the desert better and preferred it.”
Diversity continued to influence space in Egypt over the centuries, especially with the improvements in connectivity that allowed people from the north to get a taste of the life of people of the south and vice versa.
What goes for social occasions also goes for religious ones, he argued. More and more of the specific practices associated with the holy Muslim month of Ramadan or the Eid Al-Adha are disappearing in favour of more standardised behaviour.
This is a function of modernity whose advances are curtailing the uniqueness of different places and bringing more connectivity. “When I think of peasants in the villages of Sohag [in Upper Egypt], for example, I can see the change,” Moatamed said. “In the past, their lives were all about farming. They were attached to the land, and they would not want to leave. This is no longer the case.”
“With the increasing demand for workers for the mines across the Red Sea desert, these farmers are leaving their land,” Moatamed said. This, he explained, is a function of the changing nature of the local geography due to the greater connectivity between Sohag and the Red Sea. It also leads to another change, namely the decline in the use of agricultural land.
CHANGE: Modernity is not the only bringer of change to Egypt, Moatamed said, since there is also climate change. He referred to the erosion of the North Coast in and around Alexandria, something reported on in his book in detail.
Speaking to Al-Ahram Weekly before the storm that hit the city in late May, Moatamed said that he was as worried for Alexandria as he is for Port Said and the entire north of the Delta.
“I am not sure we are ready to deal with the consequences of climate change on the North Coast, and my fear is that we could lose some of these cities or at least face a dramatic change in their nature and consequently in the story they have contributed to the overall story of Egypt,” he stated.
There are other factors whose impacts are coming, among them economic. Moatamed said that economic pressures are prompting more and more people to abandon their land in favour of more profitable jobs in the country’s cities.
The construction and operation of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) that is feared will influence the flow of Nile water into Sudan and Egypt is another factor to take into account with regard to the possible impact on agricultural land, he said.
“It is painful to see the decline in agricultural land, whatever the reason,” he said, adding that this will impact the villages of the Delta and Upper Egypt and consequently also their cultural practices.
In his book, Moatamed pays tribute to the commitment that the people of Nubia have shown to their traditions even after their displacement from their traditional land with the building of the High Dam.
He writes at length about the “right to place,” the title of the second chapter of the book, where he laments the inegalitarian access to Mediterranean beaches that have become closely associated with the financial ease. He also laments the lack of access to Red Sea beaches, which “again is about economic limitations,” he says.
In the latter area, the issue is not just socio-economic inegalitarianism but also industrialisation and a development plan that gives hardly any consideration to the “right to place, including the right to access the beaches that people are supposed to be entitled to,” he said.
“We have forgotten that the banks of the River Nile in Cairo are often no longer accessible for strolls for those without financial means, unless they work in the restaurants and cafes that are dedicated to those who can afford them,” he added.
In the central chapter of the book, Moatamed reminds readers that the “relationship between people and nature – be it the river, the sea, or the land – is not about leisure and pleasure,” but instead is “the main motive for creativity and productivity.”
“Zoning off the river and the sea with gates that only the rich, and never the poor, can get through does not just lead to short-term socio-economic grievances but also actually undermines the [inspiring] concept of endlessness... in favour of the [constraining] concept of limitation,” he said.
“Zoning off the river and the sea with gates that only the rich, and never the poor, can get through does not just lead to short-term socio-economic grievances but also actually undermines the [inspiring] concept of endlessness... in favour of the [constraining] concept of limitation,” he said.
He said that his book is a testimony about things that are endangered. “I am not sure that we can be accurate when we talk about endangered things, because at the moment it seems that so many things, or almost everything, is somehow at risk,” he added.
“Some 20 years from now, those who are currently in their 30s will not be the ‘elders’ of their local communities. Unlike [those who are in their 50s today], they will not have sufficient knowledge to share the incremental story of Egypt,” he stated.
In the introduction to his book, Moatamed writes that his decision to share his trips across Egypt and the research associated with the impressions he has gathered is about sharing testimony but also about calling attention to the need to think carefully about what must be done to keep the Egypt story intact.
It is time for other people to set out on tours of Egypt, even in the simplest and most basic ways, in order to get a close and first-hand look at a story that might impact them in different ways and to take ownership of it.
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