Saturday, November 12, 2016

EGYPT



Here are a few pictures from us celebrating Halloween in the center. It was one of my favorite Halloweens because everyone got so into it and had to be creative because none of us actually had anything to work with besides what we brought. The professors’ kids came around and trick or treated at each of our rooms and they loved our room that we decorated using our curtains, blankets, and flashlights. It was so fun, and then we had a dance party with everyone in the Oasis afterwards! It definitely is a Halloween I will remember.


EGYPT…

Day 1
Our group was too big to fit on just one plane over to Egypt so we had to split into two groups. Our group filled a whole plane, and the leftovers (which was the group I was in) had to leave about three hours earlier and we flew down to Egypt with about 20 of us, which ended up being really nice traveling with a smaller group.



After we picked up the rest of the group from the airport we went to the Old City of Cairo.  We definitely stuck out, being a huge group of almost 100 white Americans getting off huge tour busses into a big crowd of Egyptians. They were filming something right inside the gate so it was a little chaotic and super crowded. It was nice that we had our security from the Center with us, but also some local security personnel with us too. We walked through the Old City, which was really pretty, but it was just a little on the stressful side because our group was so huge and everyone was very interested in us. We broke into small groups to walk around and see the Bazaar, which was nice and a lot easier to walk around. We had to have groups of at least five with one boy in each group so I never felt unsafe or anything. The craziest part of the Old City was when we left the bus drove straight through the narrow streets of the Bazaar to take us back to our hotel.


Day 2
The city of Cairo was very crowded. 20 million people live there! There were cars and people everywhere you turned. What amazed me was the fact that barely any of the roads had lines or signs or anything! There were tons of tall apartment styled buildings where people lived, but also a ton of buildings that had a couple floors completed on the bottom and towards the top of the building it is just unfinished building. Our tour guide told us that if the apartment isn’t completely build the people living inside don’t have to pay taxes so they like to live there. Another crazy thing he told us, was that this area made up of probably 8ish blocks of old tombs and 650,000 people live inside of there! It’s free to live there because they aren’t real houses, so that was pretty crazy.



The first pyramid we went and visited was the Step Pyramid where a bunch of burial mastabas were build on top of each other. That was fun to see, and we were able to see the other pyramids out on the horizon, which was way cool to see. There are over 100 pyramids in Egypt! Who knew?
       



Then we went to see the Pyramids of Giza. They were huge! I wish we had some more time there because they were so cool! Each stone was huge, it was unreal. It was amazing to think about how those pyramids have been there for thousands of years and are still standing almost virtually the same. I also didn’t realize that when Mary, Joseph, and Jesus had to flee to Egypt the pyramids had already been there for 2,000 years. Another thing was so cool that we did at the pyramids was going inside the small pyramid! There wasn’t really anything inside, but it was kind of a cool experience to walk inside one of the ancient Pyramids of Giza!










We got to the Sphynx right before it closed so that was lucky! And I ended up matching one of my professors and my friend…so I guess that’s what I get for bringing boy clothes to adhere to the frumpy dress code here haha. That night we went to a papyrus factory which was cool to see, I didn’t know that it takes at least two weeks to soak the bits of pounded papyrus before pressing them together and drying them to make paper. That night we took a night bus tour of the city, which was fun to see everything. We drove by lots of different restaurants and places where all the old men were sitting outside watching some soccer game on the TV, it was funny. It was cool seeing all the nice hotels and everything along the river too.


Day 3 
The next day we went to the Cairo Museum, which I LOVED! It was crazy because right outside the museum was the square where the Arab Spring broke out in 2011 when my professor Dr. Judd was here with a group of students, and our tour guide Ahmed was there too. And Ahmed is a stud because during the rioting, him and some tour guide friends of his went to the Cairo Museum to protect the antiquities and ended up getting shot in the leg by a rubber bullet and the Jerusalem Center Doctor did a mini surgery to remove it! I just thought that was seriously so cool that he went there to protect something that he knew was so important to him and society in general. The museum was filled with tons of amazing exhibits, but I think the sections of King Tut and the mummies were my favorite. They had all of the treasures from inside his tomb, and he didn’t even rule for that long! But the amount of treasures, gold, and craftsmanship of everything it was amazing, it almost took up the entire second floor. It was crazy to think that probably most people won’t see some of the things I saw. The mummies were so cool too! I saw the mummies of the Pharaohs we have been learning about in class, and growing up learning about Egypt.
That afternoon we had lunch on the Nile at TGIFriday’s which was kind of weird because it felt like we were back in America inside the restaurant but then looking out the window we were definitely in Egypt. Then we went to the Muhammad Mosques at the top of the citadel in the city, and they were beautiful and had an amazing view of the city!



Happy Birthday Dr. Judd! He turned 50 while we were in Cairo!

That night we took a dinner cruise on the Nile, and it was definitely one of the highlights! We had the whole inside of the boat and we had a nice buffet for dinner, and then while we were eating we had a show by this Egyptian spinning dancing man. It was crazy, he spun the entire time, he had tons of layers of skirts, some lit up, some he spun over his head, and the grand finale was when he pulled his hat out and whipped his hair around haha. It was crazy. But the best part was after his performance, we played DJ and all danced on the dance floor together the whole way back and it was one huge party, it was so fun.



Day 4
The night before we flew from Cairo to Luxor. In the morning we took little boats over to the Karnak Temple. There was an aux cord in the boat so we had another dance party on the Nile again, obviously.



The Karnak Temple was an ancient temple that different Pharaohs added onto. It was so crazy seeing all the different columns with all their hieroglyphs and all of the reliefs on the walls. It was cool, there was one that showed the ancient washing and anointing, and some of the other carvings showed how future Pharaohs would scrape off past Pharaohs off the walls.




That afternoon we got to take a camel safari along the Nile, which was awesome! Abdul was the little boy that helped me and our camel George Clooney. It was interesting talking to him about how important tourism is and how happy he was that we were there and that they don’t get tourists visit as much anymore.



After dinner we took carriages over to the Temple of Luxor and we did the Luxor by Night, which was cool to see all of the columns and the temple and everything at night. I really have liked the different places we have gone at night because it just gives a different perspective and I like it a lot.

 





Day 5
On our last day we went and visited the Valley of the Kings where they buried all of the Pharaohs. King Tut’s tomb was the only one that didn’t get completely emptied out by tomb robbers, but we still went inside 3 of them to see what they were like inside, and they were amazing. In their culture they have only 70 days to dig, plaster, paint, and fill the tombs for the different kings, which is insane because of how big, complete, and intricate the tombs were. The reliefs and paintings on the walls and ceilings were amazing, and so well preserved in there! I was definitely in awe. After we visited a few of those, we went to the Temple of Hatshepsut, the female Pharaoh and explored around her temple a bit.



That afternoon we came back to the hotel and hung out by the pool which was literally a dream. I was able to sit out in the sun, warm weather, by the pool, along the Nile in November, surrounded by my friends on vacation in Egypt! I loved it. Overall, Egypt was an amazing trip!