June 19th
Alexandria > Cairo
Fresh fruit and fruit juice, grilled tomatoes, cheese, sausages,
bacon, French toast, honey, waffles, pancakes, scones, Danish, yoghurt..
Remember the spread Julian, Dick, George and Anne used to have? Breakfast in
Radisson Blue reminded me of them. One of the best breakfasts I’ve ever had! I’ve
not mentioned the complete list here, coz there were tables and tables of
things and I could sample only so much, but you get the idea, right? Anyways,
this post isn’t about food, so let’s move on.
After breakfast we checked out of Radisson Blue and we were
off to Cairo. 3 hrs road trip. Did I mention that Thareeq stopped a truck
loaded with fresh tomatoes so that he could get some for us the day before?
Well, he had. It was so nice of him and we enjoyed having it. But we weren’t
too keen on having tomatoes after breakfast, but Thareeq stopped a Tomato van
and a Grapes van on the way so that we could taste them.
Somewhere in the middle of the journey we stopped at a small
motel kind of a place. There was a souvenir shop where everybody went to.
Thareeq went straight to a tabled and settled down with a hookah. You don’t see
much of alcohol out in the open in this country, but smoke, yes, you see it
everywhere. Of course I couldn’t resist
when he offered me, so I had to try :P (It was amazing!)
When we reached Cairo, Sameer a.k.a Sam, our guide for Cairo
joined us and he quizzed us a bit about Egypt. He wore a locket with some hieroglyphs
that caught my eye. He explained that it was a Cartouche. Pharoes got their
name written in oval brackets to protect them, as a symbol of power etc. And if
any common man dared to wear one, it was “off with his head!” in those days. I
made up my mind to get one for myself.
He first took us to a Papyrus shop. Guess everybody knows
that papyrus was the first form of paper ever, made from the papyrus reed. We
saw how it was being made. And do you know why the papyrus reed was used? The cross
section of the reed’s stem has triangles (Triangles>face of the
pyramid>ray of the sun)! There were a lot of replicas of ancient Egyptian paintings
here for sale. The judgement day, Tutankamun, Nefertiti, the Egyptian calendar,
Horus, Cleopatra, Nut, Isis and Osiris...they even had Christian imagery on
Papyrus. These people do know their tourism industry :P
After that was Pyramids. What I reaaally longed to see. Sam
kept saying things about it as we neared it, but I was too busy gazing at them
to hear much of what he was saying. He got us the tickets and we were walking
out in the Egyptian sun towards the Pyramids.
You don’t realize how huge they are until you reach quite
close to them. They look as if they are made up of small stones from a
distance, but the height of the lowest array of stones is almost up to my
shoulder and weigh tonnes. And they are arranged in perfect symmetry with no
mortar or cementing, just placed one on top of the other.
There is more about the three great pyramids of Giza. Do you
know Orion’s belt? The hunter that appear in the night sky with three stars
that form his belt? The three pyramids of Giza and the three stars in Orion’s
belt are aligned in a way. The biggest pyramid is of Khufu, the smaller of his
son Khafre and the smallest of Menkaure. Khafre made his smaller than his father’s
out of respect. So his son menkaure followed suit and built his a little
smaller than Khafre’s.
The entrance to a Pyramid is small, narrow, and people with claustrophobia
were advised not to enter. Because it is a small narrow tunnel which you have
to crouch and climb down by wooden plank steps, walk straight a bit and then do
the crouching –climbing thingy up to see the Pharaoh's sarcophagus. I went in.
This was the tunnel through which the Pharaoh’s body was
taken in by the priests and mourners to be placed safely for his afterlife. The
small room up had the cold stone sarcophagus. The coffin and mummy were taken elsewhere,
you could only see the ancient king’s resting place made for him millenniums
before. This room held all his treasures and belongings. This small room was
the reason for the gigantic architectural marvels.
How the pyramids were exactly built is something Egyptologists
are not too sure of. True, there are theories, of rolling the stones over logs,
lifting the stones manually and bizarre ideas of aliens helping them out, but
how they could build these colossal structures with each stone that weighs
tonnes in an age so ancient and create it so perfectly?
After the Pyramids, we went to a point where the three
pyramids could be seen together from a distance. This is where all the songs
scenes that involve shots with the pyramids are taken. Then we saw the temple
where the mummification was done. It’s a 72 days process. First thirty days is
purification and the next forty days is mummification. In the purification
part, the body is cleaned, the internal organs are taken out and salts are used
to cleanse it. The 4 vital organs according to the ancient Egyptian tradition that
are required in the afterlife are the lungs, stomach, intestines and stomach.
They are placed in 4 jars. You must’ve seen it in The Mummy, right?
Then the body is embalmed with oil and essences, armed with
amulets and other magical trinkets and placed in the coffin. Mourners,
musicians, priests and people carry the Pharaohs body into the pyramid and
place there all possible things he might need in the afterlife. Sam said that
grave robbers opened the graves mainly for food. Gold and treasures were sought
after that.
Next we saw the sphinx. Human face and Lion’s body. Khafre’s
face to be exact. Like a guardian of the great pyramids. Its nose was smashed
by a ruler who wanted to prove that he was powerful than Egyptians.
After taking in all this, we went for lunch. On the Nile! It
was a floating restaurant. Food was Egyptian again coz we wanted to try that.
Chicken cooked with their special spices, kebabs, meat rolled in grape vine
leaves, salads and desserts with dates.
Then we checked in at Le Meridian, Cairo (Yes, I got to stay
in there!). After nice long rest we went
back to the Pyramids area again. But this time, we were there for a light and
sound show. No walking around. It was presented like the Sphinx telling a
story. It talked about Egypt’s history, stories from the past, the pharaohs of
the pyramids and the glory of the ancient Egyptian civilization. It was a
lovely sight. And there was a cool breeze and it was pleasant to sit out there
and watch the show.
Dinner was on a rooftop restaurant. Food was great as usual,
not going into details. I could still see the outline of the Pyramids from
where I was sitting. I still had one more day in this city, close to the place
I’ve longed to see.