Old Cairo art center destroyed ‘without notice’ to make way for road network

by time news

2024-01-13 17:04:02

After the project to destroy thousands of tombs in the City of the Dead, a UNESCO world heritage site, it is the turn of the Darb 1718 art center to pay the costs of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah’s enormous urban project. al-Sisi. “Everything inside was destroyed.”

It’s a new corner in historic Cairo: the Darb 1718 art center, a true institution for culture lovers in the Egyptian capital, nestled in the heart of the potters’ district, has just been destroyed to widen a road fast.

Before him, there were whole sections of cemeteries and other heritage sites in the city, which was long the cultural beacon of the Arab world. But today, the government wants to create a new place in Africa’s second capital with more than 20 million inhabitants, clear highways, build bridges and other bypasses to connect new towns and business districts which serve as a facade to an economy in tatters.

On January 6, it is with a “deep sadness” and an “huge anger” that Darb 1718 saw its premises – open to artists and their aficionados for 15 years – destroyed “without notice or compensation”, tells the center in a text published on Facebook. For those responsible for Darb 1718 – figures chosen in homage to the bread riots of January 17 and 18, 1977 – their case is only one “a glaring reminder of the permanent threats weighing on the heritage and history of Cairo and the displacements without any consideration of its inhabitants”.

Residents, specialists and activists continue to remind us that since 2020, thousands of tombs in the City of the Dead, the oldest necropolis in the Muslim world listed as a UNESCO world heritage site, have been destroyed in Cairo. For experts, the bulldozer is one of the tools of the policy of President Abdel Fattah al-Sissi, who came to power in 2013 by overthrowing the Islamist Mohamed Morsi and who has since promised the 106 million Egyptians “development”, “modernity” et “better future”with major construction sites and concrete pours.

Ces «bulldozers», they are the ones who surprised Moataz Nasreddine “just after the New Year holidays”. The visual artist, founder of Darb 1718, recounted on one of the most followed talk shows in the country how he had to watch excavators attack his exhibition building as well as two training workshops in pottery and craftsmanship.

“Everything inside was destroyed.” and even “works belonging to 150 foreign artists worth millions and I don’t know what to tell them now”, because no one had been warned that the place had to be emptied, he told Lamiss Hadidi. The presenter of the program Kalma Akheeraone last word» in Arabic), is, like all the country’s media figures, usually a great defender of power. But even she was exasperated that evening.

“We want a city that is only roads, asphalt, bridges. »

Lamiss Hadidi

“How can we present a candidate to UNESCO while we hate our heritage!”she said, while Egypt proposed its former Minister of Tourism and Antiquities Khaled el-Enani for the post of director general of Unesco. “We hate our history and our Old Cairo, we want a city that is only roads, asphalt, bridges”she said again.

On social networks, the anger is the same. A user writes: “the worst is that these are the same officials who walk in the streets of Paris, Vienna or Rome and take photos while being ecstatic and who, once returned to the country, order the very symbols of the country to be demolished ».

“A huge shock”

The architect Ayman Badr, a regular at Darb 1718, said he felt “a mixture of frustration and anger and extreme sadness”. There, he tells AFP, “I met many artists, I attended workshops and shows”. And, he said, “Darb not only affected me, but also the residents of the neighborhood, especially the children”. So its destruction was “a huge shock”.

An even bigger shock for its founder Moataz Nasreddine who in July, sensing the wind coming, launched a petition and collected 16,000 supporters. He had even obtained, he assures, a promise from the neighborhood mayor to start “negotiations after the presidential election”. But in December the Egyptians voted and renewed, unsurprisingly, Mr. Sissi until 2030. Then the bulldozers arrived…


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