This article was published in Campus magazine, April '13.
I am one of the lucky few who happen to work in Heliopolis.
I used to live there too, but I moved to Rehab a year ago; which is not too far
away, for at least I’m spared the Ring road, 6th of October bridge
and Mehwar. I’m spared the whole hassle of driving and usually take the Rehab
bus to and from work, where I get on and off in Korba and go to my office from
there. And let me say this; Korba is one of the best architectural
places in Heliopolis, in all of Cairo in fact. The buildings are beautiful; the
carvings in the balconies and on the walls are really a sight to look at, and
the streets are well designed with the shades in front of shops for people to
walk under; everything about it is just lovely. But just like everything we are
so good at ruining - like downtown Cairo and Zamalek and even privately
owned cities like Rehab - we have succeeded in "uglying" - if I
may say - El Korba.
If you've been there recently, you’ll see that cafes now
outnumber the people themselves, and it's not like there's any place to park
around them, you either have to second park, preventing people from driving by
smoothly; or go round and round the block till you find a parking space,
causing more traffic jam in the already narrow streets.
But I wish this was all. The problem is that cafes and ...
well, "el ahawy" are now taking up all the pavements - oh and STREETS
as well - with their tiny tables and chairs and shisha. Why? No seriously, H-whyyyy??
It's a bad enough phenomenon in informal areas or “randomly built areas” (i.e.
Nasr City, Mohandessin…etc). But why do that in Korba, one of the chicest
places in Cairo? Why turn it into a s***-hole like this? And who gave them to
right to do that anyways? How obvious is it that the street should be a PUBLIC property?
Heck, even the pavements are a public property, but we seem to have forgotten this
part ages ago.
Why should a girl like me walking in a straight line on a
pavement suddenly find herself in the middle of a cafe where all men are
staring at her and wondering why she's passing from here? I feel like
screaming: "This is MY route people, YOU shouldn’t be sitting here"
And if I skip the pavement, my other alternative is of course the street. I
literally end up walking IN THE MIDDLE OF THE DAMN STREET, risking being hit by
cars, yelled and honked at, or worse, harassed (not that the pavements are any
safer when it comes to this). And girls are not the most endangered here; what
if an old man or woman, or even kid wants to walk down the street? Shouldn’t
the pavement be their pathway? Or am I wrong?
The same thing goes for Zamalek and the Souq in Rehab -
which has really become an eyesore, after having been part of an ideal city.
The issue here is that it's both depressing and outraging! The fact that
such beautiful and nicely organized places are turned into clogged streets
filled with endless honking, reckless shop owners and angry people is quite
depressing. And the fact that citizens are stripped even of their simplest right
- to walk on a pavement - is more than just "quite" outraging.
I won't blab on about how the "government" is
responsible for this - which it is - but I just want to point out that the lack
of morals are the main problem here, it is the "root cause" in my
opinion. Business men and even young entrepreneurs want nothing but to maximize
their profit by serving a larger number of customers, regardless of where and
how they will serve them, regardless of what they will ruin in the process,
regardless of anything to do with the community as a whole - the only factor
playing a role here is PROFIT, and nothing but profit.
Just like contractors who build humongous apartment
buildings after tearing down nice little houses, not caring how it will look,
not caring where people will park, not caring except for profit, and nothing
but the profit.
This is a desperate shout out, not for the government to
apply the already existing rules of not using the streets and pavements as a
private property; but for the young business owners who supposedly want this
country to be a better place and who know well that it’s only in their hands
to make it better. It is a shout out to young customers like us to refuse to
sit and be served on the pavement or in the streets, hoping that the trend will
pass and café owners will get the hint. It is a shout out for thinking a little
bit outside the “profit zone” and regarding the consequences our business activities
have on the community.
This is a shout out for MORALS, and nothing but morals.

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