Luxor Lately

Part of: NewsFlash

Luxor (the ancient city of Thebes) is a beautiful city of approximately 500,000 people. The streets are clean and broad. Horse drawn carriages and donkey drawn carts share the streets with slow moving vehicles. The Luxor Railway station is sparkling, decorated in the typical red granite of Egypt, with impressive bas reliefs drawn from the many temples in the area.

Words do not do justice to the grandiosity of the Luxor temple. The columns are several stories tall. The statues and hieroglyphics have lasted for over 3000 years. What building built today could last that long? The near absence of rain certainly helped to preserve the temple and its statues, but one can only marvel at the ancient Egyptian mastery of engineering. In late April, the reformed Egyptian Antiquities Council announced that a 3400 year old statute of King Ahmenhotep III was unearthed in Luxor. 

The main Luxor temple was unusual in that it first housed a temple for ancient Egyptian Gods. Then, a church was built on the Temple grounds. Later, a Mosque, which is still operational, was built on the ruins of part of the temple. For a period, both the Mosque and the Church operated simultaneously within the temple grounds. There is a lesson regarding peaceful coexistence of multiple faiths inside that temple.

In Upper Egypt, remnants of the old regime still cling to power. In late April. violence erupted between supporters of the old National Democratic Party, and the January 25 Revolution Youth Coalition during a rally for Amr Moussa , Secretary General of the Arab League and a potential presidential candidate for Egypt. Moussa has pledged to prioritize the region of Upper Egypt.

I asked my guide to tell me how the government of Luxor has been functioning since the Revolution. My guide Khaled lives in Luxor with his family. The Governor of Luxor, Samir Farag has been replaced by the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces. Allegedly, Farag is implicated in the corruption of the Mubarak era. The SCAF has replaced 14 out of 26 regional governors since the revolution. In mid April, hundreds of thousands of protesters demanded the speedy trial of Mubarak and the replacement of governors he had appointed. The SCAF made the decision to replace these governors one day after the massive protest. As Khaled pointed out, the head of the snake has been removed, but the body is still there, and writhing, with enough venom in it to do damage. He said that in Luxor, electricity and water are functioning, but many government services are barely being attended to.

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Article Author: Warigia Bowman

I am an Assistant Professor at the American University in Cairo. I hold a doctorate in public policy from Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government. I am married with three children. I am half Kenyan, half American, married to a Kenyan. …

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  • 1 - Catherine

    Jun 01, 2011 at 12:58 am

    Hi Warigia,
    I'm really to see someone writing about Egypt's political situation outside of Cairo! I was actually in Luxor on the 28th-30th of January, and while it wasn't getting any coverage on any major news network, there was a lot of activity there that weekend.

    I think it's really important to remember that Egyptians exist outside of Cairo and that the political situation in the different governorates varies depending on the local economy and people. Luxor and Aswan especially deserve a bit more attention because they do generate such high tourist traffic.

    When I was in Luxor that weekend, everyone from the hotel operators, Egyptian tour guides, and tourism police refused to tell us exactly what was going on. I had to literally walk into a protest to figure out what was happening.

  • 2 - Warigia Bowman

    Jun 01, 2011 at 1:00 am

    Hi Catherine. Great to hear from you. Yes, it is important to follow the news outside of Cairo. I am so glad you got to participate in the Egyptian Revolution. Mabruk! I am in Cairo teaching for the year, but I am trying to get out into the country side and check things out.

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