
This is the street that I live on.

This is another view of my street.

This is the view from the living room and my bedroom; it is the ex-olive orchard turned sand pit behind my apartment building.

This is my bedroom.

This is the dining room in my apartment.

This is the living room.
After over 30 hours of traveling and all the joys that come with it....1 missed flight, 3 connecting flights...a never-ending sea of strange faces, bitter coffee and aching feet, splashes of water to the face to keep alert, semi-entertaining airplane companions, surprisingly good airline food, (Lufthansa, I love you!), sleeping pills that failed to work, (despite being taken with wine), complete delirium from approximately 4 hours of sleep in 3 days... I finally arrived in Cairo. Egypt... the place I have wanted to see for as long as I can remember!
It was about 7:30 at night when my plane landed in Cairo, so there were no glimpses to been seen of my new home from the windows of the plane. Because I was seated directly behind the first class passengers, I was one of the first people to disembark. The people at the school I am working for told me before I arrived what to do and how to proceed through immigration after I got off the plane, which made things much easier for me than for the swarms of confused foreigners who stood beside me. Many people were in a state of complete bewilderment as to what to do upon their arrival.
Immediately after leaving the plane I headed to the Bank of Alexandria, one of the many banks lining the walls of the airport, to purchase a tourist/entry visa for $15. The visa is actually a sticker they put in your passport which allows you to enter the country, provided you can pass through immigration without any problems. Since I will be working in Egypt for the year, the immigration people were notified of my arrival beforehand, and they only had to check in their computers to see that I had a work visa through the school that was also in progress.
I was lucky enough to get toward the front of the line for immigration, because 4 other planes had landed at the same time that mine had, and the line behind me seemed to trail on indefinitely. When it was my turn to talk to an immigration officer, I simply handed him my passport, he checked to see that I had an entry visa sticker inside, and asked me, "Sarah?" "Aiwa," (yes), I responded. "What are you doing in Egypt?" he asked with a smile. "Ana mudaresa ingleezie," (I'm an English teacher), I replied. Thanks to Tariq, my much adored Arabic tutor, I was able to learn quite a few phrases to get me by before I left the States. "Mashi," (o.k.), he answered, "ahlan wa sahlan" (welcome). I thanked him and made my way to the baggage claim area.
As soon as I stepped up to the luggage belt, I saw my first bag going by and grabbed it. Two minutes later, I had my second. Yes! No lost luggage! I had everything I needed and things were going so smoothly that I couldn't believe it.
At that point, bags in tow, I made my way out of the airport to the transportation area where someone from the school was going to be meeting me. A guard strapped with guns asked for my passport, I showed it to him, and he asked me what I had in my bags. "Just clothes and shoes," I told him. He looked at me incredibly and said "ALL that, just clothes?" "I'm a woman," I replied, "and I'm going to be here a whole year." To which he laughed and said, "mashi, go ahead." I looked to my right and noticed other people nearby who weren't as fortunate as I was. They were having their bags ripped apart and inspected by other gaurds who weren't as friendly as mine was.
As soon as I stepped outside of the airport, I was overwhelmed by the hundreds of people standing there waiting to greet their friends and loved ones getting off of the planes. Several men held signs with names of people they were supposed to pick up or companies written on them, and I scanned them all for the one that would say Sakkara Language School. It wasn't there. I walked back and forth in front of the throngs of people 3 times and still didn't see it. They weren't there to meet me.
Since I missed my first flight and had been delayed in Chicago for 6 hours, I arrived in Cairo 7 hours later than the school had anticipated. However, I had emailed the director of the school with my new flight information, and I had assumed that someone would have gotten the message that I was going to be arriving on a different flight. I didn't know what I was going to do at that point, because my cell phone obviously didn't work in Egypt, and although I had the number for the school's director, I didn't see any payphones around and I really had no way of calling him.
I saw a duty free shop to my right, and decided to head in that direction to get away from the masses and try to figure things out. As I was heading there, struggling to push my luggage cart with ridiculously heavy bags aboard, several men came running to my "rescue." "Miss, miss, you need taxi?" "You need help?" One man actually commandeered my luggage cart from me, started talking rapidly in Arabic to another man, and then walked away with my things. I understood the word taxi from his conversation and said forcefully but politely, "la, LA!" (no, No!) "LA taxi!," (NO taxi!) and took my cart back from him.
I made my way back towards the duty free shop and was approached by yet another man. He introduced himself and asked if I wanted to use his cell phone. Thank God for the kidness of strangers! I thanked him, got out the number for the director of the school, and called it. Fortunately, someone answered after the first ring. "Dr. Nagwa Beshir?" I asked. "Yes, who's this?" a man answered. "Sarah," I replied, I'm one of the new teachers for your school. Someone was supposed to pick me up, and no one is here." I tried to keep the annoyance I was feeling from reaching my voice. "No problem," he told me. "You see the duty free shop?" "Yes." "Good, go stand there and someone will be there in 2 minutes."
After arriving in Egypt, a person has 48 hours from the time they purchase their tourist visa to buy things from the duty free shop. Since alcohol is ridiculously expensive in Egypt because most people are Muslim and don't drink, I was advised by the people at the school where I'm teaching to stock up when I arrived because the duty free shops are much cheaper than anywhere else in the area. I asked one of the guards standing outside of the duty free shop if it was ok if I left my luggage cart outside, (I didn't want to risk knocking anything over trying to move a huge cart around inside the store), and he said I could, so I headed in and started looking around.
The first thing I wanted to get was cigarettes. (Not for me, mom---really, for my smoking friends back home). I had promised several people Egyptian cigarettes upon my return. I saw a carton of Cleopatra smokes, and knew I had found my brand. I flipped it over to look at the price...$4.00. Four dollars for a fricking carton of cigarettes! I grabbed a few and made my way to the booze. You are only allowed to purchase up to 3 bottles of liquor, so I had to get everything that I would need until January, which would be then next time I would be traveling from the airport and would get a chance to buy it again. I got a couple of bottles and made my way to the cashier.
There were 3 men standing around the cash register and as I gave them my purchases and they rang me up, they asked me what my name was. I told them it was Sarah and all three of them told me "Ohhh, Sarah, my daughter is named Sarah." (side note: I have heard that many, many times since then. Sarah is apparently one of the most common female names here). They asked me where I was from and I answered and made small talk with them. I looked up and saw two Egyptian males and one middle-aged, foreign, (aka white and obviously from somewhere else), woman watching me from outside the store. The woman then spoke up and asked, "Are you Sarah?" "Yes," I answered. "Hi, I'm Bonnie from the school!" she announced.
She introduced the men who were beside her, Mohamed, one of the supervisors for the teachers at the school, and Ahmed, the school's van driver. They asked me about my flight and then Bonnie quickly took over the conversation and started explaining the other teachers to me. There were two girls who had arrived so far besides me, a girl named Joelle from Pittsburgh and a girl named Mhairi, (pronounced Varie---it's an ancient Gaelic name), from Scotland who were living together in an apartment on the same street where I would be living. My roommate was going to be a girl who was arriving the next day. Bonnie didn't know where she was from, but she did know her name was Katie.
She continued to talk excitedly beside me, sometimes interrupting herself to ask Mohamed, "Where is Ahmed? Where's the van? What's taking so long?" I would soon learn that Bonnie, although a sweet, endearing, and very helpful and interesting woman, is often sidetracked by her own conversations and therefore repeats herself unnecessarily. I tried to listen to her, but found myself distracted by the scenes around me. I watched the people leaving the airport being herded into various taxis and buses, listened to their foreign tongues, and tried to imagine what my life here was going to be like. How long would it take me to understand what they were saying? I had never lived someplace where I didn't know how to speak the language. This would be very different than my time in Spain.
Because it was so dark, I couldn't see much of the landscape around me except for a few palm trees and a seemingly endless sea of sand and roads surrounding us. The air was warm, but not uncomfortable, thanks to a wonderful little breeze. I closed my eyes and breathed in this new place. The pyramids were just 15 minutes or so away from me. I couldn't believe I was actually here.
"Sarah?!" " Ahmed's finally here with the van!" Bonnie exclaimed, interrupting my thoughts. Ahmed got out, grabbed my luggage, and placed it in the van. Bonnie and I climbed in the back, and Mohamed took the passenger seat. He had been talking on his cell phone incessantly since meeting me.
Bonnie kept talking about the school and the other teachers who were coming in later that week, explaining to me that she was the Kindergarten director but also the person responsible for meeting all of the teachers and getting them settled into their apartments. She then switched the subject to her own travels and explained that she was married to an Egyptian man and although she had lived in France, New Zealand, Germany, England, and various other places, Egypt was the place she had lived in for the longest period of time.
After about 10 or 15 minutes, we arrived in Maadi, which is the southern portion of Cairo and where I would be living. Ahmed navigated the van through the streets with reckless abandon, honking his horn every 2 or 3 seconds and weaving in and out of traffic with skills that would make a Nascar driver envious. Other cars came barreling straight towards us and just when it seemed they were about to hit us,they would swerve out of the way. This is standard driving procedure in Cairo. No turn signals are used, just horns. The sound of honking of horns is a constant here, and drivers do pretty much whatever they want, even driving the wrong direction on one way streets if it gets them where they're going any faster. It's utter chaos, and leaves most foreigners gripping their seats in fear. I kind of like it. No driving rules is my kind of driving rules!
The van stopped on a street lined with various little shops and fruit stands, and Ahmed jumped out once again. Bonnie explained that this was the street I would be living on and then went into a detailed description about the various fruits that are available in Egypt and which ones are currently in season. Ahmed was inside one of the little shops buying me a few things that I would need right away for the apartment.
After he returned, he unloaded my bags and we all headed up to my apartment, which was just a few doors down. When we arrived at the building, Bonnie introduced me to my bowab, or doorman. Bowabs are a fundamental part of modern Egyptian society; their job is to look after the buildings and make sure no one unwanted enters. They also serve as general delivery men; it is standard for people to shout down the stairwells, "Ya, belwab, mya!" (Hey, doorman, I need water!), or whatever it is that they need, and the doorman goes to a store nearby and fetches it for them. They also take out the garbage, (you leave the little bags outside of your apartment door and they pick them up), clean your rugs for you, or do pretty much anything else you want them to do.
If the bowab is helping you out with extra things such as this, it is standard to tip them 1 or 2 pounds, (which is the equivalent of 50 cents or so). The job of a bowab, however, is seen as one of the lowest jobs you can have in Egypt. Bowabs live with their wives and children all together in one tiny room immediately inside the entrance to the buildings. They are extremely poor and, in general, disrespected by society, (side note: it really bothers me the way bowabs are treated and it's one of the things I'm having the hardest time with here).
After I met the doorman, Bonnie, Ahmed, and I, (Mohamed had since taken off to return home to his wife and son), headed up the stairs to my apartment. I had no idea what to expect of the apartment, and was pleasantly surprised when I saw the inside. There was a large living and dining room area off from the kitchen, a decent bathroom, and two large bedrooms. Since I had arrived before my roommate, I got my pick of the rooms, and chose the one with a large window (for lots of sunshine!) which overlooked a field of sand which was, at one time, an olive orchard. Bonnie explained there was once an underground prison nearby, and the prisoners took care of the olive orchard during the day. However, after the prison closed, there was nobody to look after the orchard, so all of the trees shriveled up and died. Now all that remains is a sand pit that is home to a few packs of street dogs.
Bonnie asked if I was tired or if I wanted to go out and have coffee and meet the other two girls who had already arrived. Although I was physically tired, my mind was wide awake and I was eager to meet my fellow coworkers, so I changed my clothes quickly and made the short walk down the street with Bonnie to where Mhairi and Joelle lived.





































