/* */

PDA

View Full Version : Islamic Conservatism in Egypt



LusoHijabi
11-30-2015, 03:36 AM
This is an old article I remember reading talking about how Egypt has seen a wave of Islamic conservatism in the past few decades with most Egyptian women wearing hijab and Islam having a bigger role in the culture and public life of Egypt.so much so that many nightclubs and bars that were quite prominent in Egypt are now less prominent and the ones that do exist are often discrete and hidden from public view or in expensive hotels for foreign tourists. The only people it seems who got clubbing in Egypt are tourists and secular liberal Egyptians.

tourists who go to Egypt are advised to dress modestly.

here is the link http://http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wo...st/7936048.stm

Downtown the bars and nightclubs flourished along the sweeping boulevards attracting all sorts of adventurers from around the world.

Since then many of the bars and cabaret clubs have fallen into disrepair and disrepute, as the Egyptians grow more observant of conservative Islam.

Some do survive; the Windsor Hotel is one of them. Built at the turn of the last century as the baths of the Egyptian royal family, it later served as a colonial club for the British officers.

Today the hotel's Barrel Bar is still popular with Europeans, even though it is now a picture of faded grandeur.

The old telephone exchange has survived in the reception. The cage elevator is still there, as are the Lufthansa posters which have adorned the hallways since the 1960s.

The hotel is run by the Doss family - largely by two brothers, Wasfi and Wafiq, and their sister Marileez. "I remember these very chic cafes," said Marileez. "Downtown Cairo was the place to be seen. Everyone dressed up - I was still a young girl, but I remember that I felt so proud in my little dress and white socks.

"My parents would sit in the open-air cafes drinking a glass of wine or a glass of Ricard. It was all so very sophisticated."

"This area was full of clubs and cabarets," said Wafiq. "The Opera was just around the corner. This was very much the place to be seen.

"But most of these places have since disappeared, particularly those that faced out on to the street - people didn't want to see that any more."

The Sharezad club has survived the cull, but this belly-dancing venue is a far cry from its glorious heyday.

Inside there are heavy red velvet curtains and on the walls the photos of the some of the world's best belly-dancers, who once came here to shake their stuff.

Max Rodenbeck, journalist and author of Cairo, the City Victorious, says belly-dancing has faded out in the last 10 years.

"It has really suffered from the wave of conservatism that has passed over this place," Mr Rodenbeck says.

"You no longer go out to a nightclub and sit with your friends, put a bottle of whisky on the table and smoke lots of cigarettes. That's not what people do any more.

"In a way downtown Cairo has degentrified... but then if you look back at the long, long history of Cairo, you see that it is always reinventing itself.

"It's a cyclical pattern, where the rich have always moved to new places, somewhere fancier, abandoning whatever is old. If you unpack the city you will find one district after another that used to be fashionable."

Another writer who looks back with fondness on the Cairo of old is the author of the best-selling novel The Yacoubian Building.

Dr Alaa al-Aswany blames the slow death of downtown Cairo on the encroachment of conservative Islam.

"From the beginning of the 1980s it became very hard, sometimes impossible, for the owner to pass on the liquor licence to a son or a new owner," he said.

"I think it is all part of the government's attempts to counteract the fanatics - but they are doing in the wrong way. The government's trying to make the point they are as religious as the fanatics. It is silly really."

The one-time cosmopolitan flair of downtown Cairo has largely disappeared. The adventurers moved on and the middle and upper classes moved to the suburbs.

The bars and nightclubs of the 1940s and 1950s are consigned to history, as Egypt turns its face from the pleasures - some might say the vices - of the West.

You have to work hard to find the bars that survive.

There are no shimmering lights. Most are tucked away from the street in nondescript buildings without any windows.

One such club is the Hawaii, where each night people sneak down a darkly lit alley to drink beer and listen to the local pub singer.

One of those who drops in from time to time is journalist Sameer Atrash.

"People here really like to let off steam and have fun," he said.

"It is not very stylish. But remember these people live with so many restrictions in their lives - in here there are no restrictions. Anything goes."

In truth, the Hawaii experience all felt rather seedy - and sad.
My concern is that Egypt maybe "religious" on the outside but I feel on the inside things need to reform especially on moral values. With the rampant sexual harrassment, organized crime, the violent political culture which allows thugs like Sisi to rule and so on

What do you think?
Reply

Login/Register to hide ads. Scroll down for more posts
Search
11-30-2015, 04:13 AM
:bism:

:sl:

I have never been to Egypt, nor am I an Egyptian.

With that disclaimer in place, I know that a lot of third world countries have the same problems that you mentioned, that is, sexual harassment, organized crime, and violent political culture.

Law school professors teach that laws reflects our social mores. From my knowledge (and feel free to correct me here), I don't believe the legal system in Egypt is equitable or just in its application and certainly not based on any type of divine regulations.

Probably some reformation does need to take place to tackle the challenges enumerated in your post and reiterated herein. For example, authorities would have to be stringent in ensuring applications of laws already in place to tackle the aforementioned challenges. Tackling poverty, unemployment, and education reform, including providing religious instruction on akhlaaq (manners) and tasawwuf (inwardness of Islam), could probably induce also a social change for the better. Religious cognoscenti would also generally strive to win the populace's hearts rather than creating a social environment that breeds hypocrisy in action; and also the aforesaid cognoscenti should themselves challenge their own selves to live out the model of Islamic virtue to soften people's hearts to embracing Islamic morality.

That said, I have no hope of any of that happening as I do not believe that the tyranny of any type in Egypt will end any time soon as worldwide we live in age of trials and tribulations foretold in prophetic traditions. So, we are only in the position to make dua (supplication) to Allah SWT humbly to relieve hardships of our fellow man and bring us the promised and awaited rule of Mahdi alayhis salaam.

:wa:
Reply

Hey there! Looks like you're enjoying the discussion, but you're not signed up for an account.

When you create an account, you can participate in the discussions and share your thoughts. You also get notifications, here and via email, whenever new posts are made. And you can like posts and make new friends.
Sign Up

Similar Threads

  1. Replies: 2
    Last Post: 03-18-2013, 08:33 PM
  2. Replies: 2
    Last Post: 01-21-2012, 04:29 PM
  3. Replies: 55
    Last Post: 02-26-2010, 11:40 PM
  4. Replies: 4
    Last Post: 06-01-2009, 03:23 PM
  5. Replies: 1
    Last Post: 05-17-2007, 08:35 AM
British Wholesales - Certified Wholesale Linen & Towels | Holiday in the Maldives

IslamicBoard

Experience a richer experience on our mobile app!