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Yrisarri, NM, United States
Inside every old person is a young person asking what in the hell happened!
Showing posts with label Egypt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Egypt. Show all posts

Friday, March 15, 2019

Looking for the Kahn Kahlili

“ Hello my friends, Welcome to Cairo!” The smiling man said as he peered at us from the doorway of the store where we were window shopping.  

“Hello my friend.”  I replied looking up from the display of souvenirs for tourists in the window of his shop.  

“Come in, come in, there are many things for you to look at many fine souvenirs to take back when you go home.”  He said in accented English.  He stepped onto the sidewalk and gestured for us to enter his store.

“No thanks, We are just looking, we actually live here in Cairo, really in Heliopolis, and we are out on a walk, we’re on our way to the Khan al Khalili.” 

“I have many fine items in my shop, just like you will find in the Khan.  Come in, you needn’t buy anything, we are all friends.  Are you an American?”  he smiled at me under his thick mustache. 

“Yes, I’m an American, so is my wife.  We have been living here for about a year already, we are teachers at the American School of  Cairo, and we love walking around your city.”  I remarked trying to move away from the store and get back to our walk.
The store owner stepped further away from the doorway, he was dressed neatly in a starched white shirt, creased black trousers and shiny leather shoes.   

“Where are you from in America, I have a cousin in Detroit.  Do you know Detroit?”

“No, we’re from Albuquerque, New Mexico and have never been to Detroit.” I replied.

“You are from Mexico, not America?  The store keeper looked puzzled.

“No, no, we are Americans, you know, we live close to Texas.” I said as I took LaWanda’s arm ready to step out on the sidewalk and take off.

“Ah, Texas, please enter my shop and let us share a cup of tea, we will talk, you don’t have to buy anything just look.”  His enticement punctuated by a bow, a gesture to enter his store and a slight movement to block our passage.

“Alright, just a cup of tea and we will talk.” I said worn down by his persistence.  

We entered the shop passing between shelves loaded with souvenirs as he led us to a small sitting area with a coffee table, two chairs, and a small couch that all looked as if they had been plucked from Louis XIVth’s palace.  We sat down and a young woman wearing a black head scarf and a full length black dress covering her body from neck to foot entered, her exposed face expressionless.  She set our tea on the table in front of the couch and withdrew. 

“Many Americans have been here, many famous people.  Let me show you.”  He opened a book on the coffee table and there were pictures of famous people, I even recognized a few.  “Let me show you a some nice things.”  He quickly stood up scurried to the surrounding shelves and picked up a small ceramic statue. 

“Here is something many Americans like, it is the Sphinx, better than you will find at the Kahn al Kahlili.” he said pushing the statue toward LaWanda.  

“No thank you!” she told him refusing to hold the Sphinx, “We are not interested in buying AnyThing!  We want to walk around and find the Khan Khalili!”  

It was as if she had told him to go to hell.  He straightened up, his eyes narrowed and holding the statue, he gesticulated emphasizing his displeasure while he spoke.   “Why you don’t buy anything, it is good merchandise, help Egypt, help me, buy from my shop!”   
He said something in Arabic and the woman reappeared, picked up our unfinished tea and retreated to the rear of the store.  The owner turned his back on us and went back to the doorway ready to cast his line again leaving us sitting all alone on the uncomfortable French furniture.


“Well,” I said, “that sure pissed him off.”  We smiled at each other, got up, walked past him in his doorway, and continued walking toward the Khan Kahlili.

Tuesday, October 9, 2018

Myths are Stories


“.....two fundamental realizations--of the inevitability of eventual death and the endurance of the social order have been combined symbolically and constitute the nuclear structuring force of the rites and, thereby, the society.” 
Joseph Campbell

Myths are powerful stories that give meaning to individual lives and shape the civilizations they inhabit.  The many functions of myths provide the narrative for individual lives and bring us together to share tragedy and create societal order. A myth, however, only retains its power by telling and retelling it’s stories and helps to shape and organize individuals into cultural and political groups. 

There are many ways to tell these stories.  In American Gods Neil Gaiman uses the metaphor of worship to explain why the old Gods are losing their power. Worship is another form of storytelling. No matter the form of the story, if the stories are not told they begin to lose their power and the functions they provide to individuals and society are replaced by new myths whose stories become accepted through the cycle of telling and retelling. 

The Nile River

The Egyptian myth cycle clearly illustrates this dynamic.  As George Hart notes in Egyptian Myths, “Egyptian myths, though seemingly outlandish to some, have survived because the society out of which they originated considered them crucial to the creation of a  view of the world. Scribes, priests and story-tellers transmitted myths to explain etiological phenomena, to provide data for the continuity of existence in the afterlife and to exhibit the versatility of their imaginations. So whether as part of a religious quest of anthropological investigation or whether for an adventure into the surreal, the myths and legends of ancient Egypt leave us richer for their speculation and imagery.” 

The harsh realty of the Egypt's geography provided the material for its stories. A narrow river valley surrounded by bleak deserts and the punishing sun beating down each day was the genesis for Egyptian myths. As in all societies, there was a need for each individual to understand the meaning of their life and what happened upon death and there was a need to organize a society that could survive the harsh environment they had been given. The river Nile overflowing its banks and providing the rich silt which nourished the earth and gave rise to agriculture was proof of resurrection. Individuals had to work together to exist and insure that the cycle of life continued from year to year. 

This brutal reality gave rise to many Gods and stories of creation, resurrection and survival in the villages up and down the length of the Nile river. Jules Cashford elegantly explains this concept, “The ancient Egyptians explored these questions in the context of the overwhelming reality of their daily lives: the annual rising and falling of the River Nile, on which their life depended. The land of Egypt is re-created every year by this river which flows from south to north, from the equator to the Mediterranean,  Life was--and still is contained in a narrow valley on either side of the river.  Beyond this lies desert, a barren land of sand and rock with no water and no shade from the burning sun.”

These stories began to consolidate as villages became city-states while leaders learned the power of the Gods to keep society functioning. The rites of worship and ways of life were forms of the stories needed to to create society and cultures. Significantly, the rulers began to transcribe the stories in order to perpetuate their power. 

In Egypt these stories were transcribed on what is known as the Pyramid Texts.  In Egyptian Myths George Hart explains that these texts are, “Columns of hieroglyphs were carved 4,300 years ago in the vestibule and sarcophagus hall of the pyramid of King Wenis (c2350 BC) at Sakkara, necropolis of the royal capital of Memphis, with the intention of seeking a hereafter for the monarch in the vicinity of the sun god. Subsequent rulers of the old Kingdom (c2649-2152 BC continued this tradition. Known as Pyramid Texts, this corpus of spells and speculations gives us the opportunity to evaluate the complex imagery centered upon the Egyptian pantheon,. It also forms the earliest religious compilations in the world. “


The pyramid texts were the precursors to a civilization rich in written stories, oral storytelling, rites of worship and a pantheon of Gods to support the many functions that myths provide. The four basic functions of myth were prevalent in the stories of the Gods. The creation myths supported the awe and explanation of the universe as seen from the perspective of the narrow river valley in which they lived. Gods such as Ra, Osiris and Anubis gave shape to the social order of the great civilizations that rose under the relentless heat of the rising and setting sun transversing their river valley. The story of Isis and Osiris gave instructions about how to be human in an ever expanding empire beset with outside attacks and the cruelty of nature.

As the city-states combined and a strong nation developed, encompassing the land from Sudan to the Mediterranean Sea, the Gods too consolidated and their stories were told in ever increasing ways. Other forms of storytelling beside the pyramid texts were the Coffin Texts, the Bremner-Rhind Papyrus and the "Shabaka Stone" .  The latter contains the story of the accession of the god Horus to the throne of Egypt and the Memphite myth of the creator god. These stories were preserved by King Shabaka (712-698 BC) who discovered the papyrus scrolls on which they were inscribed was being eaten by worms. Evidence for Amun as the creator is found on Papyrus Leiden. 

There are also stories inscribed into statues and buildings perpetuating the mythic stories. Temples in Luxor contain stories of Amun and his sexual union fathering the future monarch of Egypt and temple decorations at Esna and Edu that also record accounts of creation. 

It is clear that the preservation of the stories was important to the rulers of Egypt. They understood the power of myth and in particular the organizing capabilities of the stories. In 1984 Mary Boyce reported on the research of Berger and Luckmann linking social construction, story and organization and determined that story can be a vehicle for social control. The wide spread telling and preservation in ancient Egypt would indicate that the Pharaohs and men of power understood exactly how to create a political state using myth.

The most enduring myth of Egypt is that of Osiris. He underwent several changes over the years as his importance waned and waxed.  His stories served many functions for ancient Egyptians. He was a legendary king who brought civilization to his people, showed them how to cultivate crops, taught people how to worship the gods, is associated with the afterlife, fertility, and resurrection and serves as a dynastic myth. He had a long and useful life in ancient Egypt as long as his story was told.

This myth, as Cashford explains, was not extant in a full epic version but had be pieced together from several ancient and classical sources: The pyramid texts of the old kingdom, the coffin texts of the middle kingdom, the Book of the Dead from the new kingdom, a ribald text entitled the Contest of Horus and from the twentieth dynasty and the summary of Plutarch in Concerning Isis and Osiris from the second century AD. 

The stories of Osiris are illustrative of the power of myth in relation to the telling of the stories. Plutarch saved Osiris by searching for his story and finding it at the festival of Abydos a yearly event following the inundation of the Nile. It was not until 1882 and the discovery of the Rosetta Stone that the stories of Osiris and other Egyptian myths became available to the modern world. 

The resurgence of these stories in today’s world is an indicator of the power of the stories they tell. Although their power has not reach the level of organizing society, they are multifunctional and appealing to the individual who is wondering what life is all about.


Works Cited

Boyce, Mary E., Organizational Story and Storytelling: A Critical Review, University of
Redlands, California, 1996, Web, 13 Sept. 2010.

Campbell, Joseph, Myths To Live By, Penguin Group, New York, 1972, Print.

Cashford, Jules, The Myth of Isis and Osiris, Barefoot Books, Boston, 1993, Print.

Gaiman, Neil, American Gods, Harpertorch, New York, 2001, Print.

Hart, George, Egyptian Myths, British Museum Publications University of Texas Press, Austin,
1990, Print. 

Reid, Patrick V., ed., Readings In Western Religious Thought: The Ancient World, Paulist
Press, New Jersey, 1987, Print.