Siwa, Egypt: An Isolated And Flourishing Oasis Populated By A Community Of Gracious Berbers
April 30th, 2007 · 11 Comments
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It wasn’t that long ago visitors to the remote Siwa Oasis (literally in Bum Fuck Egypt, 31 miles East of the Libyan border) would more likely find themselves fearing for their lives than being shown a table at one of the palm-shaded cafés dotted throughout town.
To say that has now changed is a laughable understatement. In a country where you are already treated as an honored guest by even the most casual of strangers, Siwis will simply blow you away with their kindness. In fact, it was the only place during our trip where I barely had to utter the phrase, “la’ shukran” (no, thank you), something that had seemed like a mantra during the previous four weeks in Egypt.
Our Siwa experience hadn’t started out so sanguinely however. After a nine-hour, 850 kilometer dusty drive from Cairo, we arrived to what can only be described as a scene right out of Children of the Corn (except instead of corn, it was dates and olives).
Young kids were everywhere. Running in the streets. Standing in groups out in front of shops. Even driving the ramshackle donkey carts. Until we got closer in to town (a stunning place with its old salty mud brick dwellings dissolving majestically in the smack middle of the square), I had to search to find anyone over the age of 11. As a first impression, it was just strange. And of course, it didn’t help that soon after we got lost.
It’s not a big place, but we only had a crude map to our hotel on the outskirts of town and our drivers, who were absolutely wonderful, but who had also never been here before. So we drove our comically oversized van through narrow streets, honking at the carts and kids in a way that made it clear we were sorely out of place.
But after the dead ends and backtracking and asking half the town for directions, we make it unscathed to the Siwa Shali Resort, where it all promptly went downhill. (not to sully this post, you can read why here)
In contrast to the resort, everything else about Siwa was the dream I’d been imagining since I’d read Kenneth Heiber’s mention of it in the Sept. 2006 issue of Frommer’s Budget Travel Magazine.
Siwa Oasis is so mysteriously beautiful that you feel a bit lightheaded and shy exploring its treasures. Spend your first morning trying to imagine living within the old city of Shali as you traipse up and down the salt-encrusted remains.
As far as other “official” sights to see, there is the famed Temple of Amun, where Alexander the Great is said to have gotten the Oracle’s official nod to rule Egypt.
Gebel al-Mawta (the Mountain of the Dead) is a hill pitted with tombs of the 26th Dynasty, the Greek (Ptolemic) and Roman periods.
And Fatnas Island is where you can take a dip in a fresh pool and smoke sheesha while watching the sunset.
My favorite excursion was an afternoon Travel Boyfriend and I spent cresting the knife-edged dunes of the Sahara desert in a 4×4, floating in an invigoratingly cold lake in the middle of nothing but sand and then finishing it all off with a deep soak at Bir Wahed, a hot-water spring about 12 kilometers from town.
Practically everything about this town is a unique and memorable sight to see, including the people.
Little boys, on their way to school, dress in uniforms of beige with white neckerchiefs and caps to round out the look. The effect is that of 1940s sailors off to fight a little Pearl Harbor.
Girls wear their hair in braids with long red scraps of fabric blousing from the ends.
Married women, a rare sight to see in public, sit like upright bolts of black fabric on the back of donkey carts, not even their eyes visible (although a few did have dark peepholes jutting out like proboscis, which they used to stare as furtively at me as I did them).
And unlike destinations where locals and tourists occupy the same spaces, but ne’er the twain shall meet, Siwis go out of their way to welcome visitors to their town. We had an entire cast of characters who helped make our trip memorable:
Our local driver, Abdallah, who invited us to his home for dinner.
Goma, a charming young donkey cart entrepreneur.
Achmed, who sat me down for tea while I contemplated purchases in his handicraft shop (fixed prices!).
Bojana, the Slovenian writer interviewing locals for an article about magic.
Although only in Siwa for four days, we had so many positive experiences I actually started daydreaming about moving here. When asked by Travel Boyfriend if I was ready to head back to Cairo, it was then I remembered the phrase I hadn’t had to use for days: la’ shukran.
Travel Betty Banter
Have you driven the long road to Siwa? What did you discover when you got there? Let us know in the comments section.
Tags: Egypt
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11 responses so far ↓
1 visit-the-coqui // May 28, 2007 at 4:07 am
Nice read, this sounds like a great place to visit
2 Bella // May 30, 2007 at 12:25 pm
Hi Travel Betty!
It sounds like you had a great adventure in Egypt-I would definitely like to go. I enjoyed your post about the resort as well!
3 Travel Betty // May 30, 2007 at 3:22 pm
Thanks for stopping by, Coqui and Bella. It is definitely a magical place.
4 curryegg // Jun 14, 2007 at 6:14 pm
Another nice photos from egypt. I love to see the view of egypt. thanks for sharing.. Hope to see more from you..
And oh ya.. here is a love email for you. NIce to know you pal… ^^
5 curryegg // Jun 14, 2007 at 6:16 pm
Sorry.. I wonder whether my html works o not.. haha..
Again: love email
6 Travel Betty // Jun 15, 2007 at 9:44 am
you’re the sweetest, curryegg! thanks so much
7 Ishtar // Jun 16, 2007 at 2:41 pm
Hi!
Just wanted to say that your post has now been published in the Beautiful Africa Carnival.
http://ishtarnews.blogspot.com/2007/06/my-personal-experience-of-africa.html
Thank you for your contribution & good luck with creating new positive posts about Africa, which you hopefully will present at upcoming carnivals! The next one is schedules on the 18th of July.
Greetings from Niger,
Ishtar
8 Travel Betty // Jun 17, 2007 at 3:33 pm
Awesome! Thanks for including me, Ishtar. I can’t wait to read all of the other submissions. They sound totally intriguing. And I hope some of my fellow Travel Betties will submit their own Africa blog entries for the next carnival!
9 Travel Betty // Jun 29, 2008 at 11:31 am
I wanted to share these 2 exciting comments that were emailed to me privately:
Jade says: Hi Betty, I met Goma in Siwa. If you get back there, I recommend that you stay at either Shali Lodge or Siwa Villa. Great blog!
Then Jade also said: I met Goma in January 2007. He took me all around Siwa and we ended the day at Fatnas Island for tea and the sunset. Fab! I like Goma, he’s a nice kid, met him at the bus stop. Ali Baba, that’s the name of his donkey. Siwa, it was different than the rest of Egypt. I’m not dissin Egypt, but the atmosphere and the people just felt more relaxed. I love the little kids, calling out hello, hello all the time. I went out to Bier Wahed and all the way out to the White Desert. One of the best trips of my life. I love the desert.
10 claudia // Sep 6, 2008 at 11:14 am
I went to Egypt in February and while there I realized neither Siwa nor Sinai were on the tour. Deeply frustrated and having fallen in love with Egypt and the Egyptian people I returned in April, for my birthday! (Bear in mind I live on the other end of the world -Chile- so this was really true love.) I went back for Shali and I wasn’t wrong. The long road is well worth it and when I arrived at Siwa and saw Shali lit up at night I was in tears. Breathtaking! Nothing better than sitting on the corner café sipping mint tea while admiring the ruins. I visited Siwa for one day and was able to see and do pretty much everything, except for the out-of-town fountain dip. Egypt has definitely been a life-changing experience for me.
11 Travel Betty // Sep 7, 2008 at 7:11 pm
Claudia, so glad to hear you fell in love with Siwa as well. It is a hike, but I hope more people are inspired to make the effort. It definitely pays off!
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