We just
got word from WQXR.FM’s classical music
hostess (and Jade Sphinx reader) Nimet Habachy that the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church is
hosting a sale of Egyptian crafts to help Egypt’s Moqattam community. The sale will be held May 6, 7, and 8, from
Noon till 8:00 PM at the Church, located at the Christian Education Center
(lower level), 7 West 55th Street, New York.
These sales are essential if Egypt's Moqattam community is to
continue to survive. The schools and the
recycling project that sustains the Moqattam continue to give hope to the young
women and their families ravaged by the recent revolution.
“As the Egyptian Revolution enters its third year, it has become
clear that the sales of goods made in Egypt and sold in New York and elsewhere keep
this project not only alive, but expanding,” Habachy told your
correspondent. “Many girls and women and
their children are waiting to enter the two schools in Moqattam, and the sale
of new quilts, rugs, bags, place mats and paper products from Cairo will fund
this initiative. We are so proud of the
achievement of these young women who work so hard, and who manage to create beauty
in such difficult circumstances. By joining us in this project, you help many
poor women in this very poor country to a better life.”
The Moqattam hills near Cairo’s Citadel is the home of the Zabbaleen
people. This community produces many of
the Egyptian craft items that are purchased by us here in the West. Ongoing violence, demonstrations and curfews
have restricted normal activity, and Cairenes are not venturing out to purchase
the cottage-industry goods produced by the Zabbaleen people, and their survival
has become dependent on the sales of their goods in the US.
The Zabbaleen supported themselves for generations by collecting
trash door-to-door from the residents of Cairo for nearly no charge. Notably,
the Zabbaleen recycle up to 80 percent of the waste that they collect, whereas
most Western garbage collecting companies can only recycle 20 to 25 percent of
the waste that they collect. Living
conditions for the Zabbaleen are very poor, as they live amid the trash they
sort in their village, and with the pigs to which they feed their organic
waste.
As trade for these simple people withers away, the Zabbaleen will
suffer – the efforts to advance hygiene and literacy in the community will
languish and the two schools which have been established will disappear.
We here at The Jade Sphinx attended the last sale and returned
with a bag-full of goodies. This event
is recommended to those who want to support a worthy cause, and find beautiful,
hand-made things at an affordable price.
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