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Sunday, December 19, 2010

678

Today was one of those beautifully simple Cairo days I will miss so much.
Sophie, Margaux and I went into town this evening for dinner at one of our favorite spots, then headed downtown to see a new Egyptian movie called 678. 

Seeing movies in Egypt is an experience, let's just say. We had a lot of fun with it. After running around lost for a while and telling people we speak "a little" arabic, we finally made it into the theater. We are 'those three foreign girls' after all; giggly and lost and confused but happy to be there, hahaha.
Egyptian theaters are a little less glamorous than the dollar theater in my town. They're nice enough. What really gets me is the movie etiquette that was never introduced to Cairo. You'll find babies running down the isles, and of cooourse people answer their phones.. after letting it ring for a few moments longer than necessary. And my new favorite: there was a man smoking inside the theater....
It's all part of the experience =)

The movie was increddddible.
678 is centered around three women and their plight dealing with sexual harassment on a daily basis on the streets of Cairo. It is based on true accounts and the first sexual harassment court case in Cairo.
The movie follows the stories of Abdel, Seba and Nelly, three Egyptian women. 
Abdel is a vailed women who is forced by financial constraints to take a public bus to work every day. On the bus she is harassed every day by men who do everything from verbally harass her to grabbing her in public and even exposing themselves and pressing their bodies against her. Eventually she gets fed up and decides to take matters into her own hands and defend herself. 
She goes to a support group run by Seba who was assaulted during a futball match. She wants to teach women how to speak out against harassment and she tells Abdel that she needs to defend herself, not knowing that Abdel will resort to stabbing her attackers. But the two stick together as a detective starts looking into the cases and exposes the "victims" for their perversion.
Nelly is the third protagonist who is pressing charges on a man who groped her while she was walking and dragged her along the the street with his car. The movie shows as she struggles to get the police to hear her case and how her family encourages her to just let it go.
It was a really brilliant movie and showed so many aspects of Egyptian life, even the morning rutein of the women. Many of us may take this for granted, but if you're walking alone in the city a lot of thought has to go in to what you wear and what kind of transportation you should take. Another really interesting point was that the movie showed how the men don't differentiate between girls in western dress or in hijab, everyone gets harassed if they're alone. 

The director Mohammed Diab said "I made this film to break the silence of women. The short term solution for sexual harassment is that women should not feel ashamed when they get harassed and they should speak out.” 
But only 5% do speak out although at least 80% of women in Egypt say they experience harassment on a regular basis. So! This needs to change, and this movie was astoundingly inspiring!




“Everyday I ride the bus and everyday I get harassed.  How, after all that, do you want me to be rational?”

Get it guuurl, stand up for yourself!! =)
Absolutely loooved it.

Also, on a personal level... it was SO cool understanding 10% of the arabic, and watching them walk around areas I'm familiar with =) And I feel very empowered! Well done 678!!

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Fatimid Cairo Photos

All stolen from Dr. Gomez-Rivas, my Shia Islam in History professor.
A beautiful day in the heart of the city on the brink of the sand storm.






Shi'i only make up 15% of the Muslim
community, but they're there!

The streets near Khan

Salam alekum


Munir and I talking about how cute those three girls are next to us!

I sooo loved this class!!

And I sooo love this city

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

7allas (I am done with arabic!)

This was my final presentation:
(Obviously you don't have to read it but I feel like sharing it/ preserving it) Shook!

Saba7elhair! Esmi Kjrstin! Ena min Amerika leken dilwati ena taliba fi il gema America fi el Cahera Gadida fi Masr. Bedris il oha arabic, adub engleezy, teri7 Masr, deen Shia wu moosik7a. Moosik7a heya hayeti <3 ohib owey baakheni! Et welet fi South Carolina, baden roht li Florida. Baden aysha fi California ken andi teletasher. Baba bishte7rel fil cinisa wu mama moazafa. Andi a7h wahed, esmo Andrew. Wu andi kelib wahed, esmo Cleo... patra... Fi CA ena ba3shtena fi il maktaba fi gema.

Ahib owey hayeti fi Masr. A7sen maken andi Masr. Koolio ena sa3ida owey hena. Ahsahbi wu ena nroht li Sharm el Shakh, Luxor wu Istanbul fi agezed. Fi Sharm el Shakh sabe7na fi il shatr wu nshooft David Guetta. Fi ageza Eid Shukran nroht li Lixor bil aut. Ken whish owey il aut!! Ken zibela wu dowsha wu ken izez maksur! Ken zehma wu oaf fil arabaya seya etnain. Lekennnnnn.... baden shooft Luxor Temple, ken gamil owey!! Nshooft Karnak, Valley of the Kings wu Hatshepsut's Court. Ken helween!! Fi ageza mo7terif, nroht li Istanbul. Istanbul heya 7relly, mo7terif an Masr. Leken ahibit owey Istanbul. Il Hagia Sophia ken gamil owey. Baden negat hena. Fil wati shooft il sheruh shems adem ahramat! Ahib owey il safar leken ahib Masr katir.

Yarit aysha hena. Haftakil owey Masr wu ahsa7bi hena.
Insha'allah ena haga hena badekemsa!!

7obiktir wu shukran,
Kj



(( Good morning, my name is Kjrstin. I'm from America but now I am a student at the American University in Cairo. I study arabic, english literature, history, Shia religion and music. Music is my life, I love to sing!
I was born in South Carolina, then I went to Florida, then I moved to California when I was 12. My dad works in a church (there's no word for chaplain, just go with it) and my mom is a government employee (my teacher doesn't understand what a social worker is so I just gave up..) I have one brother, his name is Andrew. I have one dog, her name is Cleo. In California, I work at the library at my school.
I really love my life in Egypt. My favorite place is Egypt. Here I am happy every day.
My friends and I went to Sharm, Luxor and Istanbul for the holidays. In Sharm we swam and saw David Guetta. For Thanksgiving, we went to Luxor on the train. The train was awful. It was loud and dirty and there was broken glass (lol). It was crowded and we had to stand in between cars for three hours. But! then we saw Luxor and it was really beautiful. We saw Karnak, Valley of the Kings and Hatshepsut's Court. It was gorgeous! For a different holiday we went to Istanbuk. Istanbul is expensive, different than Egypt. But I liked Istanbul a lot. Hagia Sophia is beautiful. Then we came home. I love to travel but I like Egypt best.
Later I watched the sun rise behind the pyramids! I wish to live here. I will miss Egypt and my friends here very much.
God willing, I will come back here after a few years!!
Lot's of love and thank you (to my teacher) KJ ))


I love Arabic.
THE END!

Monday, December 13, 2010

Happiness and Cheer

Christmas time is here! We found some evidence in the coptic neighborhood in Doqqi! It was magical =)
And the weather outside is more than frightful, so there ya go!

CHRISTMAS!!
 This weekend was jam-packed full of more amazing memories, and more reasons I feel so torn leaving here. That's not to say I'm not excited to go home and see everyone, it's just that I really do love it here. It's definitely been some of the best months of my life.

The week was really nice too, full of cake and celebration and finally I hung out with some girls from campus, our Egyptian friend Randa took us shopping, she is really sweet. And then after that we went to see the Cairo Choral Society perform the Messiah. It was a really nice week!!

This one's for the Christmas card!
This weekend, we celebrated Margaux, Sophie and Aaron's birthdays! Thursday night we went out to Cairo Jazz Club, but before that we had some cake at the apartment. Alex bought a xmas tree!!!!! It was the best surprise ever, we all just about died. We took some awkward family photos with it, it was glorious. Then we headed out to Cairo Jazz to meet Aaron and his posse. Basically every non-study abroad friend we have was there, it was reallllly fun!!
The next morning we woke up and watched some BBC and arabic news with a cup of tea before heading out for Sophie's birthday picnic! We got some cinnamon rolls and a bucket of KFC and took to the streets. Our original plan was to crash a private garden and eat in there, but after hopping the fence we found it to be a little too dirty. We ended up doing the most authentic Egyptian thing one can do and ate on a curb across from a toy store, lavishly decorated in Santa Clauses.
It was an awesome day just walking around and discovering things! We found a grocery store, fruit market, Nike store and a huuuuge candy store.... yummmm! I bought the Mummy Returns with arabic subtitles. Pretty exciting. And some shoes for the choir concert tomorrow.
It was a really lovely day =)
We ended the night at our favorite restaurant, Falfela (the one I mention all. the. time. because it is wonderful). We ate some delicious felafel and tehena and eggplant concoctions. Later our friend Mohamed joined us for a while (his family owns it actually, so he was in the neighborhood), and we had some delicious cake which Alex made a waiter go buy and bring back! Haha! It was awesome. Alex is the king of birthdays. We even got the whole restaurant singing!! "Sana helwa ya gamil!!"

EGYPTIAN!!!!!
Twenty One-derful <3
The next day I had a field trip with my Shia Islam in History class. We walked around the oldest part of Cairo, where Khan el Kalili is and the fortress wall. Our objective was to see Fatimid mosques because the Fatimids were Shii. So we stopped at some amazing sites and had a great time just walking around, the area is really cool, and I love all my classmates!! 

"We go to the mosques to study and pray!"
SURE =)))

One of the supposed burial sites of Hussein,
grandson of Muhammad and son of Ali


I love them soo much

The view from the top of the fortress gate
Did I mention there was a sand storm? =/



SO! Hallas, the weekend was really awesome and insha'allah this one will be awesome too, it's our last hoorah! =)

9 days until I'm home! <3




PS. Sometimes I just drive by the pyramids =)))))

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

احب مصر

Last week Sophie and Alex found their apartment for next semester! They (....we) got to start moving in on the first, and we've been having a blast there. First of all... the American dollar goes sooo beautifully far here, hamdullila!! My dear Eskander and Sophia are living in fully furnished flat with three bedrooms (5 beds), two bath, two living rooms, kitchen, three balconies, deep freezer, television, radios and internet, for less then a two room studio apartment in downtown Bakersfield. Seriously. And it's in a great area!! The part of town is called Doqqi, it's a 5-10 minute ride to Zamelek (the neighborhood we spend the most time in) and two metro stops away from downtown. And it's family oriented, not touristic at all, annnnnd the whole building is Coptic. It's so perfect, I'm sooo proud of them for finding such a perfect place!

Their first night there we had a delicious home-cooked meal, it was so perfect. Then on monday night we spent the night there after celebrating Margaux's birthday at a restaurant called Crave and returning for the most delicious cake ever, purchased by Papa Eskander.

Sitting room number 2
Mama cookin' a delicious meal!

Coptic decorations, wooh!
Happy Birsday to you!!



The next day we went to the citadel, Sultan Hassan Mosque and the Cairo Museum!
It was an awesome full and fun day, and now I feel like I've seen every big tourist spot I need to see in Cairo.

The Citadel is gorgeous! It's a huge complex which has been rebuilt under a few different sultans and caliphs, but it was originally the palace of Sultan Saladin. Today, it's mainly a tourist stop but the mosque is still used. There is also a military compound. And it has the most incredible view of the city.
The Citadel from the street
Citadel plus cute children =)
The courtyard 
The grounds around it. That tree has been trimmed into the word "Allah!!"
Inside the Mosque
The view from the West side of the grounds,
Can you see the pyramids?!?!!
Classic team TINA: Margaux being silly, Alex photo-
bombing and Sophie taking a thousand pictures <3
<3

We walked around the grounds and then headed over to a mosque called the Sultan Hassan Mosque. It's one of the most beautiful ones I have seen, I really loved it.

Sultan Hassan Mosque from down the street

Marg and I inside

Inside the mosque and part of the courtyard


Cairo Museum front entrance
After the mosque we met up with my Egyptology class and toured the Cairo Museum!!!
Let's just say: dream come true. I mean, history right in front of you. It was the best thing ever. The museum is not really well organized and most of the artifacts are not being properly preserved, people were touching statuary, there aren't many plaques describing the pieces... but if you go with an Egyptologist, it's awesome.
We weren't aloud to take cameras inside otherwise this blog post would be very very long. But it was incredible!! I FINALLY saw all the King Tut stuff!!! He's so beautiful!! You know, his mask is worth more than the crown jewels of England? It's huge and intricate and solllllid gold. And his sarcophagi are SO cool. And his jewelry is gorgeous. Ah, I loved it so much.
It made me really mourn the fact that all the other royal tombs were robbed so early on because they must have been filled with even more beautiful things than Tut's he ruled less than 10 years, and doesn't have any monuments even!

We also saw 3,992,193,249,3943,923thousand pieces of art and statuary that we'd learned about in school, which was so awesome.
We saw the Narmer Palate!! It's a reeeally well preserved palette used for mixing paint or eye make-up and it's dated cerca 3000BC! We talk about it soo much in class because it has all your classic ancient Egyptian art on it, like the king smiting his enemy and captives and then on the other side there is Mesopotamian art. I don't expect anyone else to be excited about this buttttt, other favorites include: statues of Rahotep and his wife Nofret (the perfect example of First Intermediate art), Middle Kingdom funerary models of daily life (aka things I made for art class when I was 8), the only statues ever found of King Kufu, who built the great pyramid (its about three inches tall), statues of the very tired and hard working Senusret III and his sphinxes, the tomb inscription of Weni (which is a wonderful story about a pigmy from Nubia brought to entertain king Teti when he was little. We read the whole thing in class) and jewelry from princess' tombs from the first dynasties up until the Greeks. And most most most important and coolest thing ever: a piece of the Polermo Stone (the whole things is in Polermo, Italy. But the Polermo Stone is one of the most important artifacts of Ancient Egypt because it is a list of all the kings from the first to the fifth dynasty in order, their mothers and the Nile inundation levels. SO cool! <3)
So. I am really truly the happiest girl ever on the planet. I love this place soo much, I'm going to miss it way too much, but I'm also feeling really lucky to be going home in two weeks! I'm getting excited =)
Seeee you soooon Bakoland!!

Saturday, December 4, 2010

On a scale from one to pyramid, it's definitely been a Giza

1 Choir concert to preform
2 papers left to write
3 continents visited
4 friends who make a family
5 New Kingdom sites visited
6 looks like a seven in arabic - ٦
7 school days left
8 arabic words that can get us home in a taxi
10 Old Kingdom Egyptian pyramids visited
19 days left in Cairo




Things worth missing:
Arabic billboards and signs, call to prayer, girls in hijab, watching the sun rise, camels, cheap hookah, cheap things in general, "habibi", arab children (soo cute, and so well behaved!!), stuffed pigeon... (and felafel, kushary, fatir, baklava, etc), Sophie getting into dance battles, Alex skipping and/or sitting on the stoop, hanging out on roof-tops, seafood being called "viagra", Margaux chasing off cats, professors who never take roll, talking about people in front of them because they don't speak english, half built houses, practicing arabic with waiters and bartenders, seeing three people on one motorcycle, yahoo makoob, donkey carts, my arabic teacher- Shadya Fahmy, graphic warning labels on cigarette packs, playing "Mummy" at real monuments with Marg, babies in galabias, haggling, things actually being old, Aaron's mad dance skills, arabic soda cans, the White Desert, house music, feluccas, etc, etc...




Things not worth missing:
Cairo traffic, Cairo CATS, persistent flies, cover fees, cab drivers, sticking out, people smoking in my face, only having McD's and Subway options for food, living a gazillion miles away from everything, the jerks who run the buses, things being filthy, people "clicking" at us, being grabbed on the metro/ street, dealing with Visas, getting lost every day in the cab, squeezing 8 people into Miriam's or Ali's tiny cars, getting creepy facebook messages, Sharm el Sheikh, mean boabs, busses, sharing one shower with 6 strangers, arab movie theaters, Egyptians walking slowly all the time, the Egyptian money system and hearing "no you can't eat here because we can't break a 20$ bill" etc...

(Ok, I'll stop with the lists now because I could do this forever, and I really need to work on my paper...)

First things I will do in the states:
In this order- Hug my mom, squeeze the life out of Andrew, eat bacon, eat an avocado, sit in the front seat of a car, drive to Bakersfield, hug my dad, send a text message, lay on top of my dog, take a bath, make Alyssa, Kyle, Sara and company come to my house, put on a tank top and/or shorts, touch a bible, drink water from the tap, sleep for 5 days, go to Target, drive around looking at xmas lights, develop pictures, drive somewhere alone, see the rest of my family, have Christmas =D

Can't wait to see you Bako!!!



Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Ruh, ruh, random

No exciting updates from me today. But Sophie and Alex got an apartment for next semester, we're going to have dinner there tomorrow night to christen it! And monday night I went dancing at Cairo Jazz club with Margaux, Sophie, Alex, Aaron, Yaz, Miriam and some other girls. It was a jolllly good time. Other then that, I'm writing a term paper and studying for exams, and all that jazz. 
Oh but I skyped with my best friend Alyssa this morning, which made my entire life!! I'm excited to come home/ heart broken to leave. I can't wait to see everybody!



I started sketching again! It's nice to have some inspiration!

Oh and this is my new favorite quote:
“If the world were merely seductive, that would be easy. If it were merely challenging, that would be no problem. But I arise in the morning torn between a desire to improve the world and a desire to enjoy the world. This makes it hard to plan the day.” - E.B. White

Monday, November 29, 2010

Thanksgiving/Luxor weekend/Upper Egypt Adventures!!

The Thanksgiving sleepover 2009, I miss these girls so much

It's a strange thing being away from your country during a national holiday. I experienced this in Tanzania too when I had forgotten the date until I heard about red, white and blue fireworks lighting up the sky above the U.S. Embassy. 
Thanksgiving this year was just another day almost. Last year (and the year before) I spent the night before with my closest girlfriends from high school. We made it a big event, drew names for christmas gifts, ate a ton of food, sang together and talked until morning. Those nights I love so much. And then of course I found myself really missing my family. I still made a traditional hand turkey though. In the center is a extravagant stick figure drawing of my family (and Cleo), in the fingers some music notes, an airplane, an anch, a pyramid, a mosque, skype, a camera and a list of people. 
I find myself to be very very blessed this year =)


The day before Thanksgiving, the International Programs Office hosted a cute little turkey lunch for us. There were even a few decorations! No green bean casserole, but it's okay. Also.. there was an un-plucked feather left in my piece of turkey.. TIA.

We did have the day off though, hamdulilah! So for our short holiday, Margaux, Sophie, Alex and I decided to hop a train to Luxor and see what the rest of Egypt is all about. Simple enough!


Here's what I wrote in my notebook on the train home:
I'm sitting on a train following the Nile down from Luxor back to Cairo. Margaux, Sophie, Alex and I decided to take advantage of the long weekend and explore! 
The weekend has been awesome. We went to the Luxor Temple, Valley of the Queens, Hatchepsut's court, Valley of the Kings and the Karnak Temple. All in about a day and a half!
The weekend has also been insane. And I mean clinically. But hey, TIA. I feel pretty Egyptian now to say the least.
The four of us left from the Cairo train station at 11pm on wednesday. 
Because of an attack on the trains a few years ago, foreigners are no longer allowed to ride on the local trains, we have the only option of the $30 sleeper car (which had already left that night). I guess the powers that be want us all to be in one car so the Egyptians wont be in danger. Anyway. You don't have to buy tickets at the booth, you can just hop on, so the family and I avoided eye contact, tried to look inconspicuous (HAHA) and hopped the local train...
The local train was quite a treat. We rode first class, or it might have been second, I'm not sure. We saw third class and almost turned around to go back home. It was a real train car, standing room only... kind of looked like the holocaust... But don't worry, our car was... better. Most of the windows were either half open and broken to stay that way or just made of nicely half-shattered glass. We sat near the back where the door between cars kept flying open. The car seemed rickety on the track and it was too noisy from the wind and weird Egyptian ringtones to talk much... let alone sleep, it was too cold to sleep anyway though. 
- Here I should put a little disclaimer: I've never felt unsafe in Egypt. Ever. Only uncomfortable. Egyptian culture doesnt really have room for pick-pockets, and the men tend to be more talk then action, so you don't have to worry about people harming you. The train was sketchy, but the anxiety we felt was more about being uncomfortable then being scared.
We were the only women in the car, and of course the only foreigners, so we stuck out like sore thumbs. Every time I looked up I found a new pair of eyes watching me. There were also young men taking pictures of us, so most of the 16 hours, the girls and I sat curled up in a ball with our hoods covering our faces. The most warm and conservative thing to do and we learned quickly.
The train was filthy and freezing, I felt my immune system growing stronger by the minute. And I wont tell you about the "bathroom." 
We actually stayed in great spirits though. The four of us mesh so well. You learn a lot about yourself and about each other when you spend entire days with each other. The three of them are some of the best people I've ever met, I can't even tell you. I've found an awesome niche here. =)
So we made it. 16 hours and we were fine, dropped off right by our hostel in the warm Luxor daylight ready to start a new day. Not bad for 4 dollars!!
We freshened up at our hostel, which was really clean and cheap and had the most helpful guys at the front desk. A friend had referred it! It was perfect! 3 and a half bucks a night each =)
First we went to Luxor Temple! It was in walking distance from our hostel. We made it in time for sunset and listened to call to prayer as we watched the sun sink behind the huge statues of a New Kingdom pharaoh.
Around the back as the sun was setting
The front!
(This Obelisk has a twin, but some dumb Egyptian president
gave it as a present to France in exchange for a clock...)

I believe this is a Rameses but I'm not sure. The cone-shaped things
on the ground in between them is the crown for Upper Egypt 
Fun fact!: The Anch, the Egyptian symbol for life, is actually
a representation of Egypt! The circle is the delta, the middle is the Nile
 and the cross section represents the Eastern and Western deserts!
 (No it is not a Christian symbol.. everyone, go tell your friends) Also,
below it is a cartouche with the name of the king =) the end!


The Luxor Temple is a great collection of New Kingdom monuments. Just like Karnak, it has been built upon and built upon. Most of what is seen is attributed to Rameses II (the 11 Rameses liked to put their names on things that aren't theirs). Hatchepsut and Tutmoses II were the first to build at Luxor though and can be accredited to the first chapels and the pylons. Rameses II contributed the gorgeous obelisk and the entrance causeway. And during the Roman era, Alexander set up government in the fortress.

looking very fresh, rested and clean!
We ended that leg of the trip at a cafe down the street before realizing "Oh my gosh you guys, it's Thanksgiving!!" So for Thanksgiving 2010, my new little family and I ate McDonalds by the Nile in Upper Egypt. It was almost traditional! American food and the closest thing to family as you can get 6,000 miles away from home. We went around the table saying what we were thankful for this year (each other!) and talking about our families and home. It was really nice.
Then, exhausted and grimy, we headed to the most comfortable beds in all of Egypt.

The next morning we woke up early for a guided tour after we had breakfast on the roof. The hostel set up the whole thing. Transportation and an Egyptologist to guide us, all included for something in the area of 25 dollars. It was awesome! Our guide, Aladdin, was dorky and excited and overly educated on the subjects having studied in Egypt, England and Maryland. He also reads and writes hieroglyphics, go figure. Our group was cool too, we had some English, Danish, Filipino and Kiwis!
Our first stop was the Colossi of Memnon, two gigantic statues of Amenhotep III, but called Memnon after the war hero slain by Achilles during the Trojan War who ruled Ethiopia... yeah I don't get it either... 



Our next stop was the Valley of the Queens where we saw the tomb of Queen Titi, primary wife of a Rameses and the tomb of her son who died at age 7. Inside the prince's tomb is a skeleton of a miscarried baby (this is why you don't mary your brother). Both tombs are in really good condition, still with brilliant brilliant colors. It almost looked fresh! I especially loved the prince's tomb, on the walls were paintings of his father introducing him to all the gods. It was really nice. 

(No pictures allowed in the valleys)

Next we went to Hatchepsut's court, which was built solely for her mummification. The entire West bank of the Nile in the Luxor area is considered the city of the dead, so it's all funerary complexes. The East bank (Luxor and Karnak for example) is all cult temples and worship areas. 
I reaaaaally like Hatchepsut. She was the acting regent for Tutmoses III in the beginning of his reign when he was too young to usurp his father's throne. Hatchepsut was his aunt and step-mother. She stole the throne when her father died and called herself "King" of Egypt. None of this queen nonsense, she meant business. She had much more and much grander building projects then her ancestors, and she was proud of it no doubt. Unfortunately there are not many pictures of her in the temple, when Tutmoses III took the throne he removed them all. It still is an incredible complex though. A lot of it is reconstructed because there was an earth quake, but it's mostly the floors and support beams. There are still original sculptures lining the causeways and original wall art. One of my favorite things was a depiction of the army, some of the soldiers are carrying surf boards!!!
Team TINA takes Hatchepsut's court! 
Surfin' safari!!

What would have been a mural of Hatchepsut making an offering to Amun

After Hatchepsut we went to the Valley of the Kings (again, no pictures unfortunately). 
I was so ecstatically happy inside the valley!! The historical significance alone is too much to wrap your head around. Valley of the Kings and reading about Carter's excavation of King Tut's tomb was what first sparked my interest in Egypt when I was in elementary school. It's one of Egypt's most well-known areas (thanks Tut!) It was just incredible to be there.
We went into three tombs there, two of them belonging to one Rameses or another. And we saw the entrance of King Tut's tomb, hidden under the tomb of Neferteri (one of only two queens buried there). She saved Tut! The only reason he was never robbed was because the thieves got their fill in Neferteri's tomb and stopped looking. Tut's tomb is now empty though and spread all over the France, Italy, Cairo and the states. 
There's a greek king list that names 200 kings buried in the valley, so there are still over 100 just waiting to be found somewhere in there! Help me find them?

I'm not sure how the four of us survived the morning considering how exhausted we were, but it turned out to be an awesome day. And after some Egyptian food and a great view of Luxor, we hopped a minibus to Karnak, explored the grounds and watched the sunset there. (Team TINA has a thing for sunsets I think. And we LOVE call to prayer). 
Karnak's entrance
Taken from the very back of the complex
(Did you know there are only 6 obelisks in Egypt!!!
 And there are 9 in Rome, and 1 in Turkey and 1 in France??!!

Karnak is gorgeous! It's huuuuuge, for one thing. And has been worked on by 30 different pharaohs! Rulers built in, on, around it from the Middle Kingdom until the Roman era when it was called Thebes. (You know Thebes, that's where Hercules goes to fight his first monster in the Disney version, hahaa)
My favorite thing in the complex is on the seventh pylon of the Temple of Amun where there's a huge depiction of Tutmoses III smiting a group of foreigners. I like it so much because it's what I've studied in class. He's in the classic Old Kingdom pose even though he is from the New Kingdom! 
Its just so cool to see these things in real life. Yeah, you learn about them in school, but in class it doesn't seem real. It's just some huge building I'll never get a chance to see... It all changes when it's in front of your face!


After that we had a delicious fancy Egyptian meal and retired early again. Then, we woke up bright and early, inhaled some breakfast and ran to the train station to head home.
The second train ride was 100,000,000,000 times better than the last, but no less eventful. 
We started in second class, a 10 dollar ticket (still not the train foreigners are allowed on, but that's only a problem at the ticket office, they don't care when you're actually on the train).
Well, because we bought tickets on the train itself, we had no seat numbers, so we kept getting kicked around. The train was really full that day. We started in second and slept for a while before someone came for my seat and from for the next 8 hours or so we bounced around. From a comfy chair in first class my journal reads "Insha'Allah this can be our spot for a while, we have two seats and we're switching around. Margaux is sitting on a newspaper on the floor right now. But its ok. This train only takes 10 hours. Insha'Allah." Hahaha.
Before that we had been standing in between cars on the area where they hook together. That was kind of fun. Then we sat for a while near the "bar" area where the guys were heating up tea.
After that, we were moved again, but managed to stay in first class. Margaux and I shared a chair, I would just sit on the arm rest and drape my legs over her. There was a hilarious group of football player sized Egyptian guys doing the same thing, it was pretty entertaining. And I slept! And read a book! And did homework! So, it was still productive!
arabic homework!
All in all, I had an amazing weekend. I feel really really blessed to have made such great friends here. I don't feel like I could have made that trip with very many other people. I've been so blessed. 

Baaa, ram, ewe! Baa, ram, ewe!


Oh, and I'll never complain about a 2 hour drive over the Grapevine again!! =P


Loooooove, 
 Kj