EGYPTIAN REVOLT: ORDINARY PEOPLE DEMANDING ORDINARY FREEDOM
Don't be misled by the grand scale and vast legacy of Egypt's legendary leaders -- from Ramses to Cleopatra to Mehmet Ali. The same nameless Egyptians calling for freedom today have always been the heart of this ancient society.
Walk through the Museum of Egyptian antiquities – the one in Cairo’s Tahrir 
Square that was briefly attacked during the recent Egyptian unrest – and you can 
be overwhelmed. Room after room is filled with ceiling-high shelves jammed with 
amulets, jars, effigies, statues, and hundreds of thousands more pharaonic-era 
pieces.
Egypt is a time tunnel of human habitation. In the space of a few miles you can 
be transported from a swank, 21st-century hotel to a dusty Mameluke-era mosque 
to a 5,000-year-old temple to the sun god. Humans have lived on the narrow 
ribbon of green that the Nile bisects since before hieroglyphics were around to 
tell their story.
It is tempting to think of Egypt as the land of Akhenaten, Cleopatra, 
Tutankhamen, Mehemet Ali, and Napoleon. More remarkable than the treasures and 
legends they left behind, however, is the continuity of Egyptian society, the 
patience and organization that nameless generations of Egyptians needed to 
apportion the Nile’s water and live side by side on its banks.
Nowhere is that millenniums-old social compact more evident than at Tahrir 
Square, the vast open space at the center of downtown Cairo that most days teems 
with business people, students, peasants in simple galabias, women in smart 
dresses, others camouflaged in black abayas, buses overflowing with passengers, 
trams, vans, sparkling Mercedes, banged-up clunkers, donkey carts, and bicycles 
laden with two or more riders – an amiable chaos softened by an ever-present 
aerosol of desert sand.
A thousand small disputes and as many spontaneous smiles erupt every minute in 
Tahrir Square. Horns honk in consternation. Friends walk hand in hand. The 
overwhelming feeling is of a great mass of humanity living and letting live.
The Egyptian novelist Naguib Mahfouz, who made his way to the square every 
morning for breakfast, once was asked why he didn’t have heroes in his writing. 
Because he believed in the dignity of ordinary Egyptians, he said. All they 
wanted, he believed, was freedom – “Freedom from colonization, freedom from the 
absolute rule of a king, and basic human freedom in the context of society and 
the family.”
Tahrir means freedom. To the Nobel laureate, freedom wasn’t individuals 
rocketing off on solo journeys of self-discovery. Freedom came with society and 
family, continuity and context. For a closer look at the epochal struggle for 
freedom in Egypt and beyond.
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