The City of the Dead: A History of Cairo's Cemetery Communities
By (Author) Jeffrey Nedoroscik
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
23rd September 1997
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
African history
Urban communities
Social and cultural history
Biography: historical, political and military
962.16
Hardback
152
Home to some of the most impressive monuments of the Islamic world, Cairo's City of the Dead is also home to hundreds of thousands of Egypt's urban poor. This book presents a comprehensive look at this unique informal community, and includes biographies of some of the residents of the cemeteries. This book presents a comprehensive look at one of the most unusual informal communities in the world. The City of the Dead is a group of vast Islamic cemeteries that have been the primary burial grounds for the city of Cairo for 1200 years. Within its borders are some of the most impressive monuments of the Islamic world. The City of the Dead, however, is also home to the living, as it was always an active part of the community of Cairo. Qu'ran reciters and tombkeepers have always made their homes among the graves. The cemeteries have also been a popular destination for Islamic pilgrims seeking spiritual blessing, as well as thieves and runaways seeking refuge from the law. In more modern times, given the housing crisis that has plagued Cairo in the 20th century, the cemeteries have become the primary source of shelter for hundreds of thousands of otherwise homeless Egyptians. This community of people includes both rural migrants to Cairo and more established city dwellers. This book takes an in-depth look at these individuals' lives and introduces the reader to the life stories of some residents. The future of this unique community is also explored. An important work for students, scholars, and researchers of Egypt and the Islamic world.
"A first-hand and heartfelt account of life in Cairo's City of the Dead. Nedoroscik sympathetically describes the vibrant and creative spirit demonstrated daily by poor cemetery dwellers whose humble communities form one of Cairo's most distinct yet least well understood neighborhoods."-Selma Botman Vice President for Academic Affairs, University of Massachusetts
"A sensitive and moving account of life in Cairo's cemetery communities by an outsider who has gained the trust and friendship of their residents. Skillfully combining personal stories with more general historical, political, and sociological analysis, Jeffrey Nedoroscik has presented residents of the City of the Dead, not merely as victims of outside forces, but as people whose everyday struggles express human aspirations as well as disappointments. His inclusion of women's stories gives us a rare glimpse of the complexity of gender relations and the important contributions that women and children make to the family economy. Of particular interest to those concerned with the political and economic development of the region, this book is written in a style which is sure to engage a broader audience as well."-J. Ann Tickner School of International Relations, University of Southern California
JEFFREY A. NEDOROSCIK is Deputy Executive Officer for the United States Agency for International Development's Mission to Rwanda. He studied the City of the Dead as a Thomas J. Watson Fellow.