AGA KHAN AND
MADAME MUBARAK INAUGURATE CAIRO'S AL-AZHAR PARK
The Park as a Catalyst for Social,
Economic and Cultural Renewal
Cairo, Egypt, 25th March
2005 - Her Excellency Madame Suzanne Mubarak today
inaugurated the 30-hectare (74-acre) Al Azhar Park in
the presence of His Highness the Aga Khan, Imam
(spiritual leader) of the Ismaili Muslims. The Al-Azhar
Park Project is a catalyst for social, economic and
cultural renewal and improvement and will have far
reaching consequences for the 200,000 residents of the
neighbouring Darb al-Ahmar district.
The 500-year-old accumulation of fill
and debris has been transformed into much-needed leisure
and recreational space while functioning as a "green
lung" for Cairo - a city with a population of 17 million
and one of the lowest ratios of green space to urban
population in the world - an area the size of a
footprint per inhabitant, according to one estimate.
The US$ 30 million project was
envisaged over 20 years ago and has since developed into
a catalyst for economic development, becoming a case
study for creative solutions to a spectrum of challenges
facing historic cities, including ecological
rehabilitation.
The construction of the park and the
restoration of cultural monuments are meant to be
catalysts for social and economic development and the
overall improvement of the quality of life in the
district. At the same time, the park offers a new
vantage point with spectacular views of Historic Cairo's
countless architectural treasures, which will no doubt
draw foreign tourists and the inhabitants of greater
Cairo alike to the once-neglected area. Park entry fees
range from 1-6 EGP. Residents of neighbouring Darb
al-Ahmar and Gamaliya districts will benefit from
reduced rates.
"A fundamental lesson, which reinforced
our experience in other countries, is that
public-private partnerships can be effective mechanisms
for enhancing the value of underused, unappreciated or
even unknown social, cultural and economic assets," said
the Aga Khan in his address at the inauguration
ceremony. He underlined that the project would not have
been successful without effective partnerships with a
number of international, national and local NGOs and
institutions such as the Swiss Egyptian Development
Fund, the Ford Foundation, the World Monuments Fund, the
French Institute of Archaeology, the city of Stuttgart
and the newest donor, the Social Development Fund.
Although it started as a project to
design and construct a park, the project took on
additional elements such as the excavation and extensive
restoration of the adjoining 12th century Ayyubid wall
and the rehabilitation of important monuments and
landmark buildings in the neighbouring Historic City. It
also encompasses an extensive social development
programme, including apprenticeship arrangements,
housing rehabilitation, micro-credit and health care
facilities. The project presented several challenges
such as the highly saline soils and the incorporation in
the park of three large fresh water reservoirs for the
city of Cairo, each 80 metres in diameter and 14 metres
deep. The horticultural challenges were also formidable.
After the creation of specialist nurseries to identify
and grow the best plants and trees for the soil, terrain
and climate, over two million plants and trees were
propagated. Over 655,000 have now been planted in the
park. In addition, in order to restore the 12th century
Ayyubid wall, which had been buried up to its
crenellated battlements, it proved necessary to excavate
to a depth of 15 metres.
Three landmark buildings, the 14th
Century Umm Sultan Shaban Mosque, the Khayrbek complex
(encompassing a 13th century palace, a mosque and an
Ottoman house), and the Darb Shoughlan School are also
being restored. Local housing rehabilitation activities
undertaken by the Aga Khan Trust for Culture are
expected to average 50 houses per year until 2007. A
housing credit scheme is aiding individuals in the
rehabilitation of their own houses.
"Another lesson here was the important
role that microfinance could play in helping residents
of this community lift themselves beyond subsistence,
enabling them to grow businesses and upgrade the quality
of their living conditions," explained the Aga Khan. In
the low-income neighbourhood of Darb al-Ahmar, which is
adjacent to the park, micro-credit loans have enabled
residents to open small businesses such as carpentry
shops and a drycleaner. In addition, job training and
employment opportunities are being offered in different
sectors such as shoemaking, furniture manufacturing and
tourist goods production. Apprenticeships are available
for automobile electronics, mobile telephones,
computers, masonry, carpentry and office skills.
Hundreds of young men and women in Darb al-Ahmar have
found work in the park, in horticulture and on project
teams restoring the Ayyubid wall.
As with all its undertakings, the
Trust's approach has been to work with local residents
to identify priorities and then take practical steps to
address these needs. Community priorities, including
restoration of houses, health, education, solid waste
disposal, job training and jobs, are now being
addressed.
"In our excavations and our historical
investigations, I constantly have been reminded that we
were touching the very foundations of my ancestors, the
Fatimids, and the pluralistic history and intellectual
profile of this city and this country to which they
contributed so profoundly," ended the Aga Khan. "I am
very humbled by the opportunity to return to Cairo,
founded over a thousand years ago by the Fatimid Caliph
Al-Muiz, to build on that history. Thirty-five
generations later, through the work done here by my
institutions, it is my prayer that this park will be a
continuing contribution to the people of this great
city."
For further information, please
contact:
Eman Wahby Aga Khan Cultural
Services- Egypt Tel: +202 510 3868/ 510 7378 Fax:
+202 512 1054
Sam Pickens Information
Officer Aga Khan Development Network 1-3 Avenue de
la Paix 1202 Geneva Switzerland Tel: +41 22 909
7277 Mobile: 078 661 8714 Fax: +41 22 909
7291 Email: info@akdn.org
Department of Public
Affairs Secretariat of His Highness the Aga
Khan Aiglemont 60270
Gouvieux France Telephone:
+33.3.44.58.40.0 Fax: +33.3.44.58.42.79 E-mail: information@aiglemont.org Website:
www.akdn.org
NOTES
The Aga Khan Trust
for Culture focuses on the physical, social, cultural
and economic revitalisation of communities in the Muslim
world. It includes the Aga Khan Award for Architecture,
the Historic Cities Support Programme, the Music
Initiative in Central Asia, the Humanities Project, the
on-line resource ArchNet, the Museum Projects and the
Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture at Harvard
University and the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology.
The Aga Khan Trust for Culture is a
part of the Aga Khan Development Network, a group of
private, non-denominational development agencies and
institutions that seek to empower communities and
individuals, often in disadvantaged circumstances, to
improve living conditions and opportunities in specific
regions of Africa and Asia. Active in over 30 countries,
the Network's underlying impulse is the ethic of
compassion for the vulnerable in society and its
agencies and institutions work for the common good of
all citizens, regardless of origin, gender or religion.
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