Two Major Landmarks Restored in Historic Cairo
His Highness
the Aga Khan's Speech
For related information, please see "Azhar
Park"
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His
Highness the Aga Khan greeting restoration
technicians at the Tarabay mausoleum. |
Cairo,
26 October 2007 – In a ceremony here
today, His Highness the Aga Khan, His Excellency
Farouk Hosni, Egypt’s Minister of Culture,
and His Excellency Dr. Abdel Azim Wazir, the Governor
of Cairo, inaugurated the restoration and revitalisation
of two historic complexes in the city’s Darb
al-Ahmar district.
The restoration of the fourteenth century Umm al
Sultan Shabaan mosque and the Khayrebek complex,
which encompasses a 13th century palace, a mosque
and an Ottoman house, represent major steps in the
revitalisation of Cairo’s Islamic City.
Speaking at the ceremony inaugurating the restored
sites, the Aga Khan, who is spiritual leader of
the world’s Shia Ismaili community, said the
restoration work has helped bridge Cairo’s
present with the era of its Fatimid Ismaili founders
1000 years ago.
“I have found that this endeavour has provided
for me, personally, a profound sense of connection
with my own ancestors, the Fatimid Caliphs, who
founded Cairo and who laid its physical and cultural
foundations 1000 years ago,” he said.
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His
Highness the Aga Khan, H.E. Farouk Hosni,
Egypt’s Minister of Culture, and H.E.
Dr. Abdel Azim Wazir, the Governor of Cairo,
marked the completion of the restoration of
the fourteenth century Umm al Sultan Shabaan
mosque and the Khayrebek complex
on 26 October 2007. |
The
Aga Khan noted that the restoration work was a unique
joint effort of institutions and people from across
the world.
“It has involved people whose homes are thousands
of miles away from Cairo – and it has also
involved, most profoundly, the people of this neighbourhood,
those who live and work only minutes away, in the
very shadows of these buildings,” he said.
Restoration was undertaken by the Aga Khan Trust
for Culture in collaboration with the Supreme Council
of Antiquities as part of a broad programme encompassing
restoration projects, housing rehabilitation, microfinance
initiatives, training and apprenticeships. Hundreds
of young men and women in Darb Al Ahmar have been
trained in restoration techniques and have found
work on the restoration projects, in Al-Azhar park
and on project teams restoring 1.5 kilometres of
the twelfth century Ayyubid wall which runs between
the park and Darb al-Ahmar.
The Aga Khan said the restoration work on the area’s
historic buildings will be expanded to include other
jewels of Islamic cultural heritage. But he also
noted that the restoration work cannot be complete
without looking after the environmental needs of
the local residents.
“I cannot see how this enormous endeavour,
which still lies ahead, could be considered complete
without serious attention being given to the area’s
ongoing infrastructure, such as the road surfaces,
the sewage disposal system, the distribution of
water and electricity, the signage and public lighting,”
he said.
Hundreds of local houses -- many structurally damaged
by earthquakes or otherwise in disrepair -- have
been renovated and upgraded with water and sanitation
facilities and returned to their owners. A housing
credit scheme is aiding private individuals in the
rehabilitation of their own houses.
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His
Highness the Aga Khan speaking at the ceremony
marking the completion of the restoration
of the fourteenth century Umm al Sultan Shabaan
mosque and the Khayrebek complex on 26 October
2007. |
The
construction of the park and the restoration of
cultural monuments are seen as catalysts for social
and economic development and the overall improvement
of the quality of life in the district.
In July of this year, the Governorate of Cairo and
the Aga Khan Trust for Culture signed an historic
Public-Private Partnership (PPP) agreement linking
Al-Azhar Park, a future “Urban Plaza”
project at the northern end of the Park, and ongoing
work by the Aga Khan Trust for Culture in Darb al-Ahmar.
The “Urban Plaza” project will be a
mixed-use centre with underground car parking, shops
and cultural facilities, including the Museum of
Historic Cairo, which is being built by the Aga
Khan Trust for Culture in cooperation with the Supreme
Council of Antiquities of Egypt.
The Museum will house some of the great wealth of
art and artefacts of Cairo’s Islamic heritage
that are not currently on display. To be built adjacent
to the “Urban Plaza,” the Museum will
give visitors insight into the urban, cultural and
architectural history of the heart of Cairo.
To conserve and restore all the artefacts and artworks
which will be shown in the museum, the Trust has
set up a major conservation laboratory, which is
training young technicians in this field. It is
also being used to restore important art and architectural
elements for the Cairo Museum of Islamic Art, due
to open in 2007.
For more information:
Sam
Pickens
Aga Khan Development Network
P.O. Box 2049
1211 Geneva 2
Switzerland
Tel: (+41 22) 909 7277
Fax: (+41 22) 909 7292
E-mail: sam.pickens@akdn.org
Website: http://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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