by Luna

by Luna

Luna

Luna

Blog Intro

Hello, I'm Luna, and I'd like to welcome you to "Kisses from Kairo,"* my blog about living and working as an American belly dancer in Cairo.

Life in Cairo isn't easy for dancers, foreigners, women, or even Egyptians. It is, however, always exciting. That’s why after living here for seven years, I've decided to share my experiences with the world. From being contracted at the Semiramis Hotel to almost being deported, not a day has gone by without something odd or magical happening. I will therefore fill these pages with bits of my history in Cairo—my experiences, successes, mistakes, and observations. Admittedly, my time here has been rather unique, so I want to stress that while everything I write is true, my experiences do not necessarily reflect the lives of other dancers.

In addition to my life as a belly dancer, I will write about developments in costuming, performances, festivals, and, of course, the dance itself. I will also make frequent references to Egyptian culture. I should note that I have a love/hate relationship with Egypt. If I make any criticisms about the country, please keep in mind that I do so with the utmost love, respect, and most of all, honesty. Egypt has become my home, so I want to avoid romanticizing and apologizing for social maladies, as most foreigners tend to do. Nothing could be more misguided, patronizing, or insulting.

I hope you find this blog informative, insightful and entertaining, and that we can make this as interactive as possible. That means I'd love to hear from you. Send me your comments, questions, complaints, suggestions, pics, doctoral dissertations, money, etc., and I will get back to you. Promise. :)~



My Videos

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Condomonium

Condomonium

...yes, you read that correctly :) 

 

That Little Blue “Piece of Paper”

Here’s some heartfelt advice from your resident foreign belly dancer living in Egypt. Never carry condoms on you or anywhere near you while traveling in Egypt. Never. Same goes for tampons.  Most Egyptians don’t know what they are, and when their curiosity gets the better of them, things can get a bit… uncomfortable.

It just so happened that while I was returning to Cairo one night after a show in the Red Sea area, the security check-point officers decided they would stop our car and search our bags. The three guys who were with me—the DJ, the whirling dervish, and the driver—stepped out of the car for the officers to frisk them. I, being the only woman, was ordered to stay inside until the search was over. As I sat there, I could feel the car bounce as the officers opened the trunk and rummaged through our bags. And then, one by one, the guys climbed back into the vehicle, each with a look of embarrassed humiliation on his face. 

“What’s wrong? Did the officers find anything they weren’t supposed to?” I asked them as we drove away. “I’m not sure,” Mahmoud, the 20-old DJ replied. “They took something from your bag.” “What? They stole something? My jewelry?” I asked.  “No, they took a little blue piece of paper with writing on it,” he said. “Huh? What little blue piece of paper?” I wondered if it was a supermarket receipt. But why would they take that? “I don’t know what it was,” Mahmoud said, “but the officer said it was very bad and that he could have arrested us” After thinking about it for a while, I realized that the little blue piece of “paper” Mahmoud was referring to was a condom!

Now, I had no recollection whatsoever of any condoms in my belly dance suitcase (it’s not like I need them for work or anything!), nor was I about to explain to three young Egyptian men what that little blue “piece of paper” was. Instead, I remained silent for the rest of the two-hour ride, musing over what those officers must have thought when they found that condom in a car that contained three Egyptian males and one foreign female wearing way too much makeup. So that’s why Mahmoud said the officers contemplated arresting us…they probably thought I was a prostitute and that the guys were my customers. Typical. 

“So why did they let us go?” I asked Mahmoud at the end of the trip. “Because you’re American,” he answered. “What does that mean?” I asked. “The officers were ready to arrest us until I told them you are American. In Egypt, Americans are above the law.” “That’s not really true,” I rebutted, admittedly only half convinced. Mahmoud went on explaining how Egyptian citizens and authorities are afraid of messing with Americans and generally avoid upsetting them at all costs. Maybe we have former President Bush to thank for that?

Well then, I can’t argue with that now, can I?  

 

Saved by the Cockroaches

It’s no easier with tampons. Now these I KNOW I placed in my belly dance bag because they come in handy every now and then. The problem is that most Egyptian women don’t know what tampons are, let alone use them. In Egypt (and the Muslim world in general), tampons are taboo. This is due to the misconception that tampons take away virginity, an idea perpetrated by the mainstream macho mentality (MMM) endemic in this part of the world. But wait. It gets worse. MMM divides women who are not virgins into three categories: virgins, wives, and whores. Well, I’m neither a wife nor a virgin, so I guess that makes me…

…one very embarrassed foreigner when the check-point officer searching my bag on a different occasion pulls out a tampon and tries to open it out of curiosity! COULD. my life. get any worse right now? It’s not enough that I’m standing in front of Egyptian authorities with no passport, no working papers, tons of makeup and glittered lips. Now this man is going to open up my tampon right in front of me.  

Beads of sweat rolled down my reddened face as the officer twiddled with the yet unopened tampon. How was I going to explain tampons to him? Lipstick? Extra large Q-tip? Pen with invisible ink?

And then, just as he was about to open it, a horde of flying cockroaches invaded the makeshift check-point kiosk and landed all over us. No. lie. It was a scene straight out of Exodus. The fact that it happened in Egypt was not lost on me.

As it happened, my crazed reaction to the roaches (screaming, jumping, and slapping everything around me including one of the officers), completely diverted the officers’ attention from the tampons. None of this was calculated, mind you. I really do have a phobia of cockroaches. My phobia is so bad I moved out of my first apartment in Cairo on account of seeing one roach in the bathroom. One! And that was only after a week of living in the apartment.

It's funny. As dysfunctional as Egypt is, things have a way of working out. If it weren’t for those roaches, that officer would have opened the tampon and proceeded to interrogate me about it. Instead, he was amused by my reaction to the roaches, as well to my screaming something like “Oh my God! I’m going to die! Get me away from these f***n cockroaches” in Arabic. The officer had a good laugh. He said he did not believe I was American. I swore to him that I was, but that I did not have my passport with me to prove it (or any other form of ID, which was stupid of me). 

In the end, the roaches scattered, the officer and I made nice, and he let me be on my way. You would think this experience would teach me to take the tampons out of my belly dance bag. But no. I have to make the same mistake over and over again. Until…

 

...Thieves Steal my Money AND Open Up my Tampons!

This is really pathetic, but I have had money stolen from my belly dance bag on three different occasions while performing in Cairo. It is my fault for leaving the money in there. But the funny part is that every time my money gets stolen, I find one of my tampons opened up! It never fails.

This begs all sorts of questions. First, why would the thief want to leave any indication that my bag had been tampered with? Second, was it really that important that he satisfy his curiosity by opening a tampon rather than just taking the money and leaving? Third, once he opened the tampon and still had no clue what it was, why didn’t he just throw it out so I wouldn’t figure out that someone went through my bag? 

I don’t have the answer to any of these questions, but I can say that experiences such as these shed light on the extent to which Egyptians are generally un(der)informed about most things sexual. My gut tells me this is not a good thing, but I’m not going to say anything about that. 

4 comments:

  1. I also hate cockroaches with a passion, and would very likely acted the same way as you did ... well I have to admit it. I did in my own home in Indonesia - having a shower and no lie a 2 to 2.5" fat thing crawled out of the plug hole and joined me in my shower well I leaped out of the shower screaming blue murder - hubby came running he truly thought I was being murdered and ran in with a truncheon we kept under the bed. He the horrible man burst out laughing, I was so unimpressed, that wasn't the last encounter with the creepy crawlies so dancing as if on hot coals and screaming happened several times a year.

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  2. Okay wait let me get this straight, you have tampons, but its frowned apon (almost illegal?)? are you buying them or having them sent out of state, or are they being provided for American tourists? So if its frowned upon carrying, and silly MMM people are curiose, would it only be advisable to carry the tampon when you know you are going to have/having your period? Have you thought of getting a little cigar case, and throwing the tampon in?

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  3. Tampons aren't illegal. The people who know about them frown upon them. But most people don't know what they are. Of course I hide mine (I stock up on them when I go to the States), but in the event of a search, everything will be found

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  4. well, some dont know about Tampons and i was one of them, a friend who cant speak arabic needed some and she had no other clue than to ask for my help as it was her first time in Egypt and after she told me i got that we need a third party advice :)))) in a previuos post u talked about being in Rome and act like a Roman, try to include the matter of Tampons as a Roman's bussiness :)
    Rgrds,
    Tamer

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