Egypt's SCZONE posts EGP 6.25 bln revenue in FY2025/26    Egypt's Cabinet approves plan to increase Arab Monetary Fund's capital    Egypt launches joint venture to expand rooftop solar operations nationwide    Housing Minister reviews progress at alternative site for Samla, Alam Al-Roum    FRA launches first register for tech-based risk assessment firms in non-banking finance    Egypt's Health Ministry, Philips to study local manufacturing of CT scan machines    African World Heritage Fund registers four new sites as Egypt hosts board meetings    Turkish firm Eroglu Moda Tekstil to invest $5.6m in Egypt garment factory    Maduro faces New York court as world leaders demand explanation and Trump threatens strikes    Egypt, Saudi Arabia reaffirm ties, pledge coordination on regional crises    Al-Sisi pledges full support for UN desertification chief in Cairo meeting    Al-Sisi highlights Egypt's sporting readiness during 2026 World Cup trophy tour    Egypt opens Braille-accessible library in Cairo under presidential directive    Abdelatty urges calm in Yemen in high-level calls with Turkey, Pakistan, Gulf states    Madbouly highlights "love and closeness" between Egyptians during Christmas visit    Egypt confirms safety of citizens in Venezuela after US strikes, capture of Maduro    US forces capture Maduro in "Midnight Hammer" raid; Trump pledges US governance of Venezuela    From Niche to National Asset: Inside the Egyptian Golf Federation's Institutional Rebirth    5th-century BC industrial hub, Roman burials discovered in Egypt's West Delta    Egyptian-Italian team uncovers ancient workshops, Roman cemetery in Western Nile Delta    Egypt, Viatris sign MoU to expand presidential mental health initiative    Egypt's PM reviews rollout of second phase of universal health insurance scheme    Egypt sends medical convoy, supplies to Sudan to support healthcare sector    Egypt sends 15th urgent aid convoy to Gaza in cooperation with Catholic Relief Services    Al-Sisi: Egypt seeks binding Nile agreement with Ethiopia    Egyptian-built dam in Tanzania is model for Nile cooperation, says Foreign Minister    Al-Sisi affirms support for Sudan's sovereignty and calls for accountability over conflict crimes    Egyptian Golf Federation appoints Stuart Clayton as technical director    4th Egyptian Women Summit kicks off with focus on STEM, AI    UNESCO adds Egyptian Koshari to intangible cultural heritage list    Egypt recovers two ancient artefacts from Belgium    Egypt warns of erratic Ethiopian dam operations after sharp swings in Blue Nile flows    Sisi expands national support fund to include diplomats who died on duty    Egypt's PM reviews efforts to remove Nile River encroachments    Egypt resolves dispute between top African sports bodies ahead of 2027 African Games    Germany among EU's priciest labour markets – official data    Russia says it's in sync with US, China, Pakistan on Taliban    It's a bit frustrating to draw at home: Real Madrid keeper after Villarreal game    Shoukry reviews with Guterres Egypt's efforts to achieve SDGs, promote human rights    Sudan says countries must cooperate on vaccines    Johnson & Johnson: Second shot boosts antibodies and protection against COVID-19    Egypt to tax bloggers, YouTubers    Egypt's FM asserts importance of stability in Libya, holding elections as scheduled    We mustn't lose touch: Muller after Bayern win in Bundesliga    Egypt records 36 new deaths from Covid-19, highest since mid June    Egypt sells $3 bln US-dollar dominated eurobonds    Gamal Hanafy's ceramic exhibition at Gezira Arts Centre is a must go    Italian Institute Director Davide Scalmani presents activities of the Cairo Institute for ITALIANA.IT platform    







Thank you for reporting!
This image will be automatically disabled when it gets reported by several people.



Hen picked: Salwa Bakr''s Egyptian fables
Published in Almasry Alyoum on 30 - 08 - 2010

Ramadan is a time of fasting, self-restraint, and good deeds. It is also an occasion for storytelling, either in celebration of the nightly feast or as a way to pass the time. In the spirit of the long days and longer nights of Ramadan, Al-Masry Al-Youm shares stories and tips for a good month in a new series called “Alf Leila We Leila: Stories for Ramadan Through the Ages.” Throughout the holy month, we will post original pieces from the Al-Masry Al-Youm staff on everything from how to host a perfect iftar to reports of Ramadan abroad, alongside Arabic literature from Sheherazade to Mahfouz.
Below, Al-Masry Al-Youm discusses Salwa Bakr's work, particularly her story The Rooster's Egg: A Fable of Ancient Thebes.
The Egyptian novelist and short story writer Salwa Bakr was born in Cairo in 1949, where she still lives today with her husband and two children. Her first collection of stories, Zinat fi Janasat ar-Ra'is (Zinat at the President's Funeral) was self-published in 1985, four years before Bakr was arrested for supporting the Egyptian labor movement.
Bakr has worked as a literary and film critic, but she is most celebrated for her fiction. Her novel The Golden Chariot (AUC Press 208) has been compared to Alf Leila We Leila for its use of “circular and digressive narrative techniques... to explore the lives and histories of inmates in a women's prison in Egypt.”
Bakr's characters are often defined by their limitations. Take Usama, a father and husband trying to improve his life through small adjustments and schemes while pondering his life's great, dismissed dreams, created by Bakr in “Rabbits” (translated by Samia Mehrez and excerpted in The Literary Atlas of Cairo).
In the scene, Usama carries a bag with two rabbits which, he feels, holds the key to broadening his future in a way that previous sacrifices--forgoing daily tea so that his daughter can have the fruits she loves--did, but only to a small degree. Bakr manages to imbue Usama with a credible but fragile hope, like an eggshell around the man.
Another of Bakr's stories, The Rooster's Egg: A Fable of Ancient Thebes, (translated by Chip Rosetti and published in full on Words Without Borders), tells a story of vanity, power, and the whims of the dominant class through the eyes of a rooster and his wife, the dutiful hen, who one day, thinking “for a long time about the status of the race of chickens” convinces her preening husband to appeal to the high priest at the Temple of Amun in Thebes for divine status.
The rooster, god of the the hen house, needs little convincing. “The rooster was a youth, in the prime of his life, and quite vain about his beauty and charm, which didn't entirely translate into experience and practice.”
At the temple, with the high priest as their audience, the rooster makes his appeal. Among the qualities that make him and the hen worthy of being gods are their fervent procreation, their worship of Ra, their gentleness, and their beauty.
The hen, for her part, is convinced.
“The hen could not restrain herself from feeling joy and pride in her beloved, and she felt as though she had just laid an egg in the hen house that very moment, and she was about to squawk proudly, for she had discovered that her rooster was eloquent, well-spoken, persuasive, and charmingly forthright.”
The high priest, on the other hand, is less impressed.
With disdain, the priest describes the intimidating roster of gods--Ra's sharp teeth, Horace's swift flight, Amun's inedible meat making him devastating even in death. Chickens, on the other hand, particularly insolent, vain chickens, are, well, chickens.
“Even the weasel,” says the priest, “which is considered a species of mouse, can throttle you and suck your blood without you being able to prevent him in any way.”
The rooster tries to win the priest's favor by extolling the god Ra above all, and is chastised for his favoritism.
Bakr writes with occasionally vulgar humor, reminding the reader that these divinities--aspiring and realized--are still animals. In her fear, the hen worries about her unpredictable bowels, “She thought perhaps she urgently needed a well-known remedy for diarrhea.” And the rooster, after making excuses not to, thinks about pecking at the offending man, “priestly genitalia included.”
After putting the chickens in their place, Bakr gives the priest the same treatment; he agrees to a bribe of eggs in exchange for granting the chickens their wish some time in the future.
Power, though, in this story is dictated by whim, and the tides change for all three players with the ascension of a new pharaoh, Akhenaten. The young ruler happened to have overheard the rooster's assessment of Ra as the godliest of all the gods, and was won over. Absolute power appeals to the pharoah. “He became convinced that what the rooster said was right: that every god—no matter who he was—had limited, relative and incomplete power, with the exception of the god Ra, who is able to do anything and has absolute power.”
In his campaign for Ra, Akhenaten condemns those who worship other gods, including the priests, who he removes from their positions.
Here, Bakr's point--that worship and devotion, be it the hen of the rooster or man of god, is a mutually sustaining relationship based on circumstance and perception--comes through. Without their stages and props, the priests “became normal humans, like the rest of God's creatures. All their false mystique of holiness, created by the power of suggestion and illusion, fell away from them.”
The priest lives in agony. “His grief grew greater still when he came to understand how pathetic his former notions of power were.” The chickens, on the other hand, being content to be chickens, are happy.
Bakr's story ends here but, of course, Egyptian history does not. As noted in the translator's introduction, the priest would eventually triumph when, after Akhenaten's death, the old system of polytheism was re-instituted.
But what might be most interesting in The Rooster's Egg is not the duration of its religious and political facts, but its assessment of power in the hen house. The rooster's blindly encouraging, beguiling, and nagging wife, celebrated for her ability to lay eggs, can be forgiven for trying to negotiate her way out of the roost; flattery of her husband being, after all, one of the only weapons allotted to her.


Clic here to read the story from its source.