Issue Date: June 2001
Back then, the Khan was a living museum. Woodworkers grasped their tools and small lathes with both hands and feet, turning seasoned wooden chunks into the mouthpieces of water pipes, legs for chairs, and a thousand other useful items. A secondary market bought, sold, and disposed of the shreds of metal, wood, and leather the craftsmen left behind. As several of the Khan old-timers recall, the merchants and craftsmen all lived in the market, in the warren of small houses branching off the busy shopping areas.

"We used to work in front of the shop," says Kerabi ruefully. "It was good for business because the customers could see how much work it took to make our goods."

The more traditional atmosphere has been well captured by Nobel Prize--winning Egyptian author Naguib Mahfouz. Brought up in Gamaliyya, a neighborhood adjacent to the Khan, he wrote affectionately of these Cairo districts. One of his earliest books is actually titled Khan al-Khalili, and a later novel, Palace Walk, describes lives spent in the ancient network around the Khan.

These days the streets are clean, and the noise comes from hawkers inviting you to "come in and look, no charge," rather than the sound of hammering. Many goods are manufactured outside the market. The modern convenience of credit cards is widely accepted as well.

Many old denizens of the region, including both Kerabi and Mahfouz, have moved to "nicer" areas of the city where they enjoy more air, light, and space and newer housing, schools, and amenities. Although Cairo has expanded to more than ten million people, living standards have benefited from two decades of peace with Israel, massive U.S. aid of more than $1 billion a year, and extensive U.S.-British investments. Most people now prefer to live away from the teeming districts of the old city. Nevertheless, Kerabi says he regrets the passing of the old days, when he could just tumble out of his apartment and be at the shop in five minutes. His wife could come and help while the children were at school, he recalls, and he could also dash home for lunch.
 


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