Egypt 1st-Hand: Nine Views of a Country's Future (Bohn)
 Saturday, February 18, 2012 at 7:08 |
Saturday, February 18, 2012 at 7:08 |      Scott Lucas in
Scott Lucas in   EA Middle East and Turkey,
EA Middle East and Turkey,   Middle East and Iran
Middle East and Iran   Photos: Lauren BohnBefore the revolution, Ayad says he didn't fit in. And now, he says he still doesn't. He's "not pumped up enough to be a revolutionary." But he's not apathetic enough for the popular Hezb al Kanaba, the party of the couch. In fact, he wishes he were more indifferent. Like many, he's frustrated, if not angry, by a regime he says is still running the show. Back then, days spent in Tahrir seemed like the beginning of an exciting story, one where anything could happen. Now, he feels the square's more like a bad sequel.
Photos: Lauren BohnBefore the revolution, Ayad says he didn't fit in. And now, he says he still doesn't. He's "not pumped up enough to be a revolutionary." But he's not apathetic enough for the popular Hezb al Kanaba, the party of the couch. In fact, he wishes he were more indifferent. Like many, he's frustrated, if not angry, by a regime he says is still running the show. Back then, days spent in Tahrir seemed like the beginning of an exciting story, one where anything could happen. Now, he feels the square's more like a bad sequel.
"It's sad because maybe it shows the majority of Egyptian people don't deserve better, because they're not fighting for it," he says. "You can't want something for them more than they do." Still, after he larks around the world by sea, he hopes to return to Egypt. He's developed a love-hate relationship with the place he can't seem to shake. And he still has hope, he reassures me -- or perhaps himself -- every five minutes.
 Abdel Rahman Ayad,
Abdel Rahman Ayad,   Egypt,
Egypt,   Ehab Mohammed,
Ehab Mohammed,   Lauren Bohn,
Lauren Bohn,   The Atlantic
The Atlantic  






