Young Egyptians are once
again organizing on social media and taking to the streets of Cairo by the
hundreds every Friday, not to protest injustice or clash with police, but to
enjoy long runs through one of the world's most crowded and chaotic cities. Runners
take advantage of Cairo's empty streets during the Muslim holy day of Friday,
when traffic is sparse. There are precious few spaces to run and private clubs
that are suitable for running are prohibitively expensive for many.
On a recent Friday
morning around 300 young people gathered at a central square, a small fraction
of the 2,500 that had signed up for the event on Facebook, but a reasonable
showing for an event held at 7:00 a.m. on a weekend. Organizers with bullhorns
led the crowd of young men and women -- many wearing headscarves -- in a
warm-up, and then they took off, flooding a four-lane road and occasionally
parting before honking taxis.
AFP report continues:
Cairo, a city of some 20
million people packed onto the banks of the Nile, with few green spaces and no
jogging paths, is an unlikely venue for distance running.
The streets are jammed at
nearly all hours with smoke-belching microbuses, manic taxis, speeding
motorbikes and the occasional donkey cart. The crumbling sidewalks are often
worse -- blocked by parked cars, mounds of garbage and mangy street dogs.
Anyone who runs in Cairo can expect stares and gentle mocking, and women must
contend with leering, lewdness and occasional unwanted touching.
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And yet despite all the
obstacles, young Egyptians have launched several increasingly popular running
clubs over the past two years. A half-marathon this weekend drew thousands of
runners, and more than 200 volunteers -- some wearing American football pads
and helmets -- deftly guided the runners through traffic circles and onto and
off of overpasses.
Small running groups
catering mainly to expatriates have been around for years, but Egyptians trace
the growth in local interest to Cairo Runners, a group with a large social
media presence that attracts hundreds of people to its weekly runs and has
inspired similar groups across the city.
"The first time I
ever went out on the streets to run was with Cairo Runners," says Mariz
Doss, 27, who is now one of the group's organizers. "Whenever I traveled
outside Egypt I saw that people had the opportunity to run outside in their own
country, and I thought it was a pity that we didn't have this in Egypt."
The group organizes
weekly runs and advertises them on its Facebook page, which has racked up more
than 320,000 "likes." The runs are usually held early Friday -- the
first day of the Egyptian weekend -- when the streets are mostly empty.
Strength in numbers protects the runners from both cars and street harassment.
"We run when
everything that is wrong with Cairo is asleep, and that has been our winning
formula," says Salma Shahin, whose cousin Ibrahim Safwat founded the group
in December 2012. The first run attracted 70 people, and now a weekly 5k run can
draw up to 2,000, she said.
The group began
organizing runs nearly two years after Egypt's popular uprising toppled
longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak. At the time, Egyptians were fiercely divided
over his successor, the Islamist Mohammed Morsi. Demonstrations regularly set
off clashes, and if hundreds of people were running through the streets it was
usually to get away from something.
"The first time we
ran in the streets all the workers and doormen stared at us," Doss
recalls. "They asked, 'Who are you running from? Is this a demonstration
or what?'"
The streets have been
much calmer over the past year following a massive crackdown by the
military-backed government of President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, who overthrew
Morsi at the height of the unrest in 2013.
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Organizers say they've
never encountered any problems with the authorities. "When hundreds of
people are in running shoes and shorts, we don't seem that scary," Shahin
said. And the runners say ordinary people have grown used to seeing them trot
by in the mornings.
"In the beginning,
people thought it was very strange, but they've gotten used to it," said
Ashraf Samir, a 47-year-old accountant who has been running with Cairo Runners
since last year.
"You get to breathe
clean air, you get to run far away from any chaos or traffic, and you get to
know nice people at the same time," he said.
Mahmoud al-Aawadi, 27,
who joined the group two years ago, tells the kind of road-to-Damascus story
one often hears from running addicts.
"It was the first
time I had done any sports at all in my entire life -- I didn't even play
soccer when I was a kid," he said. "I used to smoke cigarettes."
Now he goes to the gym,
swims laps and earlier this month attended a nighttime practice run to prepare
for the half marathon. "I would have never imagined," he said.
"When I started I ran 500 meters, now I do seven kilometers. I run further
and further every time. The others encourage me, and we all encourage one
another."
The running groups are
adamantly non-political. But when the runners describe how the sport has
brought them together, and how they have reclaimed their city's squares and
streets, one hears an echo of the early days of Egypt's 2011 uprising, when a
spirit of inclusiveness prevailed in Cairo's Tahrir Square.
Doss says that during the
darkest days of recent years, when the country was gripped by unrest and
furiously divided, running brought people together.
"I remember at that
time I was running and beside me were people from different backgrounds,
different beliefs, different religions," she said. "It doesn't cross
your mind if the person beside you is a Christian or a Muslim or whatever. You
just come for one purpose, to run, and to enjoy your time running."
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