It is always seen in Cairo, becoming one of its true modern landmarks in Nasr City.
It commemorates the fallen heroes of Egyptian soldiers and officers in the October 1973/Yom Kippur War.
The Memorial of the Unknown Soldier in Nasr City, Cairo Photographed by iPhone |
It is our fourth Pyramid, the Unknown Soldier Memorial in Nasr City.
It witnessed the assassination of President Mohamed Anwar El-Sadat on the 6 October 1981, eight years after the war and six years after the inauguration of the Memorial in 1975.
Although he wished to be buried at Wadi Al-Raha near Mount Sinai (Jebel Musa), Sadat was buried at Cairo’s Unknown Soldier Memorial, which he ordered to be built in 1974.
El-Sadat's funeral in October 1981 at the Uknonwn Solider Memorial |
Egyptian artist and professor Sami Rafi designed the Memorial of the Unknown Soldier as a modern pyramid with the first names of Egyptian men engraved on its sides.
Speaking about the memorial is the only thing I think about writing on the anniversary of the 6 October 1973 War in Egypt as usual not in a celebratory way.
I uploaded a YouTube Short dedicated to the Egyptian soldiers but could not share it publicly or widely with that ongoing genocide happening in Gaz and extending to Lebanon.
The Memorial of Unknown Soldier in Cairo made me think about the Memorial of Unknown Soldier in Gaza.
Yes, Gaza has its own Memorial of the Unknown Soldier in its own Park.
The park and the Memorial of the Unknown Soldier are considered the most important landmarks of Gaza City.They were built during the Egyptian administration in the 1950s.
The memorial was built in 1957 by the orders of President Gamal Abdel Nasser to represent the sacrifices of the two brotherly peoples, Palestinian and Egyptian, and their defense of national rights, as well as the dignity and pride of both nations.
The memorial in Gaza in 1964 |
It was erected over the graves of eight fighters who bravely defended the city of Gaza in 1948.
It is said that among these eight martyrs, three were Palestinian while the other five were Egyptians
The Memorial of the Unknown Soldier consists of a concrete base about two meters high, which can be accessed by climbing six steps.
At the top stands a statue of a soldier in full military gear, holding a weapon in his right hand, while pointing with the index finger of his left hand towards the east (Jerusalem).
Engraved on the marble base on the first side is a map of Palestine, with a Quranic verse inscribed beneath it:
“Do not consider those who have been killed in the way of Allah as dead. Rather, they are alive with their Lord, receiving provision.”
On the second side of the memorial is the Palestinian flag with its four colours, placed on a flagpole, beneath which is written the phrase:
"To unfurl once more after the flag is folded, and may hope to revive where pain faltered, God willing."
On the third side of the concrete base are lines of poetry that read:
"Every free man's blood is tied to the homeland,
A hand extended and a debt still owed."
On the fourth side, beneath a map of the Arab world, are verses from the Tunisian poet Aboul-Qacem Echebbi :
"If one day, the people desire life, then fate must surely respond,
and the night must end, and the chains must break."
It has been subjected to many attempts of vandalism and destruction over time. The Israeli army destroyed it during its occupation of the Gaza Strip in 1967.
The Palestinian Authority rebuilt the memorial thirty-three years after it was destroyed by the Israeli army in the 1967 Six-Day War.
The reinaugration of the Memorial of Uknown Solider in Caza on 17 March 2004. |
In November 2023, the Israeli army bombed Gaza’ Unknown Soldier Memorial and its public park destroying it.
The Memorial after the Israeli bombing in November 2023 |
Updated: Till 11 October, the Israeli army still bombs the area of the memorial madly.
Inshallah It will be rebuilt again soon.
If you think that this is the only Unknown Soldier Memorial or technically a cemetery in Gaza related to Egypt and Egyptians you are completely wrong.Deir El Belah was occupied by Commonwealth troops early in March 1917 and in April it became the railhead of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force, with an aerodrome, camps and hospitals. The Egyptian Cemetery served the Egyptian Labour Corps camp and hospital. The cemetery contains 285 burials, all Egyptian Labour Corps, but none identified by name.
The people of Burij paid their respect to our Egyptian soldiers in January 2021 as an annual tradition. |
Zionism is an idea. It will not be defeated.
ReplyDeleteWhere are your Jews Egypt?
ReplyDeleteSuch were the mutilations that not a single corpse of a girl or a woman was in a state fit to be shown to her family before burial.
ReplyDeleteThe question these days is whether the human race will be defeated (inc Zionists) in a mushroom cloud of destruction as Wars spread and in the West people fear the victory of the Great Orange Turkey King of Chaos and Degradation.
ReplyDelete