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User:Maryam Negm/Mogamma

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The Mogamma is a government building in Cairo, Egypt. The Mogamma building was given as a gift by the Soviet Union and was ordered for construction in 1950.[1] The Soviet Union believed it could gain influence in Egypt and perceived it as a potential ally. The building was completed in 1952, just before the revolution in Egypt. Mohamed Naguib was the ruler at the time and Gamal Abdel-Nasser was in charge of the military when the building was received.[2] Two years later, Nasser became president in 1954 and the building was thus associated with his era and the new regime. The Mogamma is located in downtown Cairo to the South of Tahrir Square, which was at the time the newly designed "Liberation Square." [3]

Function

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The Mogamma is an administrative governmental building, which all the paper work is done by government agencies. For example, one would go there to process documents, get a driver's license or issue a visa. The governmental agencies that are present include the Tax Evasion Investigations Offices, the Fire Fighting Organization and the Passport Offices. There are fourteen stories in the building which house 18,000 employees of the Egyptian bureaucracy.[4]

Structure and Architecture

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The structure and architecture of the Mogamma building was influenced by the building styles in the Soviet Union. The building was designed by the Egyptian architect Kamal Ismail. The external appearance wasn’t of main importance but rather, the structure focuses on central organization and maximization of space. The appearance of the building is plain yet intimidating in its colossal size.

It can be claimed that during Nasser's regime, Egypt was "moving to a closed society modeled along Soviet lines." [5] The fact that the building was a present from the Soviet Union, and the way in which it represents Soviet architecture, can serve to reinforce this claim.

The Mogamma in Cinema

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The Mogamma has appeared in several Egyptian movies. The most famous one being Al-irhab wal Kebab (Terrorism and Kebab), a comedy in which the building's bureaucracy frustrates an Egyptian citizen that he mistakenly grab a guard's gun, and proceeds to take the building hostage and is labeled as a terrorist.[6] The film uses the Mogamma and unbearable bureaucracy, as a metaphor for all that is wrong in Egyptian society. [7]

The Mogamma Today

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Cairo has a new plan for the government and administrative buildings and departments to be moved from their present locations in and around the downtown area to someplace else. The Mogamma is believed to have created and contributed to the enormous amount of congestion in Tahrir Square and will thus be included in the move to the desert area in the 5th Settlement, following in the footsteps of the American University in Cairo.[8]

However, the fate of the Mogamma building remains uncertain for many reasons. First, the inconvenience this move will pose for hundreds of people is immense. Second, the move would require added benefits for government employees to reimburse them for the longer travel and to keep them working there. Third, architects who oppose the move claim that the downtown area used to be beautiful and is now in need of making it valuable again by creating parks and gardens, and possibly renovating the building. Lastly, the move of the Mogamma building raises questions about other problems, more specifically public transportation which is in need of improvement.

The move is impending but when the move is to occur and to where is still uncertain, and is prone to change.

References

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  1. ^ El Hussini, Mohrez Mahmoud. Soviet-Egyptian Relations 1945-1985. Houndmills: Macmillan Pres, 1987.
  2. ^ Ginat, Rami. The Soviet Union and Egypt, 1945-1955. London: Frank Cass, 1993. Volume I: 86-89.
  3. ^ Williams, Sasha. "The Mogamma: Architectural Gem or Bureaucratic Oddity?" Daily News Egypt. 10 July 2009. < http://www.thedailynewsegypt.com/article.aspx?ArticleID=23018>
  4. ^ El-Noshokaty, Amira. "A Resilient Complex." Al-Ahram Weekly. <http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2007/844/fe1.htm>.
  5. ^ Jack. Crabbs, "Politics, History, and Culture in Nasser's Egypt," International Journal of Middle East Studies 6 (1975): 387
  6. ^ Sardar, Ziauddin. "What Egyptian Cinema Can Teach Us." New Statesman. 2 Apr. 2007. <http://www.newstatesman.com/religion/2007/04/film-arab-egyptian-building>.
  7. ^ Gordon, Joel. Hero of the Arab Nation. Oxford: One World, 2006.
  8. ^ Meyer, Karl E. Riding the Cairo Carousel. Winter 2007/08, Vol. 24, No. 4, Pages 108-112. March 19, 2008
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