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The jagged ruins of Shahin al-Khalwati’s khanqa (Sufi lodge) first caught my eye from Saladdin’s Citadel. On the hazy horizon to the south, its minaret juts from the cliffs of Muqattam like a knife. From miles away, the rest of the complex appears one with the desolate ridge.
A carton of kreteks was our ticket to enter a funeral party in the highlands of Tana Toraja. Tobacco, sweets and palm wine were consumed in abundance as the big day's events rolled along: buffalo sacrifice, a mass slaughter of pigs and the ritual shaking of the coffin to send the deceased on their way.
Tattered, discolored jumpsuits fill most of the nave at Samalut's Church of the 21 Martyrs, along with the zip tie cords that bound their hands and whatever was found in their pockets. Their fresh-faced icons adorn the back of the sanctuary with gold-leaf halos beneath an image of Christ.
Born right here in tiny Daraza, the poet-saint Sachal Sarmast is honored with one of Sindh's most truly dazzling shrines. Born in the mid-1700s as Abdul Wahab Farouqi, his piety earned him the pen name Sachal: the Truthful. His lines later earned him the additional sobriquet Sarmast, the Ecstatic—thus rendering him, roughly, the ‘Mystic of Truth’.
‘Take the young child and his mother and flee into Egypt,’ the angel told Joseph. Marked with many dozens of miracles, the Holy Family's momentous, round-trip journey would, according to legend, rack up some 3,000km. In October 2022, I set out to trace their route through Middle Egypt.
Carved into a ridge just east of the Nile—with a history spanning over 4,000 years—is ancient Akoris, one of Middle Egypt’s secrets, set beside the sleepy village of Tahna al Gabal. The team tasked with finding some answers to its mysteries wasn't there when I arrived. It was officially ‘closed.'
At the top of the climb up the barely lit stairwell, I was greeted with the boy’s smiling face. He held up a hatch through the roof as I joined him at the base of a ladder that led to the tower, where I was greeted as warmly by his brother – and a breathtaking view of the twin mosques at the foot of the Citadel. ⁠