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Cairo: Inside the Yacoubian building

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  • Cairo: Inside the Yacoubian building

    Cairo Magazine, Egypt
    June 10 2005


    Inside the Yacoubian building
    There is such a thing as bad publicity
    By Ursula Lindsey


    Photo: Nichan Yacoubian built the apartment building that bears his
    name on Talaat Harb St. in the 1930s.

    Ahmed Hosni

    When the Egyptian-Armenian businessman Nichan Yacoubian built an
    apartment building on Talaat Harb Street in the 1930s, he could never
    have guessed its future. He could not have predicted how his son
    Dikran would emigrate to Geneva after his death, leaving the building
    in the charge of several superintendents, how his own ground-floor
    store would become the bright Wanan shirt shop, or how the simple Art
    Deco façade would grow spotted with air-conditioning units and
    billboards, blending into Downtown's busy commercial scenery. Nor
    could he have envisaged that `The Yacoubian Building' would one day
    be a name famous and familiar across the city, much to the chagrin of
    its residents.

    Alaa Al Aswany's best-selling novel Amarat Al Yacoubian (The
    Yacoubian Building) (Merit, 2002) is on its sixth edition in Arabic,
    has been translated to English (AUC Press, 2004) and will soon be
    published and distributed in the United States by HarperCollins. More
    importantly, the film based on the book - a US$3 million
    mega-production starring Adel Imam, Nour Al Sherif and Youssra - has
    reportedly just finished filming, and should be out by the beginning
    of 2006.

    For the actual residents of the Yacoubian, all this translates into
    much unwanted attention. The novel's blunt depiction of the sexual
    and financial exploitation to which its characters subject each other
    reflects badly on its real-life counterparts, they say.

    `People call it the building of homosexuality, of prostitution,' says
    Edward Kamil, one of the building's administrators. `Not the
    Yacoubian building. There are characters in the book who have the
    same name as real people. It's a novel but it deals with real people
    and a real place.'

    This is the argument of the sons of late Yacoubian resident Malak
    Khela, who are suing Al Aswany for LE2 million for allegedly
    depticing their father as as a ruthless schemer and a smuggler of
    liquor and currency. The brothers say two characters in the novel
    share the same names, professions and physical traits as their father
    and uncle.

    Building superintendent Fikry Abdel Malek is also taking legal action
    against Al Aswany, as well as against the film production company of
    `The Yacoubian Building' and screenwriter Waheed Hamid. Hamid is in
    turn threatening to sue his accusers, saying they are defaming him.

    With so much acrimony in the air, it's little surprise that the film
    crew of the Yacoubian movie (produced by Emad Adib's Good News Films)
    were not allowed to film on location, and were obliged to adjourn
    next door to 32 Talaat Harb Street. There, they employed the bawwab
    in a small role as a policeman, and offered him and his family the
    amusing sight of superstars such as Hind Sabri posing as a baladi
    girl and washing laundry for the cameras.

    Al Aswany, who had a dentistry practice in the building in the 1990s
    and shared a flat with the late Malak Khela and another professional,
    dismisses the claims. He says his is a work of fiction and that any
    similarities are purely coincidental.

    The name of the building - written in lovely elongated green letters
    across the threshold of the building's lobby - captivated him, and he
    decided to use it as the title of his work, which he had originally
    thought of calling simply Downtown. `The name was only thing I picked
    up from the building,' says the writer, `the characters in the novel
    have nothing to do with the building's inhabitants.' Al Aswany has
    cast doubt on his accusers' motivations, saying they only became
    interested in the book three years after its publication, when news
    of the film's budget was printed in the press.

    As far as the work's supposedly scabrous subjects, Al Aswany says, `I
    believe literature must discuss what people don't discuss.'

    But residents of the Yacoubian building would rather the writer had
    set his discussion elsewhere. From the top to the bottom of the
    building, inhabitants seem to be united in their anger at Al Aswany.

    `Everything he wrote is lies,' doorman Muhammed will tell you from
    his bench in the lobby. `What Al Aswany said in his novel is not true
    and defames our reputation,' rooftop resident Said argues heatedly.
    `If I saw him, I don't know what I might do with him.'




    http://www.cairomagazine.com/?module=displaystory&story_id=1035&format= html
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