Kharga Oasis (Egypt)

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Kharga Oasis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
El-Kharga', also known as Al-Kharijah, (meaning the outer oasis) (Arabic الخارجة) ... Kharga Oasis: its topography and geology. ...

Kharga Oasis
It was called during the ancient Egyptian time the Oasis of Thebes. It contains several ... first time I saw the El-Kharga Oasis, a bright light came to my ...

Kharga Oasis Egypt,Kharga Oasis in Egypt,Kharga Oasis of Egypt,Egypt ...
Egypt Travel Kharga Oasis Egypt,Kharga Oasis in Egypt,Kharga Oasis of Egypt, ... Kharga is clearly different from the image most people of an oasis out in the desert. ...

Kharga Oasis
Kharga Oasis. Arabic: wāhā 'al-khārija. Travel information from. LookLex / Egypt ... Often the Paris Oasis is counted as a part of Kharga Oasis, but there is no ...

Roman Forts of Kharga Oasis
Views and details of mostly uninvestigated ancient forts in ... In fact, in the 1930s, Ahmed Fakhry estimated nearly 200 archaeological sites in Kharga Oasis. ...

Kharga Oasis IN MEDIA

 A chain of Sand Dunes blocking the Wady A Landmark at Sunset Begining of the Track leading to Baharia Oasis After crossing the Sand Dunes Kharga Oasis Camp ground

Bahariya to Kharga

Cairo Journal October 4, 2008 teacherai@hotmail.com

Well! I am back in Cairo and what a trip! As I mentioned, I signed up with the Arabic Language Institute for a four day trip through the oases of the Western Desert. After the marathon bus trip to and from Siwa Oasis last spring, I swore I would never take another bus trip, but we had a four day holiday, and the appeal to visit the oases was strong, so I joined the group at 7 a.m. Tuesday morning and set off for Bahariya oasis—about 350 kilos southwest of Cairo.

Our holiday from classes was for the Eid al Fitr. The Eid al Fitr is the three day feast that ends the month of Ramadan, the 28 days of sunrise to sunset fasting. In the Middle East, the Eid al Fitr began on Tuesday, and just after midnight on Tuesday, friends in Yemen and Saudi Arabia sent Happy Eid phone messages. The end of Ramadan is a raucous time in Muslim communities, but I had not heard anything special out on the streets of Cairo, so when I got to the bus, I asked a Muslim friend if Ramadan had ended and the Eid begun. NO! Not in Egypt! Although Ramadan and the Eid are based on the lunar calendar, the Eid does not begin until the sheikh sees the thinnest sliver of the crescent moon. I tend to believe that the moon can be counted on to maintain its schedule whether or not I see it, but here, it is not assumed that any thing definitely will happen. If God wills, it will happen; if not, well... So, the end of Ramadan should be confirmed by a visual sighting of the crescent moon, and if it is not seen, the calendar is used. The calendar confirms by dint of numbers that the lunar month has indeed ended and thus the extra day, just to be sure, here in Cairo. I hope my Muslim friends will feel free to correct any of my misunderstandings. At any rate, my friend’s slightly aggravated response was, “Of course he could not see the moon. No one can see that sliver of...

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