The Pharaonic
Village began with a dream. Already famous for his rediscovery of the ancient
techniques for making papyrus, Dr. Hassan Ragab had begun to ponder the
possibility of a living museum with real people, actors in costume and in a
realistic locale, taking the place of static exhibits. It was after a visit to
Disney World's EPCOT Center in Orlando, Florida, that his idea took root. Dr.
Ragab believed EPCOT "was too computerized -- there was nothing human
about it. I began to think, 'Dare I have real, live people in my village,
dressed in the manner of three or four thousand years ago?'"
And so in
1974, Dr. Ragab reinvested the profits from his papyrus rediscoveries and began
converting Jacob Island into a detailed replica of ancient Egyptian life. His
first step was the planting of five thousand trees to block the view of modern
Cairo that surrounded the island. The first trees planted were weeping willows,
sycamores, and date palms; trees easily identified in tomb paintings as a part
of ancient Egyptian life. But many more plants, flowers, animals and birds also
depicted in the paintings could no longer be found in Egypt, and some were
extinct. Yet Dr. Ragab was not discouraged. He was already familiar with
traveling great distances to find what he needed. Years before, he had traveled
to the Sudan and Ethiopia to find papyrus roots for his earlier projects, and
now he went out once again to seek plants and animals for the Pharaonic Village.
He returned to Cairo with seeds, cuttings, and roots of plants that had
flourished in Egypt thousands of years ago, and a special surprise, the famed Medium Geese so often depicted in ancient Egyptian art, but long thought
extinct by the modern world. He went everywhere in his quest, from the mouth of
the Atbara River to Ethiopia, and in each place found something new and
wonderful to bring back. Little by little, a collection of plants and animals
not seen in Egypt in centuries was assembled on Jacob Island. For the next six
years, Dr. Ragab worked to get his finds to live and grow in Egyptian soil,
soil that thousands of years ago, had been their home.
One quest just
about over, another one was beginning; this time for detailed knowledge about
the daily life of ancient Egyptians from all walks of life. Dr. Ragab began
questioning Egyptologists at museums and universities all over the world,
searching for the knowledge that would make the Pharaonic Village a complete
replica of an ancient Egyptian village. Not satisfied with information simply
on the lives of the rulers and upper class, Dr. Ragab was interested in even
the most trivial aspects of Egyptian life. "Often, what I wanted to know,
even they could not tell me," says Dr. Ragab. "How did the king live?
What did they have on their bedroom dressers? What did their doors and windows
look like?" Dr. Ragab wanted every detail, every aspect of the village
exactly right before he began building.
And build
he did. A nobleman's house and garden, a market, a field for planting and
harvesting, a shipyard, other buildings, roads, farms, and at the centerpiece,
the gigantic temple of white stone that has become the symbol for the Pharaonic
Village. Ten years of work and over six million dollars went into the building
of the village. In 1984, Dr. Ragab's Pharaonic Village formally opened to the
public.