Egypt: Celebrities sans Diplomacy

Marwa Rakha
Bikya Masr reported two stories within a couple of days apart about celebrity blunders and lack of tact.

Egypt´s chief Egyptologist Dr. Zahi Hawass called American pop-star Beyonce a "stupid person" during her brief tour of the Giza pyramids

during Hawass´ self-guided tour, he said "I showed her the Sphinx and I gave her a book on King Tutankhamen," but then his anger and frustration made its way to the forefront.

"Then he stopped being diplomatic and said in anger, ´she´s a stupid person and she doesn´t understand a thing and she doesn´t want to understand´," wrote Summer al-Gamal for Al Shorouk Newspaper.

Hawass is known for his outbursts. A number of foreigners have told Bikya Masr that he has employed Arabic to insult others at dinner events and gatherings, believing the non-Egyptians will not understand his Arabic. Beyonce, obviously, did not understand his jabs, Gamal said.


And speaking as an honored guest at the Cairo International Film Festival, Salma Hayek told how she was sexually harassed in Egypt when she was 17.

Hayek said she went on a touristic tour of Cairo, visited the Pyramids since her arrival earlier this month and expressed her happiness to visit Egypt for the second time in her life and that she thinks the country is very safe, saying she could accompany her daughter in the streets of Cairo without fear. In her native Mexico, where kidnapping is commonplace, this would be unheard of, the Frida, From Dust till Dawn and Fools Rush In star told the audience.

But, she recalled memories of her first visit to Cairo 26-years ago when she was 17, which immediately garnered the applause of the audience for revealing her age.
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Marwa Rakha

I have come a long way from the scared little girl that I once was ... I found my passion in writing, my voice in teaching & training, and my strength in marketing ... I took off my mask ... and I decided to speak up and loud .. as loud as loud could ever be.

This is neither a ruthless attack on men nor a blind defense of women. This is not bitterness released or anger withheld. This is another attempt to figure out the beliefs of the heart and the passions of the mind.

We either choose to play victim and blame men for our messy personal lives, or wallow in self disgust as we take the blame for their shameful actions.

It is time to rise above blame and take control of our actions, reactions, and lives.

When you take a blow do not turn the other cheek; men are not to blame when they use the rights you gave them

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