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"Of course it's exhibitionist,
but all girls like to feel sexy." |
| "Belly dancing is based in the womb. Where do you think we get the word wo-man?" Top belly dancing choreographer Hassan Khalil speaks to Yoga Travel |
Keti Shariff trains belly dancers in Cairo and travels all over the world to dance, although not in Egypt. She is booked by clients for shows or weddings, then flies out to perform. We sit in the opulent surroundings of Cairo's Marriot hotel.
What does belly dancing mean?
"It's about many things - physical, sexual, sensual, fitness. It's about
female empowerment, and about feeling sexy. And of course it's about glitter
and dressing up. But originally the shapes and postures used in belly dancing
were representations of nature, to worship god. In fact, one of the early
stars - Tahira Kareoka - her father was a sheik in a mosque."
Is it exhibitionist?
"Of course, but all girls like to feel sexy. You know, in some ways it
has never left the harem. It's always been about women dancing amoungst themselves.
There's a group of you and you dance together, you show off what you know.
It's not at all for the men - it's for us."
Why don't you dance in Egypt any more?
"I realized that I didn't want to dance any more in Egypt when I was
dancing at the Nile Hilton. The manager took me aside and told me I had to
get an AIDS test. He explained that they like their customers to stay for
a long time, to spend a lot of money in the hotels, and to make that happen
the dancers, you know, we have to get close to them. He said it because he
knew that I was new to dancing, and to let me know that it's not always a
clean business. But that was it. Now I don't dance in Egypt any more."
What do people think of you as a dancer?
"When I tell Egpytians that I'm a dancer they look at me a bit strangely
and their eyes go wide. They can't really understand. But when I get talking
to them about the old stars of the past and they're like 'oh yes, they were
the greats', then they know that I'm doing it for the love of the dance, not
in a sleazy sense."
What is the state of belly dancing in Egypt today?
"Most Egyptian girls get into it because they want to become actresses.
Or to get onto TV. They see people like Shakira and Britney belly dancing
and they want to be like them. But the dancers here are not the role models
they used to be. In the 40s and the 50s there were really big stars, people
still talk about them today, that was the golden age of belly dancing.
"People are interested in different stuff thess days. They don't book dancers for private parties so much any more. Younger couples getting married don't automatically look for a dancer at their weddings. These days they look for something different - maybe a jazz band. Belly dancing just isn't on their radar.
In some ways it's going back to its roots - it's always been a hidden thing. Maybe in ten years time it will re-emerge again into the glamour of the old days, when the young girls start seeing the big stars and saying - I want to do that."
Other interesting links:
MAGAZINE
About Egypt
EGYPT
- history
Red Sea history
Did Moses cross the Red
Sea?
Who was St Catherine?
The monks of Mount Sinai
Was Jesus resurrected?
Nasser - Egypt's failed strongman
Bonaparte: 'don't wash I'm coming'
Mohammed Ali
A history of St Catherine's monastery
A Short history of the harem
Lawrence of Arabia
Ancient Egypt's most prolific king: Ramses II
Egypt's Christian minority
EGYPT
- Red Sea
Red Sea bans shark fishing
Wrecks and ecology
The Red Sea and its coral reefs
Red Sea wrecks 1
Red Sea wrecks 2
Jacques Cousteau, Red Sea pioneer
Djibouti: the least-heard-of place in the world?
The Bedouins of the Red Sea
DIVING
Dahab dive sites
Diving overview
Freediving
Diving in Dahab (a testimonial)