One on one with Ahmed El Sakka

By Shorouk Abbas & Francesca Sullivan

It’s late afternoon at a rural film studio outside Cairo and a production team, crew and crowd of extras are waiting for the arrival of Ahmed El Sakka. He’s taking time out from shooting his Ramadan series Zihab wa Awda to star in a commercial for the new Chevrolet Optra.

As Egypt’s best loved action hero, star of bad boy dramas like Tito, Mafia, and El Gezira (The Island), El Sakka is an obvious choice to show case a macho new machine, and as he breezes into his trailer and flops down for a breather before the shoot, there’s no need to ask whether he likes the car he’s promoting. “It’s great; I’ve just bought one,” he declares.

El Sakka has massive box office appeal, and over the course of his career has gone out of his way to try different genres as an actor, from action drama through to romantic comedies. “I don’t have a preference,” he insists. “I’m an actor. If I love a script, then I can become that character. If I believe in myself as that character, the audience does too.”

It was of course the most successful comedy in the history of Arabic cinema, Saeedi at the American University — in which he co-starred with Mohamed Heneidy — that launched his career. Yet the image he most lives up to and appears to identify with, is less comedic and more connected to his first ambition: to join the police force.  “I went to the police academy and trained to be in the special command unit. That was my first choice as a career!”

So why the switch to acting? “I’m still trying to figure that out,” he says, with a wry laugh. It’s hard to tell whether he’s serious. Some might say that with a famous director as a father (Salah El Sakka), the jump to acting was predictable, and he has certainly taken the profession seriously, graduating  from the Faculty of Cinema in 1993 and working his way through a long list of hit movies and TV series.

Yet much about El Sakka seems to reflect that original ambition. He feels a sense of identity with the forces of law and order, has a testosterone-fuelled tough guy image (riding and shooting are his hobbies), and has a strong penchant for action roles – in fact he’s famous for doing his own stunts, with the injuries to prove it.

“Of course I take all the right safety precautions, but accidents can still happen. I’ve injured my knee, and my neck, and in 2007 sustained serious damage to one eye,” he recounts, almost casually. “But I believe that acting is something that requires you to build up your emotions from the inside, bit by bit, and that means in a physical sense also. That’s why I need to go through the action sequences to complete that character construction.”

El Sakka is so serious about stunt work he hired an international name in the stunt world, Australian stunt choreographer Andrew Mackenzie, to work with him and help build a professional Egyptian stunt team, a project first begun in 2006. One incident which may have contributed to his determination to seek expertise was a notorious shooting fiasco in 2004 in which, he recalls: “There was a shot we needed that involved me jumping off a well-known Cairo bridge into the Nile. Despite having various cameras they weren’t coordinated, so I did the same jump a total of four times because the first three times not one of the cameras caught it!”

Another incident he still vividly recalls happened while shooting Africano with Mona Zaki in 2001. Taking a solitary walk off the set in the South African bush he came face to face with a lioness, and made ‘the fastest jump ever’ over a strategically placed electric perimeter fence inside the game reserve. Interestingly the Africano shoot seems to have left an enduring love for South Africa which he and Mona Zaki share to this day.

movies taken from literature, but that was when our literature was richer. Where is that legacy now?” ponders the star.

“I knew Essam was writing the book,” explains El Sakka, “and [I] persuaded him that it would make a great TV drama. Also that the series would be helpful in promoting the book.” The story is an extremely emotive one, particularly since it involves a child. El Sakka’s son in the series is played by a young debut actor who was chosen from hundreds who auditioned. “I had a say in those auditions because I needed to have a strong rapport with the little boy. Perhaps one reason why I chose Adham, who plays the role, was because he looks very like my youngest son.”

El Sakka is father to two boys and a girl. Have they seen his movies? “Only my older son, aged fourteen, has been allowed to see all of them. Some of them involve adult themes that the younger two couldn’t understand.” One of those is the hugely successful El Gezira , which came out in 2007, and deals with drug wars in Upper Egypt. The sequel, Gezira 2, has only just been made all these years later, and is in cinemas now. But that delay has been to the advantage of the film, thinks El Sakka,“ El Gezira was a movie ahead of its time. When it came out the audience still believed, or pretended to believe, that the themes in it were a fiction in Egypt. Though many films over the past decades have dealt with the subject of mafia and drug gangs, it was still somehow make-believe; something that only happened abroad. Since then we have been through a revolution and the exposure of proven mass corruption at high levels. Good policemen turned out to be bad. Religious leaders were questioned. Many things have changed. Post revolution the audience realizes that it’s real, and it’s given Gezira 2 a credibility that the first film, despite its success, didn’t have.”

Credibility is a quality that El Sakka has earned many times over in the eyes of Egypt’s cinema going public, and Zihab wa Awda  seems set to join the long list of hits he’s enjoyed so far.

If you could choose to meet anyone, alive or dead, who would it be?

Leonardo di Caprio, because I admire him very much as an actor. His choice of roles baffles me like that of The Great Gatsby. Otherwise Robert di Nero or French actor Jean Renault for the same reason.

What would be your perfect evening out?

In the desert under a full moon, a couple of chairs… and I don’t want to say more!

What do you consider the most important skill required to do your job?

Perseverance. To always strive to be better. Talent and charisma are seventy percent of acting, but there is always room for improvement.

What do you do when you’re bored?

Go and ride one of my horses, or take my dogs out.

What’s your worst habit?

It used to be losing my temper – but these days I’ve cooled down a lot.

Are you a late night or early morning person?

I like to sleep early and wake up early.

Tea or coffee?

Coffee, especially when I’m under pressure.

What are you reading right now?

A new script that will be my next project.  It’s a historical movie set during the Ottoman occupation.

Do you have a favourite song on repeat?

I love to listen to classical music of all kinds, especially the songs of Um Kulsoum and Abdel Halim Hafez.

Where did you go for your last holiday?

Cyprus. It was actually work, as we were shooting there, but my family came out for a holiday.

Who was the last person you dialled on your phone?

You guys – to say I was on my way!

Name five essential items you never travel without?

My electric hand shaver, a small shoulder bag, my passport and my home-sickness.

What’s the best piece of advice you’ve ever received?

Before my father died, he asked me, why do they call you a movie star? When I began to list to him my achievements he interrupted me and said: never become untouchable like a star, never take revenge on anyone, and always forgive what is done to you.

 

Back to the here and now, Zihab wa Awda, in which he plays the father of a boy abducted by an international criminal gang of organ harvesters, has given El Sakka, he says, a chance to explore greater emotional depths than ever before. And he has relished that opportunity. “My character is just a normal guy. He is unprepared for what happens to him, and not equipped for the journey he has to take.”

In literal terms, that journey involves a trip to Cyprus, and also requires El Sakka to act in English for the first time. For someone who never formally studied the language, was this challenging?

“Acting is acting, and for me body language is crucial. It’s not about thinking in English. The ‘Egyptian method’ of acting for me is about internalizing the character, and letting the character speak, however that comes out – sometimes even forgetting about the script.”

Zihab wa Awda is directed by Ahmed Shafik and written by his personal friend, novelist and first-time scriptwriter Essam Youssef. It is based on a true story–something that appeals to El Sakka. “I always prefer drama based on true life. I feel it’s a more direct route that allows the audience to connect with and believe in the story. In the past we made great

El Gouna Lifestyle | YM Studios

When young designer Yasmina Makram Founder of YM Studios set out to design a beach home in El Gouna she used her skill-set to create an eclectic and serene respite from the city life of Cairo. El Gouna Lifestyle

By combining textures with simple yet elegant natural fabrics and materials, and applying a combination of chic simplicity with carefully sourced design  features, Makram has captured the essence of the Gouna lifestyle – creative, relaxed and visually exciting. El Gouna Lifestyle

Gouna Lifestyle

Gouna Lifestyle

Gouna Lifestyle

YM Studios is a multidisciplinary studio that focuses on residential, commercial, office and hospitality providing  architecture and interior design solutions.

Makram completed her studies at the George Washington University and continued in Milan her design studies at Istituto Marangoni. . .

Joie De Vivre

A Great Deal on Wheels

Getting to Know Uber

What is the concept behind Uber and where did it first start?

Uber, a smartphone application that connects drivers to passengers in the area, was founded to solve the need for reliable transportation, wherever and whenever.  The idea first came about when founders Travis Kalanick and Gareth Camp were in Paris and were having a hard time finding a taxi – they thought, “What if you could push a button to request your very own private transport to appear?” This idea is what then became Uber. Starting in San Francisco in 2009, it is now in over 310 cities across 56 countries.

Why did you start Uber in Cairo?

Cairo is a progressive city with a huge population of people on the move. Transport is available but we are here to provide an alternative choice to move around the city. For riders, we are providing a very high level of safety, transparency and reliability in getting around. We get lots of feedback from riders about this being one of the most convenient ways they have gotten around Cairo.  For drivers, we are providing additional economic benefits and flexible work hours.

Why do you think Uber has taken off so well around the world?

As a smartphone app, we are offering an unprecedented level of safety and transparency to the market. When a rider requests a ride, they see the driver’s name, photo and car license plate before even getting in the car – they can then share their route with family and friends via the GPS enabled map. You get the same experience in any of the 310 cities we operate in so we are helping build a mobility network not only within cities, but between countries and regions as well. We are also generating economic opportunity for 50,000 jobs around the world and are excited to bring that type of opportunity to Cairo.

How many cars do you have operating in Egypt?

As a technology company, we don’t employ drivers or own cars – instead we partner with licensed drivers and transportation providers in order to use our platform. While we don’t disclose numbers, I can say our focus is to grow our supply base – the number of drivers we partner with – to meet demand as steadily as possible. We have been growing (double digit) month on month.

How can we make a booking?

Riders first have to download the Uber app from the app store or on uber.com. Payment is made via credit or debit card details safely stored in the app.

How has it been received in Cairo?

The response has been amazing. The drivers we partner with are also starting to see better economic opportunity and that is something extremely important to us.

Have you had to make any modifications to the usual operating procedures to fit with local social habits i.e. ladies only vehicles?

Because we don’t own a fleet of cars or employ the drivers, we only want to build upon the existing licensed supply – however we are open to future initiatives that would bring more safety in helping people get around and ‘ladies only vehicles’ is an interesting one.

Where in Egypt does Uber operate?

We are available throughout all of Cairo, even in areas that would have otherwise not been as accessible such as 6th October and Rehab. You can generally get a ride via Uber in about 10 minutes anywhere in Cairo. However, we do go to places like Alexandria, Sa7el and Hurghada and you can find an estimate of all of our flat rate fares for trips outside of Cairo on our city blog, uber.com/cairo.

Will you have Uber cars operating in Sa7el this summer?

Yes, we are very excited to be partnering with drivers over there and have some very exciting activations and campaigns coming up so please stay tuned and be sure to follow us on social media for the latest updates!

How does your pricing compare with the local white taxis?

We estimate the journey via time and distance. The base for our current promotional pricing starts at EGP 3 and then goes up EGP 0.2 per minute plus EGP 1.3 per kilometer. Our minimum fare is at 8 EGP.

In a time when people are more vigilant, what can you tell us about your security standards?

Safety is our number one priority. For riders, Uber connects users with safe transportation on-demand, wherever and whenever they choose, at the touch of a button. The seamless experience means never having to worry about finding a ride or having cash, and most importantly, users know who their driver is before getting in the car. Screening for safe drivers is just the beginning of our safety efforts. Our process includes prospective and regular checks of drivers’ motor vehicle records to ensure ongoing safe driving. All drivers must be fully licensed to drive and have insurance for their vehicle.

Background Check: Drivers are screened via an incredibly rigorous background check process. Fingerprints are matched against existing criminal records and additional cross-checking is done to verify things such as name/physical address/identity in Cairo.

Drug Test: We require a mandatory drug test from each one of our drivers, which is then re-screened periodically to ensure all records are up to date.

One-on-One Interviews: We conduct multiple face-to-face interviews prior to hiring all our drivers. This is done to ensure that we select the most qualified candidates with the strongest performance record.

Referrals: We inquire with current drivers, former employers, neighbours, social acquaintances, etc for driver recommendations.

Taken together, these sources paint a thorough picture of each driver’s upstanding character.

Do you have non-smoking vehicles?

We don’t own a fleet of cars, but instead work with the existing supply. We do tell drivers that they should not be smoking in cars and if we get consistent complaints – via the rider feedback and ratings system – about a car smelling like smoke, we let the driver know it is an issue with the intention to not allow it.

Is there a telephone operator you can speak to?

As a forward-thinking company, we don’t have a telephone operator but we have a team working around the clock that responds as soon as possible when a rider sends an email to support.cairo@uber.com or via the feedback form that appears in the app at the end of the trip. Keeping it on e-mail allows us to know exactly which trip the rider is referring to.

How does the driver find my location?

Your phone’s GPS may not always be able to pinpoint your exact location as accurately as you’d like. If you’re indoors, your phone may have trouble establishing a good connection to the satellite(s) responsible for letting it find your location.

The pin displayed in your Uber app tells your driver where to pick you up. By moving the map on the Uber app you can re-center the pin so that it accurately reflects your location. On the latest version of the app, you can also click ‘Pickup Location’ and manually enter and search for your address.

All you Need to know About Pure Water

We drink liters of water each day, we couldn’t survive without it. So, what do we need to know to stay hydrated and healthy? Cairo West Magazine sought advice from Dr. Nesma El Talawy, CEO and Founder of Ibn Hayan Laboratories.

 

CWM: Dr. Nesma, what are common illnesses and health risks that people encounter by drinking impure water?

NT: Drinking contaminated water can lead to adverse health effects, including gastrointestinal illness, reproductive problems, and neurological disorders.

Some of the effects can be immediate, or may be noticed after many years. The health effects can range from no physical impact to severe illness according to many factors such as:

  • The age and general health status of the person
  • The type of contaminant
  • The amount
  • How long the person has been drinking the contaminated water

Infants, young children, pregnant women, the elderly, and people whose immune systems are compromised may be more susceptible to illness than others.

But in most cases common symptoms include nausea, vomiting, cramps and diarrhea. Also drinking contaminated water can cause hepatitis, giardiasis, cryptosporidiosis and dysentery.

What filters can offer the level of purity required and what are the main components?

Activated carbon filters are probably the best option as carbon is considered the most absorbent material known to man. Activated Carbon is charcoal that has been treated with oxygen to open up millions of tiny pores between the carbon atoms. This tremendously increases the surface area of the carbon, allowing it to absorb great amounts of certain chemicals. The positively charged and highly absorbent carbon attracts and traps many impurities and contaminants through its tiny pores. Chemicals that are not attracted to carbon pass by, and when all the pores are full, filtering stops. This is why filters need to be replaced.

It mainly gets rid of bad tastes, odors and harmful materials like, chlorine, heavy metals such as copper, lead and mercury, disinfection byproducts, parasites such as Giardia and Cryptosporidium, pesticides, radon, volatile organic chemicals such as methyl-tert-butyl ether (MTBE), dichlorobenzene and trichloroethylene (TCE). When choosing a carbon water filter, the decision must be made between an activated carbon water filter and a carbon block water filter. The multilevel filters are best.

Are carbon filters more reliable than bottled water?

Filtered water is a more economical option and it also has fluoride, which is good for teeth formation. But no filter will give a good performance over the long-term use unless it receives regular maintenance. As when contaminants build up, a filter can become less effective and actually can make water worse releasing harmful bacteria or chemicals back into the filtered water. In order to keep filters working properly, one must follow the manufacturer’s maintenance directions. And see how often filters should be changed.

What tests can be made to ensure that water is clean and potable?

Drinking water should be checked against pathogens, heavy metals and pesticides. Pathogens can be viruses, protozoa or bacteria. To actually test water for specific harmful organisms is very time consuming and expensive. Therefore, testing water is limited to investigating presence of specific bacteria called coliform.

Total coliform organisms are a group of bacteria that are commonly found in the environment in the feces of animals and humans, and are an indicator of the safety of your water. However total coliform bacteria don’t cause illness, but their presence is a warning sign and indicates that disease-causing organisms (bacteria, viruses, parasites) are present and could cause a potential health risk. Checking lead levels is also very important, as even very low levels can be toxic.

 

 

 

 

 

Dr Nesma El Talawy

CEO & Founder – Ibn Hayan Laboratories

10 Best Summer Beach

Todd Glaser has been staff photographer for a US magazine for years now but it’s his personal instagram that really shines. He’s in the middle of a black and white photo challenge and is showing a really unique view of the ocean.

Todd Glaser (@toddglaser)

Matt Bauer is a “visual consultant” and if you could roll the California sunlight into a ball and then put it in a camera and then blow it up, his feed is what you’d get.

Matt Bauer (@mattcbauer)

The man behind this Instagram account survived a shark attack by punching the shark in the face. He lost a leg, but was back in the water a month after the attack. Mike is a professional surf photographer, and shares his Hawaiian adventures on Instagram.

Mike Coots (@mikecoots)

John lives and breathes surfing so he decided to dedicate his life to capturing the ocean in all it’s beauty. Join him while he travels the world and photographs some of the most successful surfers in the game.

John Respondek (@johnrespondek)

Whenever you scroll by a photo on Jonathan’s Instagram it’s like a splash of sunshine hits you in the face. He captures the California spirit and leaves it right there in your feed.

Jonathan Nafarrete (@jonathan360)

This is one of the most followed travel accounts on Instagram. It’s the work of a husband and wife who travel the world. Check it out right now to be swept away to an exotic location where the sun is always shining and the sea is always turquoise.

Beaches n Resorts (@beaches_n_resorts)

After her father passed, Amber picked up his camera and took it out to sea. Since then she’s put together an amazing collection of ocean photography from her home state of Hawaii.

Amber Mozo (@ambermozo)

You can count on this adventure and lifestyle photographer to capture stunning images of the Southern California coastline. You’ll find nothing but peace and serenity in Matt’s photos.

Matt Bauer (@mattcbauer)

Big Boys’ Beach Toys

Stretches of golden sand and an azure sea beckoning a few feet away. What boy of any age could resist getting out his toys to make the most of endless summer days?

Our top picks for a fun-filled, action-packed  summer might appeal to the girls as well!

NEW WAVE

NEW WAVE

Summer Essentials

Summer is here! Are you ready? How about your kids? It’s time to stock up on the season’s essentials like summer shoes, shorts, swimsuits and more. Whether you’re jetting off somewhere abroad or spending summer in Egypt by the sea, make sure you’re well equipped.

 

Diwan New Releases

The Year of Reading Dangerously:  How Fifty Great Books Saved My Life

Author: Andy Miller

A working father whose life no longer feels like his own discovers the transforming powers of great (and downright terrible) literature in this laugh-out-loud memoir.

Andy Miller had a job he quite liked, a family he loved and no time at all for reading. Or so he kept telling himself. But, no matter how busy or tired he was, something kept niggling at him. Books. Books he’d always wanted to read. Books he’d said he’d read, when he hadn’t. Books that whispered the promise of escape from the 6.44 to London. And so, with the turn of a page, began a year of reading that was to transform Miller’s life completely.

This book is Miller’s inspirational and very funny account of his expedition through literature: classic, cult and everything in-between. Crack the spine of your unread Middlemarch, discover what The Da Vinci Code and Moby Dick have in common (everything, surprisingly) and knock yourself out with a new-found enthusiasm for Tolstoy, Douglas Adams and The Epic of Gilgamesh. The Year of Reading Dangerously is a reader’s odyssey and it begins with opening this book.

The Book of Forgiving

Authors: Desmond Tutu & Mpho Tutu

The Book of Forgiving, written together by the Nobel Peace Laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu, and his daughter Revd Mpho Tutu, offers a deeply personal testament and guide to the process of forgiveness.

All of us have, at times, needed both to forgive and be forgiven – whether small, everyday harms or real traumas. But the path to forgiveness is not easy, and the process unclear. How do we let go of resentment when we have been harmed, at times irreparably? How do we forgive and still pursue justice? How do we heal our hearts, and move on? How do we forgive ourselves for the harm we have caused others?

Drawing on his memories of reconciliation in post-apartheid South Africa, Archbishop Desmond Tutu has identified four concrete steps to forgiveness through which we must all pass if we are to reach our destination:

1) Admitting the wrong and acknowledging the harm

2) Telling one’s story and witnessing the anguish

3) Asking for forgiveness and granting forgiveness

4) Renewing or releasing the relationship

Each chapter contains reflections and personal stories, as well as exercises for practicing each step of the path. The Book of Forgiving is a touchstone and tool for anyone seeking the freedom of forgiveness: an inspiring guide to healing ourselves and creating a more united world.

 

Look Who’s Back

Author: Timur Vermes

Berlin, Summer 2011. Adolf Hitler wakes up on a patch of open ground, alive and well. Things have changed – no Eva Braun, no Nazi party, no war. Hitler barely recognizes his beloved Fatherland, filled with immigrants and run by a woman.

People certainly recognize him, albeit as a flawless impersonator who refuses to break character. The unthinkable, the inevitable happens, and the ranting Hitler goes viral, becomes a YouTube star, gets his own T.V. show, and people begin to listen. But the Führer has another program with even greater ambition – to set the country he finds a shambles back to rights.

Look Who’s Back stunned and then thrilled 1.5 million German readers with its fearless approach to the most taboo of subjects. Naive yet insightful, repellent yet strangely sympathetic, the revived Hitler unquestionably has a spring in his s