Shali reborn $600 000 restoration

Ecotourism: Egypt Trawls for visitors to Natural Reserve


Tucked away in Egypt’s Western Desert, the Shali Fortress once protected inhabitants against the incursions of wandering tribes, but now there are hopes its renovation will attract ecotourists.

The 13th-century edifice, called Shali or “home” in the local Siwi language, was built by Berber populations atop a hill in the pristine Siwa oasis, some 600km southwest of Cairo.

The towering structure is made of kershef – a mixture of clay, salt and rock, which acts as a natural insulator in an area where the summer heat can be scorching.

After it was worn away by erosion and then torrential rains almost 100 years ago, the European Union and Egyptian company Environmental Quality International (EQI) began to restore the fortress in 2018 at a cost of over $600 000
(about R9.24 million).

“Teach your children and mine about what ancient Shali means, sang a choir of young girls in brightly coloured robes at the renovated fortress’ inauguration ceremony last week.

Dotted by thick palm groves, freshwater springs and salt lakes, the Siwa oasis’ geographic and cultural isolation offers a rare ecofriendly getaway, far from Egypt’s bustling urban communities.

The region’s tourism model contrasts with Egypt’s mass approach in other areas, such as its Red Sea resorts in the east or along the Nile valley,especially in Luxor and Aswan in the south. Tourists began gravitating to Siwa from the 1980s, after the government built roads linking it with the northwestern city of Marsa Matrouh, the provincial capital on the Mediterranean.

The Marsa Matrouh governor has called the oasis, registered as a natural reserve since 2002, a “therapeutic and environmental tourism destination”.  Eco-lodges offer lush vegetable gardens and kershef facades. Restoration of the Shali fortress was carried out under the aegis of the Egyptian government, which has been pushing to make Siwa a global “ecotourism destination”.

The project also includes setting up a traditional market and a museum on local architecture. “The project will certainly benefit us and bring tourists. Today, I can offer my palm frond products inside Shali,” said Adam Aboulkassem, who sells handicrafts in the fortress.

EQI project manager Ines alMoudariss said the materials used in the restoration were sourced from the fortress site itself.

She said the project was about “bringing the inhabitants of Siwa back to their origins and offering them employment opportunities” and services.

Events in the past decade outside the desert oasis have had a ripple effect in Siwa and tourism slumped after political unrest that rocked Egypt and other countries in the Middle East in 2011.

Foreign tourist arrivals at the oasis have plummeted from around 20 000 in 2010 to just 3 000, said Mahdi al-Howeiti, director of the tourism office.

Domestic tourism has only partially made up for the decline. This year, the coronavirus pandemic put a brake on travel worldwide and dealt a further blow.

Critics say the project fails to address the concerns of the 30 000-strong Siwi population, a Berber ethnic group.

“No Siwi goes to Shali. We are attached to it, but from afar, like a landscape,” said Howeiti. There were more pressing issues for residents, such as fixing crumbled and unsafe roads or treating agricultural wastewater that harms the cultivation of olives and date palms – key pillars of the local economy.

The closest airport to Siwa, located just 50km from the border with war-torn Libya, is restricted to the military.

But some locals remain sceptical: “The fortress was not in danger of collapsing,” said Howeiti. “In my opinion, it would have been better to leave it as it is. These ruins have a history.” – AFP

For more news your way, download The Citizen’s app for iOS and Android.

Access premium news and stories

Access to the top content, vouchers and other member only benefits