Socially ostracized, discriminated against and facing cool disregard from the authorities, this community of an estimated 60 – 70,000 Coptic Christians migrated from remote regions of Egypt in the 1950’s, settling on low-value land on Cairo’s eastern edge. Now known as the Zabaleen, an Arabic phrase which means quite literally “garbage people”, the community has evolved into a hardworking and self-sustaining people offering an informal yet highly-organised service to homes and businesses throughout the city. For generations, garbage has represented an asset to them as they have pursued the invaluable harvesting and hand-sorting of the 15,000 tonnes of rotting domestic refuse produced every day by the city’s 17.8 million residents. More...
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