Dubai Telegraph - 'In our blood': Egyptian women reclaim belly dance from stigma

EUR -
AED 4.256694
AFN 73.006558
ALL 96.183185
AMD 437.462357
ANG 2.074413
AOA 1062.652651
ARS 1616.583177
AUD 1.634887
AWG 2.088802
AZN 1.968976
BAM 1.975086
BBD 2.334991
BDT 142.252756
BGN 1.980809
BHD 0.437517
BIF 3441.742426
BMD 1.158836
BND 1.487395
BOB 8.011612
BRL 6.048742
BSD 1.159341
BTN 108.010902
BWP 15.820233
BYN 3.584907
BYR 22713.182337
BZD 2.331679
CAD 1.591719
CDF 2636.351736
CHF 0.91339
CLF 0.026784
CLP 1057.587983
CNY 7.996489
CNH 7.972918
COP 4277.55277
CRC 542.427133
CUC 1.158836
CUP 30.70915
CVE 112.464864
CZK 24.472182
DJF 205.948898
DKK 7.471133
DOP 68.168493
DZD 153.256108
EGP 60.532024
ERN 17.382538
ETB 182.173906
FJD 2.558248
FKP 0.869907
GBP 0.862579
GEL 3.146225
GGP 0.869907
GHS 12.629381
GIP 0.869907
GMD 85.754443
GNF 10171.680078
GTQ 8.868484
GYD 242.551028
HKD 9.078147
HNL 30.790613
HRK 7.5344
HTG 152.071514
HUF 390.82922
IDR 19560.279743
ILS 3.624074
IMP 0.869907
INR 108.151817
IQD 1518.074942
IRR 1524013.975298
ISK 143.799646
JEP 0.869907
JMD 182.132997
JOD 0.821554
JPY 182.779731
KES 150.179997
KGS 101.337763
KHR 4646.931796
KMF 495.9811
KPW 1042.938319
KRW 1723.368534
KWD 0.354812
KYD 0.96618
KZT 557.540752
LAK 24885.999794
LBP 103773.749324
LKR 361.379075
LRD 212.536652
LSL 19.502855
LTL 3.421741
LVL 0.700968
LYD 7.393341
MAD 10.845255
MDL 20.31736
MGA 4826.550671
MKD 61.840893
MMK 2433.253315
MNT 4155.40254
MOP 9.354227
MRU 46.481248
MUR 53.891672
MVR 17.903794
MWK 2012.897608
MXN 20.545118
MYR 4.564685
MZN 74.050655
NAD 19.503121
NGN 1573.11839
NIO 42.552008
NOK 10.987384
NPR 172.811971
NZD 1.971968
OMR 0.445583
PAB 1.159381
PEN 4.0032
PGK 4.985268
PHP 68.413043
PKR 323.488759
PLN 4.267587
PYG 7533.334191
QAR 4.223496
RON 5.094213
RSD 117.478165
RUB 99.83641
RWF 1690.741481
SAR 4.350755
SBD 9.326986
SCR 17.598041
SDG 696.460551
SEK 10.757867
SGD 1.480649
SHP 0.869427
SLE 28.565483
SLL 24300.220556
SOS 662.27146
SRD 43.458668
STD 23985.562074
STN 24.91497
SVC 10.144364
SYP 128.084693
SZL 19.503003
THB 37.627637
TJS 11.10097
TMT 4.055925
TND 3.373661
TOP 2.790198
TRY 51.308384
TTD 7.858106
TWD 36.841128
TZS 3010.068531
UAH 50.982556
UGX 4381.978336
USD 1.158836
UYU 46.959974
UZS 14132.002921
VES 526.906001
VND 30465.794063
VUV 138.374754
WST 3.166195
XAF 662.460109
XAG 0.015907
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.131812
XCG 2.08942
XDR 0.823884
XOF 662.273593
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.440433
ZAR 19.405896
ZMK 10430.917809
ZMW 22.694786
ZWL 373.144666
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    22.85

    +0.09%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    25.73

    -0.08%

  • BTI

    0.6300

    58.72

    +1.07%

  • NGG

    -1.8700

    85.53

    -2.19%

  • AZN

    0.5100

    188.93

    +0.27%

  • BP

    1.2500

    45.86

    +2.73%

  • RIO

    -2.0700

    85.65

    -2.42%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    52.37

    +0.59%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5900

    16.01

    -3.69%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    33.82

    -0.12%

  • BCC

    -1.9800

    69.86

    -2.83%

  • JRI

    -0.1630

    12.16

    -1.34%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    14.42

    +0.35%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.9

    +0.04%

'In our blood': Egyptian women reclaim belly dance from stigma
'In our blood': Egyptian women reclaim belly dance from stigma / Photo: Khaled DESOUKI - AFP

'In our blood': Egyptian women reclaim belly dance from stigma

As belly dancing gains popularity internationally, young Egyptian performers are working to restore its reputation at home, pushing back against decades of stigma to reclaim the dance as part of their artistic heritage.

Text size:

Once iconic figures of Egypt's cinematic golden age, belly dancers have watched their prestige wane, their art increasingly confined to nightclubs and wedding halls.

"No woman can be a belly dancer today and feel she's truly respected," said Safy Akef, an instructor and great-niece of dance legend Naima Akef, a fixture on the silver screen during the 1950s.

Despite her celebrated lineage, Safy, 33, has never performed on stage in Egypt.

"Once the show ends, the audience doesn't respect you, they objectify you," she told AFP.

Today, belly dance is known for skin-baring theatrics performed by foreign dancers and a handful of Egyptians.

The shift has fuelled moral disapproval in the conservative society and pushed even the descendants of iconic starlets away.

"People ask me all the time where they can see belly dancing that does justice to the art," said Safaa Saeed, 32, an instructor at a Cairo dance school.

"I struggle to answer," she told AFP.

Saeed, who was enchanted by Akef as a child, is now part of a movement led by choreographer Amie Sultan to reframe the art as part of Egyptian heritage, fit for theatres, festivals and UNESCO recognition.

- Colonial baggage -

A classically trained ballerina turned belly dancer, Sultan prefers to call what is formally known as oriental dance baladi, from the Arabic word "balad", meaning homeland.

"Baladi reflects the soul of who we are."

"But now it carries images of superficial entertainment, disconnected from its roots," she told AFP.

This disconnection, Sultan said, stems from shifting moral codes -- and colonial baggage.

In her book "Imperialism and the Heshk Beshk", author Shatha Yehia traces the artform's roots to ancient Egypt, but says the modern colloquial term only emerged in the 19th century, coined by French colonisers as danse du ventre, or "dance of the belly".

While descriptive, the phrase exoticised the movement and shaped perceptions both at home and abroad.

"Heshk beshk", an old onomatopoeic Egyptian expression evoking a performer's shaking moves, "is not merely a label for the dancer", Yehia writes.

"It is the Egyptian vernacular version of a femme fatale, the destructive woman who wields her body and feminine power to get what she wants. It's not just a label of vulgarity or immorality, it's synonymous with evil and debauchery."

Yehia argues that views on "heshk beshk" -- now shorthand for provocative, lowbrow dancing -- were shaped both by Western imperialism and local conservatism.

The fallout has been generational.

Akef's great-aunt was a star who "acted, danced and created iconic film tableaux".

But Safy instead has chosen to train others, including in Japan, where she spent three years teaching Egyptian folk and belly dance.

- 'Place of our own' -

Sultan launched the Taqseem Institute, named after the improvisational solos of Arabic music, in 2022.

Since then, dozens of women have been trained at the school, seven of whom now teach full-time.

The students are trained not only in choreography, but also in musicality, history and theory.

They study the evolution of Egyptian dance from pre-cinema figures like Bamba Kashshar and Badia Masabni through the golden age icons like Tahiya Carioca and Samia Gamal.

Sultan even takes the message to universities, giving talks to demystify the art form for new audiences, while her dancers work to preserve its history.

In 2023, she staged El-Naddaha, a performance blending Sufi themes with traditional and contemporary Egyptian movement.

Still, challenges remain.

"We want to have a place of our own -- like the old theatres -- a teatro where we can regularly perform," Saeed said.

Sultan is also pushing for official recognition.

She has begun the process of campaigning for the dance to be inscribed on UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage list.

But the path is long and requires support from the country's culture authorities.

For the time being, the dancers at Taqseem focus on their next performance.

Barefoot and clad in fitted dancewear, they hold one final run-through, undulating to a melody by Egyptian diva Umm Kulthum as the beat of a tabla drum echoes.

It's a dream come true for Saeed, who has been dancing since she was a child.

"I believe it's in our blood," she said with a smile.

D.Al-Nuaimi--DT