Greater Cairo
A national hero and a suffering soldier: the Egyptian farmer in art and literature
Ever since the ancient Egyptians first left their mark on temple walls, the farmer has been the primary hero embodying the story of the land and the Nile. He was not merely a laborer who sowed and reaped, but rather a concentrated image of the spirit of Egypt, a symbol of fertility, generosity, and patience. In every historical era, the farmer reappeared, sometimes through the brush of an artist who translated his features into the hardness of the body and the depth of the gaze, and sometimes through the pen of a writer who made him a popular hero or a troubled man beset by pain.



