Zabbaleen

Zabbaleen
زبالين
A group of Zabbaleen boys at Mokattam village
Total population
Between 50,000 and 70,000. Some sources estimate over 80,000.[1]
Regions with significant populations
Mokattam village, Garbage City, at the foot of the Mokattam Mountains.20,000 - 30,000
Languages
Egyptian Arabic
Religion
Christianity

The Zabbaleen (Egyptian Arabic: زبالين Zabbalīn, IPA: [zæbbæˈliːn]) is a word which literally means "garbage people" in Egyptian Arabic.[2] The contemporary use of the word in Egyptian Arabic is to mean "garbage collectors". In cultural contexts, the word refers to teenagers and adults who have served as Cairo's informal garbage collectors since approximately the 1940s. The Zabbaleen (singular: زبال Zabbāl, [zæbˈbæːl]) are also known as Zarraba (singular: Zarrab), which means "pig-pen operators."[2] The word Zabbalīn came from the Egyptian Arabic word zebāla ([zeˈbæːlæ], زبالة) which means "garbage".

Spread out among seven different settlements scattered in the Greater Cairo Urban Region, the Zabbaleen population is between 50,000 and 70,000.[3] The largest settlement is Mokattam village, nicknamed "Garbage City," located at the foot of the Mokattam Plateau, next to Manshiyat Nasser.[4] The Zabbaleen community has a population of around 20,000 to 30,000, over 90 percent of which are poor Coptic Christians living in self-built homes, many in slum conditions.[5]

For several generations, the Zabbaleen supported themselves by collecting trash door-to-door from the residents of Cairo for nearly no charge. The Zabbaleen recycle up to 80 percent of the waste that they collect via local Egyptian companies, whereas most Western garbage collecting companies only recycle 20 to 25 percent of the waste that they collect.[6][7]

The Zabbaleen use donkey-pulled carts and pickup trucks to transport the garbage that they collect from the residents of Cairo. They then transport the garbage to their homes in Mokattam Village, where they sort the collected items, then either sell the sorted items to middlemen or create new materials from it themselves. The living situation for the Zabbaleen is poor; they live amongst the trash that they sort in their village, and with the pigs to which they feed their organic waste. Nevertheless, the Zabbaleen have formed a strong and tight-knit community.

However, their way of life has come under threat after the Cairo municipal authorities’ decision in 2003 to award annual contracts of $50 million to three multinational garbage disposal companies.[8][9][10] The government authorities do not compensate the Zabbaleen for these changes, and as a result, the takeover of waste collection threatens the socio-economic sustainability of the Zabbaleen community.[11]

The Zabbaleen faced a major challenge when the Egyptian Agricultural Ministry ordered the culling of all pigs in April 2009 in response to national fears over the possible spread of H1N1 influenza.[12][13] This governmental decision posed a major setback to the Zabbaleen because pigs, who eat the organic waste, are an essential component to their recycling and sorting system. Immediately after the culling of pigs, observers noticed a visible increase in piles of trash and rotting food on the streets of Cairo.[14] There are also worries that the Egyptian government is seeking to remove the Mokattam village entirely and relocate the Zabbaleen further outside of Cairo by a further 25 km, to a 50-feddan (51.9-acre) plot in Cairo's eastern desert settlement of Katameya.[15][16]

  1. ^ "manfredi pantanella – leaving rubbish". burn magazine. 23 April 2012.
  2. ^ a b Assaad, Ragui. (1996) Formalizing the Informal? The Transformation of Cairo's Refuse Collection System. Journal of Planning Education & Research, vol. 16, p. 118.
  3. ^ Fahmi, Wael & Sutton, Keith. (2006) Cairo's Zabbaleen Garbage Recyclers: Multi-nationals’ Takeover and State Relocation Plans.Habitat International, vol. 30, p. 812.
  4. ^ Assad, R., (1998), Upgrading the Mokattam Zabbaleen (Garbage Collectors) Settlement in Cairo: What Have We Learned?, Paper Presented at the Macarthur Consortium on International Peace and Cooperation Symposium on The Challenge of Urban Sustainability.
  5. ^ "Marina of the Zabbaleen, directed by Engi Wassef. Produced by "Torch Films."". marinathemovie.com. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  6. ^ Fahmi, Wael & Sutton, Keith. (2006) Cairo's Zabbaleen Garbage Recyclers: Multinationals’ Takeover and State Relocation Plans. Habitat International, vol. 30, p. 820.
  7. ^ Fahmi, Wael Salah.(2005) The Impact of Privatization of Solid Waste Management on the Zabbaleen Garbage Collectors of Cairo.Environment & Urbanization, vol. 17, no.2, p. 158.
  8. ^ Rashed, Dena (October 23–29, 2003). "Cairo Cleanup Conundrums". Al-Ahram Weekly. Retrieved October 24, 2010.
  9. ^ Rashed, Dena (February 6–12, 2003). "Trashed Lives". Al-Ahram Weekly. Retrieved October 24, 2010.
  10. ^ Fahmi, Wael & Sutton, Keith. (2006) Cairo's Zabbaleen Garbage Recyclers: Multinationals’ Takeover and State Relocation Plans. Habitat International, vol, 30, p. 821.
  11. ^ "Garbage Dreams". garbagedreams.com.
  12. ^ Slackman, Michael (May 24, 2009). "Cleaning Cairo, but Taking a Livelihood". The New York Times. Retrieved October 24, 2010.
  13. ^ Fahmi, Wael & Sutton, Keith. (2010) Cairo's Contested Garbage: Sustainable Solid Waste Management and the Zabbaleen's Right to the City.Sustainability, vol. 2, p. 1773.
  14. ^ Slackman, Michael (September 19, 2009). "Belatedly, Egypt Spots Flaws in Wiping Out Pigs". The New York Times. Retrieved October 24, 2010.
  15. ^ Fahmi, Wael & Sutton, Keith. (2006) Cairo's Zabbaleen Garbage Recyclers: Multinationals’ Takeover and State Relocation Plans.Habitat International, vol. 30, p. 820.
  16. ^ Fahmi, Wael & Sutton, Keith. (2010) Cairo's Contested Garbage: Sustainable Solid Waste Management and the Zabbaleen's Right to the City. Sustainability, vol. 2, pp. 1771 and 1774.

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