CAVE CHURCH OF SAINT SIMON AND GARBAGE CITY

Cairo
Duration

6 hours

Location

Cairo

Tour Type

praivate

Price

$50.00
$45.00/Per Person

Overview 

 

This journey will take you to Cairo tour 5 or 6 Hours starts every day start 8:00 am Private tour includes all Pick up & drop off transfers from customers′ location in Cairo.

HIGHLIGHTS

 

  • Private tour ensures personalized service
  • Included lunch and entrance fees mean no extra tour costs
  • Enjoy the comfort and security of traveling by private vehicle
  • Convenient pickup and drop-off at Cairo hotels

 

 

 

Prices Quoted Per Person in U.S.D ($)

 

  • Single Person = 70 $
  • From 2 to 3 People = 55 $
  • From 4 to 9 People = 45 $
  • Child From 6 to 11 Y = 30$

 

Inclusions

 

What is included in the Tour

 

  • Entrance fees
  • Bottled water
  • Professional guide
  • Hotel pickup and drop-off
  • Private tour
  • Transport by private vehicle

 

 

What is NOT included in the Tour

  • Any sites not stated in the program.
  • Gratuities.
  • Camera tickets.
  • Personal expenses.

 

Location Cairo
Price $50.00
Price After Discount $45.00
Adult Price $45.00
Children Price $30.00
Infant Price $0.00
Discount
10%
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This journey starts at 8:00 am you need to be ready at the lobby area of your hotel in Cairo. you will find your 365 Egypt Egyptologist t tour guide holding a sign of your name. At the first you will visit to the "Cave Church" in Egypt which is one of the largest churches in the country, a place where 70,000-plus Christians gather every week to worship and praise Jesus -- a place that's home to one of the world's oldest Christian communities. The cave, also known as the Monastery of Saint Simon, is located in the Mokattam mountain in southeastern Cairo, in an area known as "garbage city" due to the large population of garbage collectors, or Zabbaleen, that live there.

 

The Zabbaleen are descendants of farmers who started migrating from Upper Egypt to Cairo in the 1940s. Fleeing poor harvests and poverty they came to the city looking for work and set-up makeshift settlements around the city. Initially, they stuck to their tradition of raising pigs, goats, chickens and other animals, but eventually found collecting and sorting of waste produced by the city residents more profitable. The Zabbaleen sort through household garbage, salvaging and selling things of value, while the organic waste provides an excellent source of food for their animals. In fact, this arrangement worked so well, that successive waves of migrants came from Upper Egypt to live and work in the newly founded garbage villages of Cairo,

 

At the end of the Tour, you will be transferred back to your Hotel

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