Wikala of Al Ghuri and the Tanoora dance Show
The Wikala was built in 1504 by Sultan Qunsuwah Al Ghuri as an accommodation and
amarket place for traders from all over the world. The building that has a
rectangular shape consists of four stores with 28 rooms in each store.The
traders used to come from every country in Africa and stay in this Wikala for
weeks. They used to stay in one of the upper floors while their animals and
goods were stored in the rooms of the ground floor. The Wikala of Al Ghuri is
the best preserved example of this Islamic architecture.
The fifteen minutes were soon gone and me and my wife
.
I went there and found a huge number of tourists from different nationalities waiting at the gate of the Wikala for the start of the show. I asked the man at the door and he told me the show will start in 15 minutes and I have to wait for my turn to enter. I started looking around exploring the people who were waiting to enter the show. Most of the tourists were French who are most famous for being interested in the culture of the country they visit.
There were other tourists from other countries in Europe, the states, and Asia as well. This is beside a number of Egyptians who came to the Wikala to enjoy the Tanoora dance show
I found this a good chance to explore the complex as it was my first time to
visit the Wikala of Al Ghuri. I went and took a look inside the rooms that were
surrounding the open air Sahn in the Wikala. In each of these rooms there were
fabulous paintings showing different styles of Tanoora dancing. Some of these
paintings were realistic while the others were abstract
When I went back to my seat, I found out that most of the seats were full with
people from different nationalities. An old man was sitting next to me and he
started talking to me without hesitation as most Egyptians would do in such
occasions. He told me that he works for the supreme council of Egyptian
antiquities and this was his fourth time to come and see the Tanoora dance show
in the Ghuri Wikala. He told me that the dance was very impressive and what he
liked most was the Saggat player. The Saggat is a small percussion oriental
music instrument where the player holds a couple of metal rings in both hands
and starts hitting them together. Honestly I was surprised that this man came to
this show only to see the Saggat player in particular. However, afterwards, I
understood why he was so fond of this Saggat player.

The performance started with eight music players who came on stage. There were
eight Tabla players dressed in white oriental robes. The Tabla is the most
famous oriental percussion instrument. It is the considered to be the oriental
drums. The Saggat player was in the middle and to the left hand side there was
one Mezmar player. The Mezmar sound is like the flute in the western music. On
the first floor of the Wikala and behind the players, stood a Rabbaba player,
which is a 100% Egyptian string instrument that has a quite distinctive sound,
and beside him stood a Nay player, which is an old oriental music instrument
created in the era before Islam in the Arabian peninsula.
They all started performing together in the beginning playing very amusing
oriental music. After about 10 minutes the Mezmar player went in front of the
group performing a brilliant solo with the other players in the band playing
with him. He started moving and dancing in different directions while playing
the Mezmar and at the end of his solo he was rewarded with a huge applause from
the audience.

After him, it was the turn of one of the Tabla players who came and stood alone
in front of the group. He performed some solos on the Tabla which is considered
to be quite difficult. However, he was extremely clever in his performance and
the audience was astonished at how he created completely different rhythms in
each part of his performance.
At last it was the turn for the Saggat player who moved proudly in front of the
group opening his hands with the Saggat inside them and smiling at the audience.
He bowed in front of the audience and seemed very confident of himself and his
success but until this moment I didn’t see this distinctive factor that mad the
old man came to watch him in particular other than any other player in the band.
However, when he started his performance I knew exactly what the old man meant.
The Saggat player was different than any other player in the group. With every
sound the Saggat made, he made quite an interesting facial expression. It seemed
as if the Saggat was part of his body sending blood through his veins. His moves
and reactions were amazing. He smiled when his music was cheerful and seemed sad
when his music was sorrowful. The beats of the Saggat started getting faster and
faster as he moved around the stage dancing in circles. His solo was the most
remarkable among the whole show.
Then, it was the turn for another Tabla player to perform his Solo. His mission
to entertain the audience was difficult after the exciting Saggat player
performance. However, this tall man was pretty certain of his success. With the
first moves of his long fingers on the Tabla, he seemed to be the most talented
among all the Tabla players. He deserved loud clapping with the first beats he
played. He started playing the Tabla and all the other Tabla players went moving
around him in an amazing tableau of art.
It was awesome then to see the Saggat player again in the scene playing his
beats with the last Tabla player. They both emerged in an ensemble that really
pleased the audience who were seeing the performance and astonished at the
abilities and talents of the players.
In the next part of the show the stage was clear and a singer appeared in the
second floor of the Wikala beside the Nay and the Rabbaba player. His voice was
touching as he started chanting famous oriental songs before the group who left
the stage was beside him now in the second floor playing the Tabla while he was
singing.
Afterwards, a group of Tanoora dancers came on stage and started dancing in
circles as they played with the Tabla. Tanoora is an old Arabic word that means
skirt in English. They started doing some marvelous group dancing while the
singer sang popular songs. They moved around the stages like butterflies as
their moves were very smooth.
All the audiences were pleased to see the Saggat player again dancing in the
middle of this group of Tabla players. This time, he didn’t hold his Saggat with
him but he had two Tablas in his hands and was wearing the colorful Tanoora
robe. He started performing the traditional Tanoora dancing moving quickly in
circles while the Tanoora robe went higher and higher with the acceleration of
the speed of his circles. All the people were amazed that this man was able to
move around in circles for not less than twenty minutes without stopping.
This is the most significant factor in the Tanoora show, moving around in
circles wearing the multi colored robes. The Saggat player held another rounded
robe in his hands and it moved around with the robe he was wearing. The show
went like this for a long period with the players changing their dances. They
danced while moving around, while standing, and even while sitting, with the
Tanoora dancer moving around in circles in the middle of the group. In the same
time, the singer was singing Islamic tunes.
The last part of the show started with the Mezmar player at the right hand of
the stage and a performer with a huge Tabla to the left hand of the stage
playing a song together. In ten minutes the other Tabla players joined them. In
another ten minutes two wonderful Tanoora dancers joined them. They both started
moving around quickly in small circles making a startling scene. All the people
enjoyed this part very much as all the features of the show were combined
together in an incredible harmony.
At the end of the show I knew why the old man told me in the beginning of the
show that it was quite impressive. All the audience seemed very pleased at the
end of the show as they have seen a really distinctive performance that combined
architecture, art, and history together. After the show we went for a delicious
Fetir snack in the Hussein Area. Fetir is baked oriental pastries that are
cooked wonderfully in the Hussein Fetir restaurant. The performance of the
Tanoora dance takes place in the Ghuri Wikala usually on Monday and Wednesday at
7 o clock.
Wikala El Ghuri phone number : 02- 25100823










