My 8-year old son, Nazar, also spoke in the regional Multicultural Public Speaking competition. He talked about his connection to Egypt, including his friends and some of the things he loves about it.
Today I would like to talk about my overseas connection.
Many people in
Australia are from other countries. For example, me! Well, half of me. One half of me is from
Australia and the other half is from Egypt. Egypt is a country in Africa.
The main language in
Egypt is Arabic. My brother and I always
speak Arabic with our dad, no matter where we are. One Egyptian word is “Iziak”.
That means “hello”.
There are so many awesome things I love about Egypt. For example, the people are really generous. They are also very funny and are experts at making jokes.
My best friends in
Cairo are Zeinab and Mohamed. They don’t
have a lot of money. They live in the garage of the building next door.
They are so kind and
happy, even though they don’t have a proper house to live in. We hang out together a
lot. They are fantastic at inventing new games. One fun game we invented is a type of
hide-and-seek, where we hide in the trees. It’s called Hide and Tree.
Kids in Egypt also love
to play soccer in the street. We all meet in the park outside our house after
school. On the weekends, we sometimes
play until 11 o’clock at night!
Sometimes we get two
pounds from our grandparents and go to the kooshk to buy chips and chocolate. A
kooshk is a very small corner shop that stays open until about 1 o’clock in the
morning!
There are also some
really nasty kids in our street. They
love to pick fights with all the other kids and cause problems – just for fun. They have heaps of
money. They prove that having money doesn’t make you better than anyone. And money doesn’t make
you a better person. Because they have heaps of money and they’re bullies.
Kids like Zeinab and
Mohamed prove that being a good person isn’t about how much money you have. Because
they don’t have that much money and they’re fantastic.
If scientists are ever
able to make a time machine, I would travel back to Ancient Egypt because I
want to find out how the pharaohs built the pyramids. We can learn a lot about
ourselves from our past.
A lot of people in this
school think that Egypt is just desert, mud huts by the River Nile and people
riding camels in the street. But they are just
stereotypes. Egypt has much more than those things.
Egypt has cars, trucks,
buses, trains, roads, apartments, parks, theme parks, I phones, I pads, schools,
malls, shops, airports, markets and cities. It just goes on and on and on.
Do you still think the
same about Egypt now?