SEKEMs Journal for Economics, Culture and Society in Egypt
SEKEM Insight
Nr. 69 March 2008
Dear Readers, After having completed its third decade of existence, SEKEM is about to make a bold new step. About 250km east of the current mother farm, the Egyptian initiative who intends to realise a profitable combination of social and economic development, is going to establish the second SEKEM farm in the coming years. Those who have already visited the Sinai may be wondering at the selection of the location. The peninsula is mostly barren, with large stretches of desert not appearing to offer fertile ground at all. The Sinai’s deserts do not seem to distinguish themselves from those surrounding Cairo’s suburbs. Over the past decades the peninsula has made history several times - both peaceful and military history. However, the selection of this particular ground for the site is not unusual for SEKEM. It resembles the original ground in many ways even though the short-term visitor will likely not notice. For the second time SEKEM is about to embark on a well-known journey: to use the little the desert offers and to create flourishing life - plants, animals and human life - out of it. In this issue we would like to introduce you to SEKEM’s future plans for the new farm site on the Sinai peninsula.
Your Editorial Team
Economics
Enterprises
Culture
SEKEM inaugurates “SEKEM Sinai”
SEKEM expands milk production
Conference on social Art in SEKEM
„SEKEM Sinai“: A New Beginning SEKEM Initiative Breaks Ground for New Farm on Sinai Peninsula
The Sinai, too, is still dominated by the experience of solitude and the barrenness of the desert
After 30 years of intensive work and substantial developments in and around the original SEKEM Farm near Belbeis, SEKEM is about to embark on a new mission by breaking the ground on the new SEKEM site on the Sinai peninsula, about 150km east of Cairo. The new ground is adjacent to the Suez Canal, south of the Bitter Lakes and about 10km north of the AhmedHamdi-Tunnel, the road that connects mainland Egypt to the Sinai.
Stunning vistas stretch in front of the high sand dunes that also allow a direct view of the freighters passing through the canal. The first steps to flattening and preparing the land have already started. Some facilities containing an office, a storage and a canteen for the workers of SEKEM have already been erected and the next steps for connecting the site to existing infrastructure are being made. The official ground breaking was celebrated on 25 March.
The ground with a surface of about 2000 feddan (approximately 1000ha) is irrigated by the Sheikh-Zayed-Canal (water from the river Nile and its Ismailia Canal).
Why another site so far away from the main SEKEM farm near Belbeis? As always, the human being and its development is at the core of SEKEM’s work. Egypt desperately needs the expan-
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