My whole life, I was an atheist.  I didn’t believe in anything, except that their might be some “energy thingy” out there that made the universe tick.  After all, if there wasn’t something, why couldn’t science create life?  It was not until my first trip to Egypt, where I went as an unwitting tourist, that Spirit smacked me upside the head and, in one incredible moment of clarity, made me understand that I was a soul having a human experience, and not a human just grappling with existential dialogue.

This was a powerful transformation for me, and, twelve years later, continues to be the most important moment of my entire life.  In fact, I finally sat down to write a book about my experiences.  Red Goddess Rising is being released this month, and I am thrilled with how it turned out.  But sitting at my computer the first time, wondering what the story was going to be, I realized it was about a lot more than my own spiritual awakening.  That moment of pure Spirit energy led to spiritual tours that I co-lead with my partner, Greg Roach, of Spirit Quest Tours. And on those trips, we have seen people have their own experiences, healings, and awakenings, often just as powerful.

Many of these spiritual travel shifts occurred with women who needed some sort of heart Spiritual travel Egypthealing.  They had been through a traumatic divorce, the death of their spouse, or in some way lost part of themselves to the “stuff that happens along the way.”  Like the woman whose husband had an affair.  She had left him nearly ten years ago, but on some level, still thought it was her fault and had been punishing herself ever since.  Or the women whose husbands or loved ones committed suicide, and years later, they still felt horrific guilt and agonized over what they could have done to stop it.  Sometimes, it’s a man – like the guy who went to prison for something he was only peripherally involved with, then no longer understood his purpose.  For all these people, a single week or two on a spiritual tour with us, and they have gone home lighter, freer, having forgiven themselves.

In some cases the healing that takes place during spiritual travel is so profound they are literally no longer the same person they were when they arrived.  We had one couple who came to Egypt with us, and when we told the wife how much we liked her husband, she replied, “Oh, that’s not my husband.  I don’t know who that man is.  I just hope he comes home with me!” And he did.

So why does this happen so quickly, on what most people believe is just a great vacation? In my observations, it’s because there’s a letting go that occurs when you are taken out of your routine during spiritual travel.  Flying so far away from your “normal” life gives you permission, and the time, to dream.  Once this opening takes place, you can shift, even just a little. And then a little more.  We structure our trips to facilitate the most opportunity for awareness and healing (like on our Eat Pray Love Bali  spiritual tours, where we have daily themes from the book) but it’s more than that.  It’s the allowing and encouraging of your spirit.

Red Goddess Rising BookWe forget—as we drive to work, keep up with our errands, deal with screaming children or bosses, and continue to grind away at our daily lives—how much we need to give ourselves room to grow, to hope.  Getting away from the daily minutiae enables us to stretch, and to remember the truth underneath everything: we are spiritual beings, and our only real job is to experience joy.  As long as we accomplish that, the rest of it falls in line.  On spiritual travel, whether solo or in groups, we are granting ourselves permission to be who we really are in some small way.  Once that seed is planted, it flourishes quickly and powerful shifts occur.  I am blessed to have witnessed so many on our own spiritual tours.

Red Goddess Rising comes out January 18th. Join author Halle Eavelyn at Mystic Journey bookstore for a launch party and reading January 20th at 6:30 pm for excerpts from her spiritual travel memoir, wine, and Egyptian appetizers.  RSVP here: http://www.halleeavelyn.com in the EVENTS section.

This blog was originally published on the Mystic Journey Blog.

 

Written on January 10th, 2012 , Ask the Expert, Travelers' Tips

This week’s blog is a guest post from Spirit Quest Tours’ partner, Geoff Edwards, The Success Coach.  Geoff has been a terrific coach for me for many months now, and he has started helping our clients expand their comfort zones and build success!  He wrote this great (and very useful) article on how your perception can hold you back, and how much changing it can improve your life.  Check it out!  At the bottom, there’s more info on Geoff, too.

This article originally appeared in Oxygen Magazine, to which Geoff is a regular contributor.

IT’S VERY EASY TO TAKE YOUR PERCEPTION AS REALITY. IF SOMEONE GREETS YOU DIFFERENTLY YOU DECIDE THAT THEY’RE ANNOYED AT YOU, OR A COMMENT FROM YOUR MANAGER MAKES YOU FEEL THAT YOU ARE NOT DOING A GREAT JOB AT WORK. WE HAVE A TENDENCY TO BE OUR OWN WORST CRITICS, AND THEN EVERYONE BUT US MOVES ON.

By Geoff Edwards

One of the major factors in reducing stress is to change your perception. The good news is that it’s a very simple thing to change.

INCREASE YOUR AWARENESS How you experience life is controlled by your perception of yourself. One of the first things you need to do to change your perception is to improve your awareness.

Do any of the following sound familiar? “I know I will mess this up,” or “I never achieve enough.” Do you always see the problem – or the solution – in every situation? Do you have a “glass half empty” perspective? If you’re not sure what your answer is, then you need to pay more attention to how you react to certain situations. Be aware of when these thoughts come and address them before they happen, so you can control them.

I have achieved great success with clients in increasing their awareness, changing their perceptions and developing their inner potential. The idea is to become aware of situations that arise daily. Note how you feel and perform over a week. Typical things you could consider include:

• Why you feel the way you do

• How you manage your thoughts

• Unproductive patterns of behaviour

• Triggers that you react to

• Fears and beliefs

• Self-esteem

With this information, it is important to then trace the root cause of any unproductive states and perceptions. You can do this by taking notice of a number of things:

• How often are you running at less than optimum?

• What situations are drawing on your power?

• What are your underlying habits, fears and beliefs?

• What thinking are you engaging in?

• How successful were you at turning negative situations around?

• Overall patterns of behaviour.

From this, you will then gain an idea of how you feel on a weekly basis and whether the state you are in is productive, supports your perception and will ultimately lead you to success Another way of increasing your awareness is by gathering information on your achievements and to seek the views of others on your performance. Quite often this closes the gap on your preconceived views, enables you to adjust where appropriate and to become aware of the amazing potential you have to offer.

CONTROL YOUR THOUGHTS Once you have built an awareness of your perceptions, it’s time to make the decision to control your thoughts for an improved outcome. You mightn’t have the power to control other people but you do have the power to control yourself – and especially how stressed you may feel. Any stressful thoughts should be disposed of. You can do this by creating more positive thoughts to replace negative thoughts that enter your head. Start to think about new thoughts that make you feel better about yourself. So the next time you find yourself in a situation where you think “I’m such a fool,” replace that thought with “I’m clever and more than capable of doing this.”

CREATE NEW HABITS If you want to stay focused on changing your perception, you need to create new habits. The only way you can create a new habit is to persist through, and face, every stressful event that stands in your way. It’s important to remember that this will not happen easily but you can do it – all you have to do is believe in yourself. To create momentum for changing habits, a “reasons why” list is also very important. Below are some great reasons to change your perception.

• To overcome fear

• To feel great about yourself

• To increase your self-esteem

• To see the value in yourself

• To let go of the past through release

• To better accept other people

• To feel independence

• To let go of reasons, fears and projected obstacles as to why something cannot be done.

Typical obstacles to change can occur during this process:

• Change may be difficult and painful

• Worrying you might fail or make mistakes

• Not understanding your emotions

• Fear that you will be different after the change

• Fear of leaving your comfort zone

The key to changing habits is to be conscious of your behaviour. Decide if a change is necessary and then move out of the undesirable habit by taking the following steps:

• Decide you definitely want to do this

• Ascertain reasons why you must do this

• Seek an alternative perception

• Repeat the process until your state changes

CELEBRATE SUCCESS Part of the change process is to acknowledge what you achieve on a regular basis. This provides an opportunity to build on and accumulate successes, like interest in the bank. Then, it is important to reward yourself! Remember, you are not your perception! So the next time something stressful comes your way, remember that stress has more to do with your own personal perception and your beliefs. More importantly, remember that you have the ability to change. Always look for the solution and the opportunity in every problem – don’t close yourself off to the possibilities! Manage your perception to feel good, be empowered and discover your true state!

“There are things known and there are things unknown and in between are the doors of perception.” Aldous Huxley

Geoff Edwards is an internationally accredited Life Coach with over 25 years and 3000 hours of coaching experience. He can support you on your journey to success with results that last.

SpiritQuestTours.com/SpiritualLifeCoaching

Written on July 19th, 2011 , Ask the Expert

 

We’ve been doing our Eat Pray Love Bali tour for almost 3 years now, and over time, we’ve changed it up a bit, based on feedback and our own experiences. Here’s what we’re doing on our September (and probably future) tours!

Our Welcome Dinner in “Italy” has moved to Ubud! Though we had some incredible experiences and wonderful meals at the Amanusa’s Italian Restaurant, Bali traffic can be truly unbelievable.  We’ve moved the welcome dinner to the more accessible  Terazo Restaurant in Ubud, where we’re working with the executive chef to prepare a custom meal with Italian wines – of course, on the Eat Pray Love Bali tour we will end with Tirami su for dessert, unless your taste runs more to local sorbets. Passion fruit, anyone?

Next, we’re trying something new with our hotel.  Honestly, we really looked hard at the Ubud Inn, where book author Elizabeth Gilbert stayed when she was writing about Bali.  Despite stunning grounds, we were just underwhelmed with the rooms, and didn’t love the location.  It’s in very busy Monkey Forest Road, set too close to the street.  We wanted something more tranquil, even in the heart of Ubud’s bustle.  The Pertiwi Resort & Spa seemed like a great spot for our Eat Pray Love Bali tour, and it’s located a little further along Monkey Forest Road,.  However, we may also return on future trips to our beloved Alila Hotel – the staff and the food and the environment are really incomparable!

 

Another big shift is in the temples we’ve chosen.  We teach our guests how to pray like the Balinese, and show them what to wear and how to wear it so that we can enter the inner sanctuary of each temple, and be blessed by the local Pedanda, or priest (who is sometimes a woman, which I just love!) On every other Eat Pray Love Bali tour, we’ve gone to Besakih Temple — called the Mother Temple, it’s nestled at the base of Mount Agung, about a 3 hour ride from Ubud. So this trip, we decided instead to visit our very favorite temple, Tirta Empul. It’s a delightful day trip (about a 2-hour drive) to the pool where all the sacred waters in Bali are gathered for the local temples.

Tirta Empul is an incredible experience, and we are often the only non-Balinese woshippers!   We’ve even witnessed a Balinese exorcism here. We can go into the streams and be cleansed during our Eat Pray Love Bali tour, under each of the 13 rushing fountains – an amazing experience of bliss.

Of course, we’ve still got the visit to Ketut Liyer, to Wayan the healer, to a pizza restaurant that will make you think you’re eating your Margarita ‘za in Napoli, yoga and meditation to make you feel like you’re in India (for an hour at least!) and even spa treatments at the very spot where the film crew for Eat Pray Love got all their massages.  It will be another incredible tour – I hope you can join us!

 

Most people travel for vacation or for work.  Then there are those who travel because it’s a calling; they need to visit that place, that country, even if they have no idea why.  Maybe it’s because they read about it as a kid, or have heard stories from other people who visited, or maybe it’s somewhere they lived in a past life. Whatever the reason, they just have to go.  That’s where Spirit Quest Tours comes in.  We offer life-changing travel to exotic locales all over the world.  So we know the reasons people take spiritual trips — well, a lot of them, anyway.  Here are the top 7 reasons, even needs, that we’ve seen make people take spiritual tours:



7) Traveling to a place with a different culture can make you really appreciate your own.  When we go to places like Bali or South Africa, we can see the rest of the world, the one where there isn’t a Target in every suburb – where there isn’t even a suburb.  Being outside of our usual community, and outside of America, can make us really appreciate what we’ve got.


6) Traveling outside your comfort zone expands your boundaries and your horizons. While this is related to the reason above, it differs in that stretching yourself can make you grow, and there’s no better way to do that than a spiritual tour visiting a country where English is not the first language (or perhaps even spoken — though it is the “Lingua Franca” of modern day.  Or where perhaps the toilet facilities aren’t what you’re used to, nor is the food, nor the sounds of the forest – and you find it pushing all your buttons.  Sure it’s uncomfortable at first, but eventually, you will find that you are a better person for it – more tolerant, perhaps, or at least have some really interesting stories.

5) Spiritual travel can help you get over the hump. Transitions – we’ve all got them.  You’ve left that job and now you’re considering a career change.  Or you’ve left that old relationship behind.  This is a chance to bridge that gap and give yourself permission to dream for a moment, create your future, and step into the abyss to see where you land. “Leap, and the net will appear” is one of my favorite expressions.


4) A spiritual tour group can help you meet new friends, bond with like-minded people, and see a richer itinerary than one you might seek out on your own. In other words, you can have a deeper experience than on just any old vacation.


3) Spiritual travel gives you room to remember who you are. Sure, you’re a parent, a colleague, a gardener, a hobbyist.  But you’re also a dreamer, a thinker, an artist.  Get back to the truth of you by taking some time away from your daily life – part vacation/part retreat.


2) It gives you a chance to look at the 60,000 foot view of your life. Sure life’s going along okay.  But remember when you didn’t just have plans, but dreams? A Spiritual tour can help you focus on those dreams again, remember them, and take time to put them into plans of action that you can take home with you.


1) It helps you heal. We’ve seen this one over and over again.  My favorite story is the widow who called us after she got home and said she would now celebrate her husband’s life, and no longer mourn his passing.  What a shift! This is the kind of thing that makes me grateful for my work every time!


We hope you’ll join us on one of our upcoming spiritual tours to Bali, India, Egypt, Cuba, South Africa, or Italy (coming in Summer 2012!)  We look forward to seeing you!

 

Ever since President Obama was elected, there have been rumblings that America will finally be ending the decades-old embargo on Cuba travels.  Back in the ’40s and ’50s, Havana was a haven for American travelers who wanted to travel to Cuba — only an hour’s flight from Miami, it was gorgeous, catered to tourists, and was in another country with an exotic culture.  In the musical Guys and Dolls, where does Sky Masterson take his dame to impress her? Why, Havana, of course… just for the evening.  Then came the ’60s, the Bay of Pigs — the end of a very long party.  Cuba is almost frozen in time since then, and Americans have mostly forgotten about Cuba travels to the magical land once billed as “Year-Round Paradise.”

So before the borders are flung open, here are our Top 10 Reasons To Travel to Cuba:

10)    The people are warm, friendly and amazing.  From old ladies sucking on fat stogies in downtown Havana to street musicians playing impromptu concerts to barefoot kids running around the whole country, Cubans are smiling, happy, and very glad to see you.

Havana Antique Car

9)   Squint and it could be the 1940s — the cars look fabulous and they’re all antiques!

8)   Havana features wonderful architecture, little surprises like a Chinatown and horse-drawn carriages.

Waterfall Spiritus Sancti

7)   Cigars! Cuba travels would not be complete without visiting a world-class Cuban cigar factory.

6)   Sancti Spiritus is a whole region you should visit when you travel to Cuba. Rivers, beaches, and mountains abound, as you can see from this photo.

5)   Food! From empañadas to Mojitos to the best paella ever, Cuba’s offering are rich in culture and delicious to boot!

Musicians

4)   Music! Ever heard of the Buena Vista Social Club? This award-winning group was put together from local Cuban musicians, and their music is truly a delight.  Music is so steeped in the culture that on your Cuba travels you might find a streetside salsa festival, a local band of neighbors, or a couple guys with guitars, playing on their barstools. This is why to travel to Cuba!

3)   Trinidad is not just in the Caribbean. Sancti Spiritus is home to the “city that time forgot,” unchanged for over 400 years.  You’ll stroll cobblestone streets where pirates might have walked, or at least the Rat Pack.

Sancti Spiritus Cuba

2)   Spiritual Cuba — it’s imbued in the very air, especially in Trinidad and the mountain regions. Cuba is very Catholic, a you will see on your Cuba travels, but they have a variety of religions and a deeply spiritual approach to their lives.

1) Spirit Quest Tours is taking you there! Why go on your own, when you can travel to Cuba with our humanitarian tour in January, 2012. Experience the culture and spirituality of Cuba, and bring much-needed medicine to the locals. Did we mention the farewell dinner performance at Club Havana, with the Buena Vista Social Club? Get all the info on our site and you’ll find that very soon you’ll stop dreaming and start living your best vacation ever while on our Cuba travels!

China Spiritual TourFrom Brave New Traveler on the Matador Network, comes an excellent article!

NO DISCUSSION ABOUT returning from a lengthy time abroad is complete without talk of reverse culture shock. And, from my experience, this discussion inevitably turns to perspective. Specifically, that many people don’t seem to have any. Perhaps this isn’t a fair statement, but returning home after long-term travel in the developing world often leaves me in a fastidious state of mind.

There is something to be said about travel also crystallizing your perceptions, honing suspiciously naïve sentiments into firm sets of belief. Even within the context of culture shock, it can help keep life in perspective. And if you concentrate enough, it can help mold you into the person you strive to be.

Read the rest of the article here: How Travel Helps to Keep Life in Perspective

The above article is about how being dropped into the deep end of the pool gave that writer perspective.  From my perspective, there’s nothing better than spiritual travel to give you a greater understanding of your own life.  It can really make a difference.

There are two kinds of perspective switches when you experience spiritual travel, especially when you take a spiritual tour:

Eat Pray Love Bali

1) The 60,000 foot view kicks in

2) Your view once you return home can be radically altered.

Let’s look at each of these in more detail…

What is the 60,000 foot view?

When we’re home working, cleaning, taking care of our families, even writing, we’re focused on the task at hand.  Usually, we’re putting one foot in front of another and we’re not paying much attention to our lives.  When you get away – really get away, like to Bali, Cuba, China, Bhutan by experiencing spiritual travel… you are focused not just on seeing new things, but if you make it a spiritual tour, it’s an opportunity to look at your life not as the ant, but as the human looking down at all the little ants, saying, “Wow, they’re sure busy.” Sometimes it takes a mid-life crisis (“OMG, what the hell am I DOING with my life?”) or a strong pull to make a huge shift overnight (“Hey, this wasn’t supposed to be the game plan!”). These moments of panic go hand-in-hand with not setting goals, forgetting your dreams, etc.  If you can avoid getting to this moment of panic, and experience a spiritual tour or spiritual travel sooner, you can gain perspective which may be less profound, but will ease you to the next level as opposed to drop-kicking you.  The freedom this type of trip affords you, the chance to breathe, can make all the difference in your world when you return.

What about when I go home?

Many of our guests have what we call “re-entry shock.” Going to a country where the culture is different seems simple, but step anywhere outside of Europe (even there sometimes); you will find that once you go home again it’s all different, even more so when returning from a spiritual tour or coming back from spiritual travel.  Maybe too big, too loud, too consumer-oriented suddenly.  After my first trip to Egypt 12 years ago, I couldn’t stand radio advertising.  It was like my nerves were mysteriously sensitized to it.  However it affects you, be gentle with yourself.  Journal, talk with other people who were on the spiritual tour with you, be kind to yourself and give yourself extra sleep and downtime.  It will usually right itself in a few days or weeks, but the residual you are left with is wonderful: a better perspective on our place in the world, and our understanding of ourselves as one country, not THE country.

Happy trails and have fun!

Sometimes, something comes along that profoundly affects you enough to need to talk about it… a lot.  I read a book that I think, in addition to being highly entertaining, also had a profound spiritual impact on me, and on my own spiritual tour as I careen through this thing we call life.  So I thought I would share it with you – it’s coming out this week, and you can also read the first 2 chapters for free  at Forgiving Ararat.com.  I would also welcome your comments here!

Forgiving Ararat is, without a doubt, the most original book I have ever read. First-time novelist Gita Nazareth (surely not her real name?) has created a story world which seems to live at the intersection of the film What Dreams May Come, the Bible, and a John Grisham novel, with all the best aspects and deeper meanings of each.

The story begins as the heroine, Brek Cuttler, arrives at a train station called Shemaya just after her death. Perhaps the only previously used image in this novel is the station metaphor, but in the skillful, lyrical hands of Nazareth it becomes much more than a wayplace for the dead. A lawyer in life, Cuttler has been chosen to represent the souls of these dead as they pass their Final Judgment, but first she must learn to accept that she has died and why, as well as learning how to be a presenter of souls in this shimmering, shifting purgatory.

Both a spiritual novel and a rivetingly juicy tale, I found reading Forgiving Ararat almost a religious experience. Nazareth’s prose bathes the reader over and over in the light of justice, love and hope, tempering the sinister stories of man’s inhumanity with the truth of their reasons for making these dark choices. She turns murderers and rapists, lawyers and newscasters alike, delving back across centuries and even millennia, into dimensional human beings and argues successfully that the pursuit of justice may itself be irrational and unjust, but it is how we order our lives, and forgiveness, if not love, can still conquer all.

Underlying an epic stocked three deep with characters of every ilk, whose stories are interwoven like a colorful hand-knit afghan (even the book’s publisher gets a fictional nod as the press of one of the novel’s doomed souls) is Nazareth’s startling prose: “… the morning sun strikes the bright yellow fall leaves of a maple tree, making the tree appear as though it has burst into flame. A small sparrow lands on a branch, risking immolation.” Every sentence bursts with a transcendent pride of place, as if each word is happily embracing the next, and even the least significant description is worth rereading to see what new light Nazareth has shone upon usually mundane text.

Though Nazareth’s story of good, evil and the search for justice in what at times can seem like a very unjust world, is spiritual, it also deals with the religions of man: of Christianity, Judaism, and Islam, as well as the fanaticism of Nazis, the Aryan Nation, and Holocaust deniers. It is here that Nazareth excels the most, expertly navigating these dangerous waters and bringing the understanding of truth and the desire for reason and justice all the way to Adam and Eve, Cain and Abel, even to Jesus and Yahweh Himself (or Themselves, depending on how you look at it). It is as if she is asking us to look at each religion, at each viewpoint, as Cuttler is asked to look at each soul, impartially and without judgment, and we are richer for it by the end of the tale. Forgiving Ararat is not to be missed, and Nazareth’s novel, I hope, will be the first of many.

  • is sharing some fun insight on Eat Pray Love filming in Bali, which just wrapped. http://ping.fm/dXnXk #
  • is sooo tired! Have been working all day, but also getting ready to go camping in the AM for Greg's birthday! #
  • Happy Thanksgiving! Interesting article: U.S. couple from Georgia experiences Hajj pilgrimage – http://bit.ly/7SFxpT #cnn #
  • Had the most wonderful Thanksgiving!! Romantic, team-building, exotic, traditional, and the food… MMMMMMMM!!! #

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  • is in the Century City News with our Eat, Pray, Love Bali tour (in May). Please repost! http://ping.fm/a7JcZ #
  • has had a new article posted on Self-Growth.com Top 10 Reasons to Take a Spiritual Tour: http://ping.fm/TBAGv #
  • As if the airlines PR wasn’t bad enough already: Continental, American expand surcharges; US Air implements, too – http://bit.ly/1KAkzw #cnn #
  • My new article, Top 10 Reasons to Take a Spiritual Tour, was just published on SelfGrowth.com – please share!  http://ping.fm/AZIkM #

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Ramadan, the most important Muslim holiday, is celebrated for the whole month, and it changes almost everything about Cairo.  Ramadan is a time to get closer to God, making self-sacrifices to be awake and aware of your choices, so people fast all day every day during the month of Ramadan.  This means not only no eating, but no drinking (not even a sip of water), no smoking, no sex, and no smoking!  I think the no smoking stricture may be harder on the Egyptians than no sex.

The result of people not eating all day is that, for the most part, everything is closed during daylight hours. With few exceptions in the tourist areas, where the poor waiters and chefs are serving food they cannot eat all day, the stores and restaurants shut down and open all night instead.  At sundown, however, the whole city of Cairo goes crazy.   One night at sundown, we visited the Al-Hussein mosque, which is perhaps the most important mosque outside of Mecca, to experience the real Ramadan.

The mosque is in the heart of the Khan El Khalili market, but this evening, we couldn’t get closer than a half-mile.  It was like a rock concert, with cars everywhere, parked all higgledy-piggledy.  To get a spot, a kid about eighteen hopped up onto our hood and directed us as we drove down a bizarre narrow alley with cars parked so close we had to hold our breath just to pass.  Walking back out of the alley after cramming ourselves into a tiny space, we saw two more “parking attendents’ and the owner of a yellow car rocking the cars in front and in back of him.  Shifting the cars a few inches at a time, the yellow car finally was able to maneuver out of the spot, whereupon it was replaced by another car.

On the street, it was equally chaotic.  At Ramadan, the rich are supposed to feed the poor, and everywhere we looked, shop owners had set up impromptu cafes in the street, which were full of people breaking their fast by gorging on the free food.  Close to the mosque, we passed a covered hall where huge pots and pans were set out on the ground, and people sat around guarding the meal until it was time to eat.

The Al-Hussein mosque was like a fairground, so full of people you could barely move, part church, part circus.  Every vendor stood by a tiny stand hawking religious artifacts, beads, or spangled LED tops that could fly high into the night sky with a simple flick of the wrist.  Leaving our shoes among the hundreds of pairs at the entrance, my girlfriend and I wormed our way through the crush to the woman’s side of the mosque.  We could barely breathe as the undulating mass of women pushed us forward into the doors of the mosque.  But inside, we fared no better, as we literally couldn’t go another step.  Women sat cross-legged everywhere on the floor, knee to knee, chanting and praying and touching the marble wall which contained important relics.  Disappointed and nearly squished, we turned and wriggled our way back out.

The men had a much more enjoyable time.  Obviously a much larger space, the entrance to the men’s side was empty, so my husband and two other travelers left their shoes with us as they strode into the mosque.  Once inside, they were immediately taken under the wing of several Egyptians who, seeing them, announced, “Sit! Pray with us!” This is typical of the Egyptians, who we have found over the years to be welcoming and inclusive in their worship. While we waited for them to come back out, I looked around the main square of the Khan.  Always bustling, tonight it seemed to almost burst at the seams with the friendly, raucous, joyous celebration of the end of the day’s fast.  It may change everything in Cairo, but I was glad to be there on during Ramadan. Outside the Al-Hussein Mosque During Ramadan

Visit Spirit Quest Tours to learn about our next spiritual tour to Egypt!

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News from Spirit Quest Tours: The official blog of "Julie the Cruise Director"