The offer of the ruling military council to install Mr. Ganzouri as the head of a new national government of Egypt is not going down well with the protesters in Cairo (30 degrees North, 31 degrees East). The protesters are walking to Tahrir Square and will walk further. The military elite are stood stock still.
While the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) presents its regrets for the deaths in Tahrir Square, anger among Egyptians sets them on the move. Bangles rattling.
Slide your feet up the street bend your back
Shift your arm then you pull it back
Life is hard you know (oh whey oh)
Money's short, food prices rise, tourist revenues decrease, religious fervour mounts, long-simmering angers boil up. And the barricades grow in the streets.
The Generals are behind them – well behind them – shielded by plexiglass and inertia. They are motionless hieroglyphs of a time past.
All the old paintings on the tombs
They do the sand dance don't you know
If they move too quick (oh whey oh)
They're falling down like a domino
Mr. Ganzouri is of the old regime, although he sometimes challenged it. The protesters in Tahrir Square – and people across the world - don't want challenge. They want change. They are on the move.
All the kids in the marketplace say
Ay oh whey oh, ay oh whey oh
Walk like an Egyptian
Even in the face of police and army violence, they are walking. Can they bring the Armed Forces with them?
If you want to find all the cops
They're hanging out in the doughnut shops.
Going on the Million Man March? Women too? Battles to be fought and won?
Walks to be completed. To deliver the genuine social change Egyptians desire.
We are all Egyptians. Walking, in the deserts of al-Mutanabbi.
The desert knows me well, the night and the mounted men.
The battle and the sword, the paper and the pen.
Bangles rattling.
Ay oh whey oh, ay oh whey oh
Walk like an Egyptian; song; The Bangles; 1986; You Tube; various
Extract; poem; al-Mutanabbi; www.princeton.edu/~arabic/poetry/