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Cairo’s ‘Garbage City’ rebranded: It’s recycling … and a living

In Manshiyat Naser, garbage is everywhere. Every day, more than 14,000 tons of it – 85% of all the waste produced by Cairo’s 22 million residents – passes through the neighborhood, where it is sorted, cleaned, and processed. And everyone here in this enclave of 70,000 people has a part to play.

“This is a resource, a hidden resource,” says Ibrahim Zahi, as he and his workers haul a stack of pressed plastic onto a pickup truck.

Why We Wrote This

For decades residents of Cairo’s Manshiyat Naser neighborhood were referred to as zabaleen, or garbage people. But today’s push for a green economy and sustainability is creating opportunity and changing perceptions of their work.

That one person’s trash is another’s treasure is a philosophy that was passed down to Mr. Zahi – and is powering his community’s emergence as the recycling capital of the Middle East. There is so much potential treasure, in fact, that 50 of his relatives work in recycling. “Waste has a value,” Mr. Zahi says. “Plastic here is just like oil and gold.”

By recovering what others cast away, residents in this long-stigmatized Cairo neighborhood are finding prosperity and a form of dignity.

“People always call us Garbage City and call us ‘garbage people,’” says resident Moussa Lazmy as he peers into a bundle of plastic bottles with a checklist in hand. “But this isn’t a city of garbage, this is a recycling city. Everything that comes through here has a purpose and is reused.”

In the eastern Cairo neighborhood of Manshiyat Naser, garbage is everywhere: in the streets, piled up in alleyways, in the back of trucks, and even in the hallways of some people’s homes. Its smell is a constant companion.

For some, it’s the smell of opportunity.

“This is a resource, a hidden resource,” says resident Ibrahim Zahi, as he and his workers haul a five-foot stack of pressed plastic onto a grease-covered pickup truck.

Why We Wrote This

For decades residents of Cairo’s Manshiyat Naser neighborhood were referred to as zabaleen, or garbage people. But today’s push for a green economy and sustainability is creating opportunity and changing perceptions of their work.

One man’s trash is another man’s treasure. It might be a cliché, but it’s a philosophy passed down through generations to Mr. Zahi. And it’s the same ethos that is now powering his community’s emergence as the recycling capital of the Middle East.

There is so much potential treasure, in fact, that 50 of his relatives work in recycling.

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