It falls gently on alabaster jars in forgotten tombs. It dances across turquoise tiles in a mosque courtyard. It carves stories into the wrinkled hands of a date vendor in Luxor.
To photograph Egypt is to listen.
To witness silence roaring in temples,
to catch the desert wind painting patterns in sand,
to find the sacred in the mundane — a cracked door, a barefoot child, an old man praying.
You don’t just take pictures in Egypt.
You receive them.
Like gifts. Like whispers from the past.