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When Friday Dawns over Egypt’s Tahrir Square, Much Depends Upon the Army



“Side by side with the ugliest of humanity, you find the best.”

And so it was in Tahrir Square on Wednesday night, Thursday morning. The NY Times’ Nicholas Kristof gives one out of the many, many extraordinary and harrowing reports that have spilled out of Cairo in the last 24 historic hours while the rest of us continued to watch and hope.

Here’s a clip:

Pro-government thugs at Tahrir Square used clubs, machetes, swords and straight razors on Wednesday to try to crush Egypt’s democracy movement, but, for me, the most memorable moment of a sickening day was one of inspiration: watching two women stand up to a mob.

I was on Tahrir Square, watching armed young men pour in to scream in support of President Hosni Mubarak and to battle the pro-democracy protesters. Everybody, me included, tried to give them a wide berth, and the bodies of the injured being carried away added to the tension. Then along came two middle-age sisters, Amal and Minna, walking toward the square to join the pro-democracy movement. They had their heads covered in the conservative Muslim style, and they looked timid and frail as thugs surrounded them, jostled them, shouted at them.

Yet side by side with the ugliest of humanity, you find the best. The two sisters stood their ground. They explained calmly to the mob why they favored democratic reform and listened patiently to the screams of the pro-Mubarak mob. When the women refused to be cowed, the men lost interest and began to move on — and the two women continued to walk to the center of Tahrir Square…..

Photo by Lefteris Pitarakis/Associated Press

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