CAIRO – 28 May 2022: The Egyptian ministers of local development and tourism and antiquities inaugurated on Saturday the “Path of the Holy Family” in Wadi El-Natroun in northern Egypt after the project to develop the 25-stop path has been completed.
June 1 marks the day in which Egypt embraced the Holy Family, where they found safety and security among its people for more than three years, according to the biblical belief.
Their trail blessed Egypt from North Sinai, through the Delta and Cairo, and across Upper Egypt.
Minister of Local Development Mahmoud Shaarawi announced completing the development of the 25 stops of the holy family trail in eight governorates in cooperation with the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities and the Coptic Orthodox Church.
According to the Christianity, the journey of the Holy Family took place after King Herod, Ruler of Judea, heard of prophecies by a group of wise men who announced that the next King of Jews is Jesus.
Herod the great went on an infanticide in the Palestinian city of Bethlehem, killing all male children in hopes of erasing the threat of the child who might later dethrone him, a massacre known today as the Massacre of the Innocents.
This led to the beginning of the Holy Family's Flight to Egypt where they would seek safety from the vicious ruler, after an angel warned Joseph the Carpenter in a dream to flee with Virgin Mary and her newborn Jesus.
They left for a 25-stop-journey through Egypt, leaving a trail which will later on sprout with churches and monasteries starting from Gaza to North Sinai then passing through Wadi Al-Arish and Al-Farama (Pelusium) southeast the Nile Delta.
They then stopped at Al-Basta, where, according to Egyptian Travel Authority website, Jesus miraculously caused a water spring to well up from the ground.
The family then moved on to Mostorod, 10 kilometers from Cairo where Virgin Mary bathed newborn Jesus, that is why this place is also known as Mahamaah which means the bathing place in Arabic. A 12th century church called "The Virgin Lady" still stands in that place.
Feeling safer in Egypt, the Holy Family rested under a sycamore tree, known now as “Virgin Mary’s Tree” or "Mariam’s Tree" which is now a prominent attraction spot for religious tourists.
According to English Ahram, the "Chrism" or the holy "Mayron oil" is still being extracted from the oil of that tree.
The family's next stop was the Valley of Natrun (Wadi Al-Natrun) a place which, according to ETA's website, "was the monasticism’s first home in the world to practice chastity and meditating God."
Al-Matarya district and Al-Zaytoun are two other key stops of the Holy Family's journey; in Toman Bey Street, Al-Zaytoun, a church by the name "The Virgin Mary” still stands and some of the church visitors have been reporting sightings of the Virgin Lady appearing near the church's domes.
Moving on to "Old Cairo" (Al-Fustaat), the Holy Family stayed for a short period of time in a cave, which was turned later into Abi Serja Church, inside the Roman Fortress of Babylon. After which they moved on to Al-Maadi district and stayed in the location which later turned into another "Virgin Mary" Church.
The family the sailed a boat south the Nile stream, then crossing the east bank of the river, passing by Minya, where the Monastery of the Virgin on top of the Gabal Al-Kaf is now located.
Gabal Al-Kaf which translates Mountain of the Palm is where Jesus is believed to have left an imprint of his palm on the stones of the mountain.
They continued their journey through Upper Egypt, crossing back to the west side of the river to Assuit, where they stayed for six months, which is the longest period they spent in the same place during their journey through Egypt. That is where Joseph had a dream in which an angel told him that Herod the great was dead and it was safe to return to Palestine.
Thus, after spending more than three years in Egypt, the Holy Family started their journey back, taking the same route to Palestine. The place where they stayed in Assuit is known now as Al-Qussia, where Al-Muharraq Monastery was later on built and still stands today.
Eight stops of the 25 were chosen to form the main stops of the pilgrimage route; the pilgrimage starts in the city of Al-Arish, North Sinai, crosses to the Eastern Delta of the Nile and reaches Wadi Al-Natroun, where a number of important Coptic monasteries lie, including St. Mary Church in Mostorod, Saints Sergius and Bacchus Church and the Garnos Monastery.
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