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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Bahey El Din Hassan

Interviewed June 1, 2024

We can´t claim– not only for the Cairo Institute, for any other human rights NGO, not only in Egypt, even in other Arab countries, we can´t claim that we were leaders, we were guiding this revolution because this is not the nature of the human rights work. So all those human rights groups, definitely, they have made a great historical contribution to the launch of this revolution. But I don´t think that anyone can claim that this or that organization in Egypt or in any other Arab country was leading or guiding the revolution.

But definitely, I can´t imagine the revolution in Egypt if I would agree that we had a revolution I can´t imagine such what so-called revolution without the contribution of such great novelists, writers, artists, actors who fought through their profession, for the cause of democracy and human rights. And they were fully aware that they are doing such a job. By making great pieces of art or novel they contributed, definitely, to the contribution as well as human rights groups and defenders. In this regard, I would like to underline the fact that there was no plan to make a revolution. So, anyone, in fact, can´t claim that he or she was leading the revolution. There was a plan to organize a day of anger, to express the feeling of un-satisfaction with the Mubarak regime.

The plan was just the holding of a day of protest against the [Former Egyptian President Hosni] Mubarak regime. And the organizers of this day, they were very thoughtful in choosing the annual day of the police, the 25th of January [2011] for such day of protest. And so they worked, more hard for these days. They were more creative in mobilizing people and in making surprises for the police. But I guess that that choosing the day, annual day of the police, was very appealing for the Egyptian people. So what happened that the plan to just to have few thousand, it ends on the this first day, the 21st January, to have hundreds of thousands, and not just to hold symbolic gathering against the headquarters of the Ministry of Interior, but to occupy Tahrir Square.

So this had made the organizers to be more ambitious about the objectives, about slogans, about the continuity of the protest. And gradually it has been transformed into an appeal to Mubarak to step down, not just to protest against the brutality of the police.