NOTE: There are a variety of transliterations of the names to be
found in English language accounts (“Rayya”; “Sakina”; “Ali Hammam”).
***
OVERVIEW: The sisters Raya and Sakina were convicted, along
with their mates and two other accomplices, on May 16, 1921 of 17 murders of
women in the Labban quarter of the Egyptian port city of Alexandria. The
sisters were operators of four underground “houses of depravity.” Their victims
were visitors some of whom were prostitutes, others married women using the
facilities for trysts.
Their murder spree began in November 1919. The public became
aware of the serial murders of women only in November of the following year
when Al-Ahram newspaper displayed the shocking headline: “Women slaughtered in
Labban: 12 corpses unearthed.” The murderers’ confessions revealed that they
would drug the victims by offering them a drink, then strangle them, working as
a team, each with a specific task: “one of the killers would clamp his hands
over the victim’s mouth, another would grab hold of her throat, a third would
hold her hands behind her back and the fourth would pin down her feet until she
stopped breathing. Abdel-Aal was in charge of holding the feet.”
The trial of Raya and Sakina lasted three days, from May 10th
to the 12th in 1921. On May 16, 1921, the court issued the death
sentence against Raya and Sakina, their husbands and two “thugs” who had taken
part in the actual murders of the 17 women.
For a thorough history of the case see Al-Ahram Weekly, June
1999 http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/1999/434/chrncls.htm
***
EXCERPT: A year after their arrest, the court sentenced all
of the group to death by hanging. On December 21, 1921, a woman was executed for
the first time in modern Egyptian history – in fact, not one but two. [Eyal Sagui Bizawe, “Sisters without mercy: Behind Egypt's
most infamous murder case.” Harretz, Dec. 27, 2014]
***
FULL TEXT (Article 1 of 3): The trial of a band of assassins
who murdered women in order to obtain their jewels, and then buried them in the
courtyard of a house in Alexandria, trial take place in Cairo soon.
The police have arrested the two principals – a slim, small woman, attractive in appearance, named Sekina, and the chief cut-throat, a little blackish man of villainous aspect, called Raya. Their preliminary evidence in Court created a sensation.
The woman Sekina entered the box, and after smoothing her hair and draping the folds of her gown to her satisfaction, recited her crimes without the flicker of an eyelid or a change in the calm confidence of her expression.
“I myself have cut the throats of six women,” she began. “My first victim was called Hanem. I leaned over Hanem as if to whisper in her ear. Soon after death had passed.”
The second victim came to sell her something. The killing of this woman was attended to by another member of the band, as Sekina “had to go out to buy some medicine for her sore feet.” She gave the order, and when she returned the victim was stretched on the floor. “Death had passed,” Sekina said again.
Her third victim was a young girl she had lured by promising to tell her fortune. As she dealt the cards she made a sign with her eves to an accomplice, and “death passed that way.” This peculiar phrase was used by the murderess in connection with each crime.
“After a throat-cutting or smothering we took off the jewellery and searched for the valuables, which were divided. I had to look sharp to make sure I was not cheated out of my share.”
Once she tried to sever her connection with the other murderers, but was unable, to do so, and she was obliged regretfully to take an active part in the earring of “a dear friend’s” throat, for fear of the other members of this horrible society. Details of the disposal of the bodies followed.
[“‘Death Passed That Way.’ - Murderess Recites Her Crimes.” The Auckland Star (Australia), Apr. 30, 1921, p. 1]
The police have arrested the two principals – a slim, small woman, attractive in appearance, named Sekina, and the chief cut-throat, a little blackish man of villainous aspect, called Raya. Their preliminary evidence in Court created a sensation.
The woman Sekina entered the box, and after smoothing her hair and draping the folds of her gown to her satisfaction, recited her crimes without the flicker of an eyelid or a change in the calm confidence of her expression.
“I myself have cut the throats of six women,” she began. “My first victim was called Hanem. I leaned over Hanem as if to whisper in her ear. Soon after death had passed.”
The second victim came to sell her something. The killing of this woman was attended to by another member of the band, as Sekina “had to go out to buy some medicine for her sore feet.” She gave the order, and when she returned the victim was stretched on the floor. “Death had passed,” Sekina said again.
Her third victim was a young girl she had lured by promising to tell her fortune. As she dealt the cards she made a sign with her eves to an accomplice, and “death passed that way.” This peculiar phrase was used by the murderess in connection with each crime.
“After a throat-cutting or smothering we took off the jewellery and searched for the valuables, which were divided. I had to look sharp to make sure I was not cheated out of my share.”
Once she tried to sever her connection with the other murderers, but was unable, to do so, and she was obliged regretfully to take an active part in the earring of “a dear friend’s” throat, for fear of the other members of this horrible society. Details of the disposal of the bodies followed.
[“‘Death Passed That Way.’ - Murderess Recites Her Crimes.” The Auckland Star (Australia), Apr. 30, 1921, p. 1]
***
FULL
TEXT (Article 2 of 3): Alexandria, Sunday. – The search for the bodies of the
42 women who have mysteriously disappeared here during the last 18 months has
resulted in the discovery of 14 more corpses, making a total of 32 found. A
quantity of bones has also been discovered the identity of which has not yet
been established.
Ten
corpses were found in one room in the house of a procuress named Sekina, who
has confessed her responsibility for most of the murders. All these bodies were
neatly buried under the floor in two rows feet to feet.
Some
of the murdered women were of the poor and respectable class; others native
prostitutes who, it is believed, were murdered for the sake of their jewellery.
A
number of other houses previously inhabited by members of Sekina’s gang are
being searched.
The
police believe that there have been many murders of a similar nature during the
last 4 or 5 years.
About
18 arrests have been made. These people seem to have made no profit out of
their alleged crimes as they were living in the most wretched conditions.—
Reuter.
The
discoveries began, as stated by our Cairo correspondent on Friday, with a body
in a drain of a house which a woman recently left. Searching the house of this
woman’s sister, the police found two bodies buried under the floor.
[“Female ‘Bluebeard.’ – Confesses To Share Of
32 Murders.” Daily Mail (London, England), Nov. 22, 1920, p. 10]
***
FULL TEXT (Article 3 of 3): ALTHOUGH now a modernized and a
hybrid sort of a place in the eyes of the average tourist, Alexandria famed
city of Alexander the Great and metropolis of Egypt under the Ptolemies once
again steps into the limelight this time by reason of the confessions of Sekina
Aly Hammam the Woman Bluebeard whose revelations have caused civilized Egypt and
all Europe, especially the parts which border on the Mediterranean sea, to
experience a sensation of ghastly horror. Even Paris, jaded and calloused to
post-war excesses, is fairly speechless with amazement at the cold-blooded
atrocities to which this avaricious Egyptian woman has with indifference
admitted authorship.
Many a weird and shocking tale has come out of the land of
the Caliphs. But never before has Egypt or rather Cairo or Alexandria its two
most important centers of population, with the customary large lawless element
found in all seaports of the Suez Canal region, supplied any such story of
barbarous cruelty and systematized loot. That a woman should have been the
directing brain in such an uninterrupted campaign of butchery and wholesale theft
makes it all the more abhorrent to the minds of Europeans and Americans, who
will also be appalled by the fact that all of the victims nearly four score
were women.
This though means nothing to the native of Egypt nor to the
traveler who is familiar with the views of a land where the inferiority of the
gentler sex is essentially a part of the national religion. Innumerable
passages in the Koran testify to the idea maintained by the founder of the
Moslem faith of the ineradicable iniquity of womankind.
“I stood at the Gates of Paradise,” wrote the pessimistic
old prophet, “and lo, most of the inhabitants were the poor and I stood at the
gates of Hell and lo, most of the inhabitants were women.”
Several weeks ago, when the daily newspapers of Paris first
gave hint of the well-nigh incredible chain of murders attributed to the woman
Sekina and her sister, Raya George Owen Hastings, the special foreign correspondent
who had but recently returned from Wales, whither he went to report the trial
of Greenwood, the central figure in the strange Kidwelly poison mystery, set
forth at once for Alexandria where, as is frequently the case with newspaper
investigators in the United States, he was of to be of vital assistance to the
Egyptian authorities in tracking down members of Sekina’s organized band of
assassins.
The story he sends back is almost unbelievable to Americans.
His assertions that no Mohammedan takes a woman seriously, that he regards her
as merely an ornamental appendage of his household and is not quite satisfied
that she has a soul are interesting in the extreme to people of a land which
accords woman the highest place in the social scheme and at the same time they
throw light upon the unheard of boldness and insensibility of the hired
ruffians who could operate to the extent of sending 72 women to death with no
other incentive than the few odd bits of jewelry and odd piece of silver they
possessed when lured to their doom.
***
By GEORGE OWEN HASTINGS – Cairo, Jan 2.
THROUGH the characteristic pertinacity of an American
engineer, temporarily resident in Alexandria, there has just been brought to
light in that city all the facts in an orgy of slaying and robbery such as
would have spread horror throughout ancient Egypt, a country of mystery and of
bloodshed.
I arrived here from Alexandria yesterday, glad to leave
behind the noxious sights beheld in course of inquiry into this monstrous plot
of slaughter and ghoulish robbery I had thought that my eagerness to get away
from Alexandria was fathered merely by a desire to come to a city offering
better hotel accommodations and more of the tourist comforts but I realize now
as I am writing that it was chiefly the yearning to come away from scenes of
such horror as I had witnessed.
It will be, I fear, many years before I can efface the
memories of the five houses which I saw partly demolished in an effort to
rescue the bodies of 72 girls and young women who had been put to death by
various lethal agencies in order that the cupidity of one woman might be satisfied.
It was a grewsome process surpassing all attempts at description at each of
which the accused woman was present. Yet not so much as by the flutter of an
eyelid did she betray any conception of the enormity of the crimes which she
calmly confessed.
As, one by one, the bodies of her victims denuded of what
cheap finery they had once worn and shorn of all the real and imitation jewelry
with which they had once been adorned were brought to light, Sekina Aly Hammam
stood by, a shadow of Oriental inscrutability over her coarsened Amazonian
features. At times she seemed bored. Once or twice she broke into a torrent of
mixed Egyptian and Arabic oaths and abuse as if wearied at having to stand by
and witness verification of matters with which she was already thoroughly
cognizant.
In custody at present, besides Sekina and her sister Raya,
are two other Egyptian women known to the police as Sadah and Haidee, and three
men, miserable specimens of the waterfront outcast and alley assassin whose
names are not material. The men and the two other women may not pay the extreme
penalty for the murders but there is no chance that they will escape
altogether. Now that the authorities have finally become keen to the scope of
this staggering underworld plot they are bent upon seeing that justice shall be
dealt out after the European fashion. Sekina and Raya will pay the death
penalty. They have not yet had formal trial but I am in a position to say it,
had they not confessed the evidence against them would be too sweeping. The
story alone told by one of the men and women accomplices would be sufficient to
convict.
I have just said they will go before the executioner. They
will unless some night a jail attendant grows fatigued at the sight of them or
tires of answering their calls for some scanty prison comfort. In that case the
sisters will be found in their cells next morning lifeless on the stone
flooring and their dusky throats slit. Then it will be given out that two
irreligious and ill-begotten daughters of an infidel dog had committed suicide.
I learned quite a bit about Egyptian gaols during my stay in Alexandria.
The name of the American who upturned all this terrible
recital of bloodshed and greed is John Edgar Madden formerly of Akron, Ohio. He
came to Egypt on an errand of hydraulic engineering about twelve years ago, and
was induced to remain in an advisory capacity to the administration of the Suez
Canal and the Nile delta. About six months ago business took Mr. Madden to
Alexandria for an indefinite stay. He engaged an apartment at No 5 Rue Marcoris
not far from the Place Mahomet Ali, or as it is known to American tourists, the
Grand square Rue Marcoris, is not what might be called a fashionable street for
all its proximity to the plaza. Indeed one section of it is distinctly off
color and the very house in which Mr. Madden rented an apartment had at one
time had a suspicious reputation. This Mr. Madden knew, so he told me, but as
he said there were certain arrangements about the rooms which he liked and as
his neighbors probably wouldn’t have any higher respect for him than he was
certain he felt for them, he was not going to allow a little thing like the
one-time good or bad repute of a building to interfere with his personal case.
Whereupon he paid his rent and moved in. Immediately he
discovered that his apartment for all its cleaning and renovating suffered from
an entirely different aroma than that which marks. Alexandria to the sensitive
nostril of every American and European visitor coming within the city gates.
The dominant odor of Alexandria is camel. Few of you Americans have ever
sniffed it in all its undiluted puissance. You may remember a visit to the
circus and the feeling of faintness as you passed by the camel herd. Or you may
have toured the zoological garden and brought away from the camel corral a nose
to which you thought you had done violence. These incidents are trifles. One
has never realized the might of the camel odor until one has been in
Alexandria.
Americans and Englishmen living in Alexandria told me that
it was not until they had been in the city six months at the shortest that they
were able to ignore the camel smell and the camel taste which assailed them
everywhere I can attest that while in Alexandria in every restaurant I entered I
tasted camel in the soup, in the butter, in the vegetables, in the water and in
the coffee. Never was there any taste or smell similar. Now I know why it is so
easy to steal a camel in this country and not be traced.
For a nasal expert such as Mr. Madden had come to be after a
twelve-year residence in an odorful community he rapidly sorted out the
respective perfumes which greeted him when he took possession of the apartment
in Rue Marcoris. He properly classified them and then complained to his
landlord that there was one especial pestilential odor which would have to be
muffled. The landlord assured him it was nothing but camel and the American
made reply by engaging three native laborers and starting a personal
examination of the drain pipes.
The second floor was ripped out but no results were
attained. Then the ground floor was attacked. The scent led to a remote corner
in the basement or rather an excavation rudely dug under the street floor and
stretching out beneath the sidewalk. For an entire day the workmen bent to it
with pick and spade. At last they encountered the dismembered arm of a woman.
Six feet distant the head of a woman yet sufficiently preserved to identify the
sex of its owner at a glance was unearthed.
As if there were nothing unusual about the affair, Mr.
Madden bade his workmen go ahead with their task. Meantime he dispatched his
personal servant to police headquarters. The gendarmes responded quickly for
Egyptians. They got around in something like three hours by which time Mr Madden
had a pile of eight skeletons to offer as evidence that revolting crimes had
been committed in the house.
~ Women Occupy Degraded Position. ~
The American, however, had, in his several years residence
in this country acquired an excellent insight into the Egyptian character.
Knowing that the surest way to spread the news of the discovery and thereby
warn the criminal that the police were on his trail would be to appear in the
least excited over what had taken place in his abode he concealed from the workmen
the fact that he had sent for the authorities. Instead he told the laborers who
had done the excavating that he had other similar jobs which he desired done
and paying them well sent them away after he had taken their names and
addresses.
As for the police – well they were for the most part natives
and as was to have been expected they were not in the slightest agitated over
the discovery. Their general attitude of carelessness in any other country
would have been maddening. If they displayed any emotion over the affair it was
rather one of admiration that it had been accomplished on such wholesale and
magnificent scale. That so many women had been murdered meant nothing at all to
them.
In all countries under the yoke of Islam women occupy a
notoriously inferior and degraded position and nowhere is it lower and more
degraded than in this particular part of Egypt. Though universal equality and
fraternity are the cardinal principles of the Moslem cult women are altogether
excluded from enjoying the benefits of these liberal tenets. All over the East
women are the rich mans toys and the poor mans chattels. Whose affair is it
anyway if a rich effendi or a poverty-stricken wretch wants a woman put out of
the way? Its only a woman! That is the idea here.
It is difficult to predict where the discoveries made by Mr.
Madden would have ended had the duty of continuing the inquiry had been let to
the inert police force of the city. I should not like to assert bluntly that
the case would have been closed with the removal of the eight bodies from the
cellar in the Rue Marcoris if it had been left entirely in the hands of the
underlings, though I am constrained to this opinion for the reason that the
police department of Alexandria is far from being well organized and it is
seldom that the under officers take the trouble to report matters of importance
to their superiors.
Having unearthed conditions which gave indication of the
existence of a defiant band of robbers and cutthroats holding the city at its
mercy Mr. Madden undertook to see the matter through. His first step was to
learn from his landlord the names of the tenants who had occupied the house
before he moved in. With this knowledge he went to the police captain of the Labbane
quarter an official of intelligence and a man who takes his position as a
guardian of the law with proper seriousness. Mr. Madden at first said he was
anxious to find these former tenants as he wished to return some property which
they had left behind when they moved from the house. A search of the city
failed to gain track of them. All that could be ascertained so this police
captain one Kareh reported was that the occupants of the house were in the
habit of leaving the place at daybreak and not returning until nightfall each
evening. For the next three days the investigation was at a standstill. Kareh
had suspected from the first that the house had once been used for improper
purposes. With the true oriental idea of the picturesque he disguised himself
as a wandering beggar and haunted the wharves and the camel markets working
himself into the confidence of the army of petty thieves and outlaws who infest
these places. On the third day of his masquerading one of his disreputable but
unwitting confederates pointed out to him on the waterfront a woman who was
known to have visited the house in Rue Marcoris under its former occupancy. The
disguised police officer approached the woman and on his promise that he would
contrive to filch a fat purse somewhere in the course of the afternoon she agreed
to meet him at 9 o’clock in the evening. She named a notorious drinking den in
the Labbane quarter as the place of rendezvous.
When Kareh went to keep the appointment he was well equipped
for the work in hand. To start with he had availed himself of some valuable
information at headquarters As in a great many cities in Europe. Alexandria’s
police force had a list of all the undesirable women of the town Kareh found
this woman to be well-known as a thief and all-round bad character. It was
arranged that Mr Madden also should go to the crooks’ cafe that evening to be
on hand in the event that the woman gave trouble. She was waiting when Kareh
arrived with plenty of silver pieces to show that his deft fingers had been
busy dipping into others pockets. Therefore he was high in her estimation.
Representing himself as the Algerian or crony of a man who
had once lived at No 5 Rue Marcoris Kareh bought drinks with bewildering
rapidity. Under the influence of liquor the woman began to boast of her
knowledge of No 5.
“I know all about the house and everything that has gone on
there for the last two years,” she bragged. “Did not my own sister Sekina Aly
Hammam keep the place? But it was a quiet house compared to the others!
“You should see the house at 38 Rue Aly el Kebir Go there
and you will find bodies by the dozens. There is one the body of a woman who
wore expensive jewels which is stuffed into an old sofa covered with drapery.
We have not had time to bury her yet And there are about five under the floor of
the little room to the left as you enter the hallway.”
As heartless and as startling as these disclosures may
appear in print the woman told more details which are not needed here to
emphasize the scope of the death ring she and her sister had drawn around the
playthings of Alexandria’s night life. Even Kareh accustomed to tales of dark
crime was dumb with the shock of the revelations. The woman gave her name as
Raya and invited Kareh to visit her. He accepted but before leaving the cafe he
excused himself upon the pretense of borrowing some money from a friend whom he
had just espied in the room. This friend was the American engineer. The sequel
to the supposed financial transaction was that when Kareh and the woman arrived
at No. 38 Rue Aly el Kebir Madden and a detachment of police were waiting for
them.
~ Attempts to Drive Dirk Into Breast. ~
When Raya was finally landed in a cell after a fight in
which she all but succeeded in driving a dirk into her breast she was placed in
solitary confinement. Her grewsome story was verified in all essentials the
next day when Madden had summoned his gang of native laborers found in the
house that day alone among them that of a named Bahia Serepta, who, several
months before, had vanished from the quarter. Her disappearance had been
noticed by the police mainly because a search had been made for her on
suspicion of being implicated in the robbery of a ship purser, who had
carelessly allowed himself to wander in dangerous quarter after midnight. Bahia
was known and her associates for her possession of some solid gold bangl
bracelets and anklets, it developed, and
in course of events Raya confessed that the girl was choked to death by two
hiremen accomplices so she might become the owner of these glittering ornaments.
The body of Bahia was found crammed among the cushions of the old sofa as Raya
had foretold.
Having found herself betrayed by her supposed latest
admirers, who seemed so endlessly supplied with silver, Raya set a stubborn
course for herself in prison. She refused to tell the whereabouts of her sister
Sekina. She attempted a hunger strike. She tried to garrote a policeman who
entered her cell to question her, springing upon his back as he entered the
door. All efforts to trap her into revealing the hiding place of her sister
failed.
Then proceeding along lines which will no doubt impress
American readers as ridiculous, if not impossible, the police went about the
business of finding Sekina. They knew she would make no effort to learn from
them where Raya had vanished to. All information that the police had stumbled
upon across the trail of the murderers was suppressed from the public. By
generous wages, Madden was able to tie the tongues of his force of sullen
workmen who probably thought the American himself was a criminal and was trying
to remove the evidence of this infamy. So while the underworld denizens of
Alexandria lived their daily routine in ignorance that a net was being spread
throughout the city the police kept on the track.
Kareh haunted the cafe in the Labbane quarter nightly posing
as the enraged and discarded suitor of the missing Raya. Professing to console
himself with the smiles of another young woman, whose acquaintance he had made
in the den, he was warned that knowing Raya would get him in trouble; if he
doubted the truth of the warning he could easily satisfy himself by watching
the house at No 8 Rue Garet El Naggah.
Feeling that the time had come when he could strike boldly
Kareh took a chance and with a warrant went to the designated house and
demanded to see Sekina Aly Hamman. He found her. A few minutes afterward she
left the house wit him in the impression that he was leading her to the bedside
of Raya but recently fallen ill. When safely distant from the house, precluding
the possibility of an outcry and an attempt at rescue, Kareh turned his
prisoner over to a waiting squad of gendarmes.
What followed contain an element of comedy. Had I not been
present to see for myself I would naturally say, as I fancy most of my readers
will be moved to feel, that such a ruse as was tried and usefully worked upon
the two murderous sisters was entirely too absurd and childish for belief.
Those who would doubt, however, are reminded that what I am relating took place
is Egypt and that the object of the deception were women who have from birth
the one idea that anything a man wishes to do with them is possible. In
company with Mr. Madden I saw the Egyptian equivalent of the famous American
“third degree” applied to Sekina and Raya. I have never seen the method in use
in America, but I know it can be nothing like this.
At first the sisters with dogedness maintained silence. They
broke this silence when a mock flogging was arranged in the adjoining cell. A
gigantic negro cracked a bull whip viciously in the air in the next cell while
an attendant all but split the prison wall with his agonized shrieks and
promises to answer any question he might be asked. A few minutes of this well
fabricated uproar and Sekina fell on her knees, beseeching the jailers to tell
her why she was being detained the prefect of police in person told her it was
for the purpose of having her tell her it was for the purpose of having her
tell the truth about the houses in Rue Marcoris and in Rue Aler Bey Kebir.
Sekina responded that she knew nothing. She admitted having
visited the house in Rue Marcoris on two occasions to call on her friend, the
wife of a tailor. Kareh at this point introduced his trump card. In the house
where Raya lived he had found a woman’s flannel undervest richly embroidered
with multicolored silken threads sewed in the lining of this vest were bank
notes to the value of 160 Egyptian pounds. At a signal from the prefect a
veiled figure led into the cell. To all appearances it was a magician
accredited with with clairvoyance. This faker broke into a whirling dance after
the manner of a dervish, falling apparently from exhaustion at the feet of
Raya. As he did so he produced from the folds of his robes the flannel vest.
Both women shrank from the sight of it. Hoarse gasps of fear came from their
lips as the magician spread the vest on the stone floor at their feet and
toughed it with his forehead three times. When he arose, he drew from his
skirts a knife which Kareh also had found in the house of many deaths and with
the weapon he carefully slit away the lining where was concealed the Egyptian
money. He counted it into equal parts, which he next solemnly handed to the
sisters.
It was a cheap deception and not especially well carried out
according to Western ideas of such tricks, but it was enough to unlock the lips
of the two superstitious women. To them it was “fate.” They did not become
hysterical. With an air of resignation verging almost upon the pathetic they
bowed before the prefect.
“It belonged to Ferdos,” said Sekina in whispered tones.
I should like to make it clear here that the terrible
confessions which followed from both women could have been nothing but the
truth. Third degree practices, beyond doubt, have at times worked cruelty and
wrought from tortured victims false admissions in the hope of escaping some of
the torments of inquisition, but there was no trace of such injustice here. All
that they told of themselves and of the crimes they admitted were corroborated
by subsequent investigation.
~ Death Scenes are Described. ~
Sekina said that her murderous operations within the last
year had netted her no less than 8,000 pounds. She told where her jewels which
she had purchased with some of her spoils were hidden. Raya was no less
voluble. She described one after another the death scenes of their miserable
prey. They gave directions as to where different bodies were interred. They
enumerated the methods by which various women were put to death, explaining
that some were strangled, some stabbed, some attacked from behind with
bludgeons and still others slain by choloroform or arsenic. The favorite
method, they admitted, was by strangulation. Moreover, the sisters gave the
names of the miserable cutthroats whom they employed, and Sekina capped the
mountain of atrocities by producing a notebook in which she kept accurate
entries of the amounts in cash and in gems realized from the corpses and the
sums each had cost her in miserly fees to the executioners.
Most of the murders, it was shown, were done in the three
houses already located, but Sekina admitted that she rented two other rooms in
other sections of the city, one in the Rue des Sultans and one in the Rue
Ghawazee – an alley rather than a street, taking its name from the number
dance-halls which fringe its curb. She seldom slept in these rooms but she
carried keys to them in case she encountered a subject of such affluence that a
speedy death was advisable. No bodies, however, were found buried beneath these
two houses. Women slain there were hidden for a day or two while a guard was
placed at the door to see that no one entered, and then by night the bodies
were removed to the cellars of one of the other houses and thrown in the
hurriedly constructed trench on top of the other mutilated forms.
Sekina told the police that the first murder she had
committed was done at the suggestion of a tailor who had been on friendly terms
with her sister Raya. The wife of a rich carpenter had sent a coat to another
shop in Rue des Soers. He proposed that they both go to the other shop for the
garment and the woman acquiesced. The tailor, before starting out, communicated
with Sekina, who apparently by chance met him and the carpenter’s wife on their
way to the stop in cafe. His invitation was acted upon and the three had
glasses of cognac.
Presently the tailor, by a prearrangement, announced that he
would go to the other shop for the coat asked that the women await his return.
While he was gone, Sekina related, she persuaded her drunken dupe to accompany
her home under the pretense of looking at a quantity of silk which she
intimated had come into her hands from underground channels. Together they
walked to the house in Rue Marconis, from which the carpenter’s wife never came
out. A glass of drugged wine sent the woman into sleep, during which Sekina
choked her to death with her bony but powerful fingers. The tailor returned to
the house later in the evening and he and Sekina dismembered the body and
buried it in the basement.
It was so easy a job and the profits so huge, when one
considers the oriental value placed on the life of a mere woman, the original
investment in this instance, that Sekina directly had the notion of going into
strangulation as a steady business. Her sudden accession to wealth aroused the
suspicions of her sister, however, and in the course of a few days she wilted
under the incessant questioning and admitted the slaying. Then, according to
Sekina, Raya mentioned a woman acquaintance who seemed to be a promising
prospect in a new business. The one marked for death was a pretty Arabian girl
who was living in the Labbano quarter under the lavish patronage patronage of
an elderly Englishmen. The sisters represented to the girl that some tourists
with whom they had become acquainted in a cafe had planned a trip to Cairo and
needed one other girl to complete the party. The little Arabian was won over by
the opportunity to break the monotony of an evening away from her master and
consented to go on the mythical excursion. She did more; she told her protector
of the party, refraining, however, from mentioning the tourists, and obtained
his permission to be absent for three days.
Thus the plotters had disarmed suspicion. When the girl
failed to return to the Englishman’s apartment within the stipulated time he
omitted to report the disappearance to the police. A forged letter to him some
weeks afterward set forth that the girl had wearied of Alexandria and intended
to stay in Cairo. As was expected, the man dropped her from his thoughts.
What had happened, though, was this: The sisters coaxed the
girl into putting on some costly jewelry and to wear her most expensive attire.
When she went to the home of Sekina to meet her new friends she was seized as
she got in the door, her arms pinioned behind her and a gag placed between her
teeth. Next she was roped upon a lounge and the sisters stood over her teeth.
Next she was roped upon a lounge and sisters stood over her with cloths
saturated in chloroform which they pressed over her mouth and nose. It was a
painless death, though certain. After the girl had ceased breathing they robbed
her of all valuables, taking even the silk stockings and richly embroidered
underwear. The body was chopped up with a hatchet, this on the word of the
tailor, Hazballah, who expects immunity from the death sentence in return for
his candid story.
~ Distinctive Phase of Each Crime. ~
Each instance of the violent deeds admitted by the sisters has some distinctive phase. Each in certain detail just a little more heinous and devilish than the other. Not the least remarkable feature of the chain of crimes is that those women were able to perpetrate them without any other of the tenants of the building hearing the outcries, for it inconceivable that the victims, excepting those who were put away by anesthetics or drugged liquor, went to their deaths without struggling.
In respect to women, Egypt today is, as has been said, as
benighted as it was in the darkest of ages. The beat that can be said of
Alexandria is that it is a city of memories. It was in Alexandria that St. Mark
suffered martyrdom for his teaching of the gospel of Christ and it was in
Alexandria that Athanasius did battle with the Arian heretics. Later it was in
Alexandria that Greek culture centered where were gathered the greatest
intellects of the age. It was in Alexandria that a woman once ruled supreme –
Cleopatra, “vainquerer des vainqueurs du monde” – where this entertaining siren
held Antony in willing bondage while Octavius was preparing his legions to
crush the Roman.
It was in Alexandria, too, that Amru became a mighty
conqueror, and there Abercrombie fell. Even those whose tastes do not incline
them to historical researches as familiar with Kingsley’s immortal romance with
the story of the noble-minded Hypathia and Cyril, to recall which is to recall
Egypt.
And it is here that the native values to or a woman at zero.
“The worst of this deplorable state of things,” so has written Mr. Stanley
Lane-Poole, a British Egyptologist of wide reputation, “is that there seems no
reasonable prospect of improvement. The Mohammedan social system is so
thoroughly bound up with the religion that it appears an almost hopeless task
to attempt to separate the two. As long as the Mohammedan religion exists, the
social life with the which it has unfortunately become identified will probably
survive; and whilst the latter prevails in Egypt we can not expect the higher
results of civilization.”
[George Owen Hastings, “Solving the Startling Mystery of a
Female Bluebeard. – How the Unaccountable Disappearance of Seventy-Two Young
Women in the Ancient Egyptian City Where Cleopatra Entranced Mark Anthony Has
Been Traced at Last to the Operations of a Desperate Gang of Cutthroats, the
Leader of Whom Was a Woman,” King Features Syndicate, Washington Post (D. C.),
Jan. 16, 1921, p. 4]
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Links to more cases: Female Serial Killers Who Like to Murder Women
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More cases: Female Serial Killers Executed
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[16,894-9/15/18; 20,054-7/26/20]
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Links to more cases: Female Serial Killers Who Like to Murder Women
***
More cases: Female Serial Killers Executed
***
[16,894-9/15/18; 20,054-7/26/20]
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Actually, Abdel-Al is Sakina's Husband .. Their names are Rayya and Sakina Ali Hammam! .. It's not Rayya in the second picture and none of the victims had as Name Bahia :)
ReplyDeleteGreetings!
What source? The 1999 Al Haram source gives the captions one way and a 2014 article in Haaretz has switched the captions and has modified the photos too. Apparently there is a complete list of all victims. Do you have an online source for the complete list? The victim pictured is identified as such by a journalist present during the investigation in 1920.
ReplyDeletewhere did the George Owen Hastings source come from?
ReplyDelete[George Owen Hastings, “Solving the Startling Mystery of a Female Bluebeard. – How the Unaccountable Disappearance of Seventy-Two Young Women in the Ancient Egyptian City Where Cleopatra Entranced Mark Anthony Has Been Traced at Last to the Operations of a Desperate Gang of Cutthroats, the Leader of Whom Was a Woman,” King Features Syndicate, Washington Post (D. C.), Jan. 16, 1921, p. 4]
DeleteThat is completely wrong.
ReplyDeletethey were only 17 bodies not 72, and also no American discovered the crime. it was the property owner who discovered the corpses during his renovations.
and of course, There were no camels at all in Alexandria. The serial killers lived in slums but Alexandria was one of the most modern Mediterranean cities during this time.
Thanks. Any English language sources would be helpful.
DeleteIt is common for newspapers reporting on sensational cases -- especially by overseas correspondents -- to have distortions and inaccuracies that need correction by accurate sources.