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Although I mention the word restaurant, Petrou was originally categorized as a 'casino' meaning that once upon a time it was a dancing palace not unlike the other Greek-owned Alexandria casinos and cabarets: Athineos (C. J. Athineos), Casino Chatby (A. Coroneos), Excelsior (G. Michailidis & S. Petrar), Folies (A. Drikos), Grand Trianon (D. Pyrillis), Hollywood (Panayotti Dimitriou), Monseigneur (A. Pastroudis), Pyaramides (G. Tsangarakis), San-Giovanni (Moncroussos & Spirou).
Yet unlike many of the above restaurants Casino Petrou was for a while also a pension "with several bungalows upstairs at the rear of the restaurant," recalls Eva Manolagas.

Directly facing the Mediterranean within walking distance from the legendary Casino and Hotel San Stefano, Petrou's no-frills restaurant was situated in Alexandria's then-fashionable suburb of Ramleh (the sands), right at the base of a limestone cliff topped by Saray al Hazina (Palace of Sorrows--hence the name of the district "Palais" or al-Saray in arabic) which had once been the summer residence of the Walda Pasha (queen mother) Emina Ilhami, consort and mother respectively of Egypt's last two Khedives--Mohammed-Tewfik and Abbas Hilmi II.
Casino Petrou was originally called Casino Palais. The name change came about in the mid 1920s when, between the two world wars, the palace and its strategic grounds were converted into army barracks graced with a couple of large canons whose sole purpose it seems was to announce the breaking of the Ramadan fast at sunset. The palace building itself, now turned into army HQ, survived until the 1980s albeit in a sorry state . One comical item regarding the old palace was the mid-size trajectory canon protruding from the palace turret pointing at an empty sea!
At first Petrou's Restaurant directly fronted the sea. That was before the construction of the corniche, which once built was named Avenue Farouk before being renamed in 1953 Tarik al-Geish. The restaurant's prime location was both expedient and practical otherwise a comparable fare of fresh fish, lobsters and shrimps would mean a much longer drive to Zephiriou (Tsaparis & Catsiofas) in the outlying town of Abou Kir of Napoloenic fame where a number of fish restaurants stood side by side all of them run by Greeks; or to Xenophon and Sea Gull (S. Istropoulos) in the Mex-Dekhela region west of Alexandria, whose owners where also Greeks.
Petrou's regular summer patrons in the '60s and 70s included leading intellectuals including playwright Tewfik al-Hakim, writer-poet Aziz Abaza Pasha and future Nobel laureate Naguib Mahfouz. Also present were former cabinet ministers from King Farouk's days who congregated on the restaurant's terrace to reminisce the monarchy days and to openly criticize Nasser's totalitarian regime which had Khawaga Petrou quaking lest the mukhabarat were within hearing distance.
Casino Petrou did not provide outside catering except to the then-privileged adjoining 1954 pasha & bey-filled apartment building owned by Hassan Abdelrahman (later Ali Chichini Bey) at No. 444 Tarik al-Geish. It was also at 444 that Panayoti Petrou's American relations would later occupy the first floor apartment.
Following Petrou's death around 1960, his wife took over operations of the restaurant before she herself died from suffocation in 1968 when a truck carrying chlorine canisters overturned near the restaurant.
Left without direct heirs to run the restaurant, Panayoti Petrou's brother in law, Nicolas Manolagas, arrived from Boston-USA with his wife Helen to take over the business. Both were already in their '60s. They were soon joined by their son Constandino and his young family in November 1971.

A year later Nicolas Manolagas's health took a turn for the worse when his leg was amputated below the knee which meant he had to be carried each morning from 444 Tarik El Geish across Ikbal Street to his restaurant.
"Within one year it became clear that the relocation of Petrou's American relations--my parents and my two sisters--was not going very well. In the Summer of 1972 we moved back to Boston. My grandparents however chose to remain in Alexandria until the late 70s before returning to the USA," recalls Petrou's grandnephew Constantine Manolagas.
The restaurant closed thereafter and a few years later the adjoining cliff and its various superstructures (palace, barracks, canons) was razed to near sea level so that the entire surroundings would make way for a cluster of very ugly apartment buildings and shops owned by and for the benefit of the military establishment.
Date: Thu, 25 Jan 2007 15:29:47 EST
From: Samir Sobhy [Ssobhy@aol.com]
THANK YOU for more great moments of nostalgia while reading your article on Petrou. My late father loved Alexandria and my family used to spend all summer vacation at Glimonopolo (Glim). He also loved walking, and used to take me and my older brother along for his afternoon walk on the corniche from Glim to Petrou and back (without stopping!). Many years later, continuing to go to Alexandria as frequently as I could, Petrou was my favorite restaurant. I loved its no-nonsense, unpretentious, and simple atmosphere, as well as its superb grilled fish!. Last year, I returned to Alexandria after an absence of some 30 years. My heart sank and tears almost clouded my eyes when I drove along the corniche and saw that Petrou was no longer there. All the best.
From: Nadia Rashad [nrashad@cacegypt.org]
Date: September 10, 2006
I have just had my heart broken. Not because the place has gone to the ugly masses but, that we let it happen. What can we do??? I have such lovely memories, At? With? In? Alongside? Nearby? Petrou's
© Copyright Samir Raafat


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