
Middle East
The legendary Nile — Egypt’s lifeline since the first settlements. Pharaohs, kings, and queens built along its banks one of the greatest civilizations of all time. Everywhere you look, the past still stands: temples, tombs, statues carved from the desert itself. It’s impossible not to stop, to imagine, to wonder.
Further east, Jordan offers another kind of timelessness. The rose-red city of Petra, the calm of the Wadi Rum desert, and the deep blue of the Red Sea form a country where every horizon feels biblical. Beyond the ruins and the sand, there’s a quiet hospitality — a sense of peace that belongs only to the desert.
Turkey lies at the crossroads of worlds, between Europe and Asia, modernity and memory. Istanbul’s skyline blends minarets and domes with glass towers, while Cappadocia’s landscapes seem to belong to another planet. From the Aegean coast to the Anatolian plateaus, everything tells a story of passage and encounter.
In the Kurdistan region of Iraq, the mountains rise again — rugged, proud, and filled with a surprising warmth. Villages cling to the slopes, markets overflow with color, and history hides in the stones and valleys. It’s a place where the ancient and the present still walk side by side.
The Middle East is not one place but many — lands of light, faith, and movement. From the Nile to the Tigris, it remains a region where every step connects you to the roots of our shared past.
























