CAIRO — Egyptians used to wish each other “Eid Mubarak,” which means “a blessed Eid” in Arabic, to mark the three-day-long celebrations at the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. With former president Hosni Mubarak under house arrest and a military council firmly in power for now, some here joke that the greeting this year should have been “Eid Field Marshal” — a nod to the rank of council head Mohammed Hussein Tantawi. As the holiday ticked toward its conclusion Thursday without the man who dominated Egyptian life for three decades, it felt profoundly different from previous Eid al-Fitr seasons, filled with political campaigning that for the first time in memory reflected real choices. Read full article >>