The Maia Lotus Foundation is a Canadian non-profit serving as the legal vehicle and fiscal home for Rise Together — a co-creative initiative regenerating heritage lands across Sinai, Cairo, and Aswan in Egypt. Through its Mother Fund, the Foundation channels resources to community-led work in water and soil regeneration, heritage seed revival, indigenous knowledge, and co-creative governance, in partnership with eight Egyptian organizations including SEKEM, Nawaya, Habiba, RDNA, and Together Temple. The Foundation is anchored by Mona Rabie — Canadian-Egyptian, based in Egypt for over 12 years, with a background in corporate transformation and peace work across 70+ countries — alongside a governance team that holds the structure and coherence of the initiative across all three regeneration sites.
Project story
From Mud to Lotus: Regenerating Land on the Nile
An ancient Egyptian prophecy says that when the blue lotus returns to the Nile, society will be reborn into a new consciousness of love. From Mud to Lotus takes that prophecy literally — and ecologically. The lotus rises from the mud, but only when the mud itself is healed.
From Mud to Lotus establishes Living Temple Gardens at two sites on the Nile — lotus ponds woven together with native heritage plant gardens, tended by local stewards. The work is sequenced as test, heal, plant.
First, we test the water and soil at both sites to understand their ecological baseline — what is there, what is degraded, what is living.
Then we heal. At each site we build a constructed wetland — an engineered shallow basin planted with reeds, rushes, and other water-filtering species, where plants and microbial communities biologically clean the water as it moves through. Alongside this, we apply biodynamic preparations to rebuild the living biology of soil and water. Both methods are well-established in ecological restoration, and together they pair contemporary ecological engineering with regenerative agricultural tradition.
Then we plant — the blue lotus (Nymphaea caerulea, sacred to ancient Egypt) and a defined set of native heritage species, into living, healed ground.
Why two sites
Cairo and Aswan are the head and tail of the Egyptian Nile. Cairo is the megacity Nile under the heaviest pollution and urban pressure. Aswan is closer to the source, where Nubian land-knowledge has survived through displacement and where heritage farming practices are still alive. Working at both ends makes this a Nile project, not a local project — and creates a learning loop where what we discover in one site informs the other.
At Qursaya Island in Cairo, the project builds on an existing Together Temple lotus and heritage plants farm in partnership with the multi-generational farming families who have stewarded the island for decades and who are paid co-partners on the land. Qursaya is a 70-acre rural island inside one of the world's most congested cities — a rare, protected pocket of land-based life in the Nile. We have built a prototype of a few ponds and are looking to expand the work at Qursaya with the local families.
At our Aswan site, the project is in its earliest stage. We are entering a careful, consent-based partnership-building process with Nubian growers. The summer 2026 groundwork specifically includes formalizing this partnership through dialogue and joint design, recognizing that the Aswan site must be designed by and with them, not for them.
Who is behind the project
The Maia Lotus Foundation is the legal vehicle and fiscal manager. Together Temple, founded and led by Mona Rabie, is the on-the-ground anchor — Mona has been based in Egypt for over 12 years developing processes for personal and collective regeneration, with prior background in corporate transformation and peace work across 70+ countries. A small core team of 3–5 carries the project, alongside the named Qursaya stewards and the forming Nubian partnership.
This project lives within a broader initiative called Rise Together — a co-creative effort convening eight Egyptian organizations (including SEKEM, RDNA, Nile Journeys, Habiba, Kemet Tribe, Nawaya, and Sukoon Studios) around regenerating heritage lands. From Mud to Lotus is the flagship ecological deliverable from that broader work, scoped tightly so it can be funded, documented, and pointed to as proof of life.
Additional experts:
Hala Barakat – Ancient Egyptian temple garden designer & botanist.
Islam el sharkawy – Native and rare plant specialist, nursery grower and landscaper
Egyptian Biodynamic association – Lead for soil restoration
What success looks like by April 2027
Constructed wetlands established and functioning at both Cairo and Aswan sites.
Baseline and follow-up water and soil tests at both sites, showing measurable improvement in pond microsites.
Lotus established and growing at both Cairo and Aswan.
A defined set of native heritage plant species planted and surviving at each site, functioning as living seed banks.
Community planting ceremonies held at both sites, with named participating stewards.
A formalized partnership with Nubian growers in Aswan, developed through consent-based dialogue.
Photo, video, and a simple impact report documenting the year of work.
The blue lotus is the symbol of rebirth in the Egyptian tradition. This project enacts what the symbol has always meant — heal the ground, then let what is sacred grow back into it.
Project updates
Team
From Mud to Lotus: Regenerating Land on the Nile
The Maia Lotus Foundation is a Canadian non-profit serving as the legal vehicle and fiscal home for Rise Together — a co-creative initiative regenerating heritage lands across Sinai, Cairo, and Aswan in Egypt. Through its Mother Fund, the Foundation channels resources to community-led work in water and soil regeneration, heritage seed revival, indigenous knowledge, and co-creative governance, in partnership with eight Egyptian organizations including SEKEM, Nawaya, Habiba, RDNA, and Together Temple. The Foundation is anchored by Mona Rabie — Canadian-Egyptian, based in Egypt for over 12 years, with a background in corporate transformation and peace work across 70+ countries — alongside a governance team that holds the structure and coherence of the initiative across all three regeneration sites.
Project story
From Mud to Lotus: Regenerating Land on the Nile
An ancient Egyptian prophecy says that when the blue lotus returns to the Nile, society will be reborn into a new consciousness of love. From Mud to Lotus takes that prophecy literally — and ecologically. The lotus rises from the mud, but only when the mud itself is healed.
From Mud to Lotus establishes Living Temple Gardens at two sites on the Nile — lotus ponds woven together with native heritage plant gardens, tended by local stewards. The work is sequenced as test, heal, plant.
First, we test the water and soil at both sites to understand their ecological baseline — what is there, what is degraded, what is living.
Then we heal. At each site we build a constructed wetland — an engineered shallow basin planted with reeds, rushes, and other water-filtering species, where plants and microbial communities biologically clean the water as it moves through. Alongside this, we apply biodynamic preparations to rebuild the living biology of soil and water. Both methods are well-established in ecological restoration, and together they pair contemporary ecological engineering with regenerative agricultural tradition.
Then we plant — the blue lotus (Nymphaea caerulea, sacred to ancient Egypt) and a defined set of native heritage species, into living, healed ground.
Why two sites
Cairo and Aswan are the head and tail of the Egyptian Nile. Cairo is the megacity Nile under the heaviest pollution and urban pressure. Aswan is closer to the source, where Nubian land-knowledge has survived through displacement and where heritage farming practices are still alive. Working at both ends makes this a Nile project, not a local project — and creates a learning loop where what we discover in one site informs the other.
At Qursaya Island in Cairo, the project builds on an existing Together Temple lotus and heritage plants farm in partnership with the multi-generational farming families who have stewarded the island for decades and who are paid co-partners on the land. Qursaya is a 70-acre rural island inside one of the world's most congested cities — a rare, protected pocket of land-based life in the Nile. We have built a prototype of a few ponds and are looking to expand the work at Qursaya with the local families.
At our Aswan site, the project is in its earliest stage. We are entering a careful, consent-based partnership-building process with Nubian growers. The summer 2026 groundwork specifically includes formalizing this partnership through dialogue and joint design, recognizing that the Aswan site must be designed by and with them, not for them.
Who is behind the project
The Maia Lotus Foundation is the legal vehicle and fiscal manager. Together Temple, founded and led by Mona Rabie, is the on-the-ground anchor — Mona has been based in Egypt for over 12 years developing processes for personal and collective regeneration, with prior background in corporate transformation and peace work across 70+ countries. A small core team of 3–5 carries the project, alongside the named Qursaya stewards and the forming Nubian partnership.
This project lives within a broader initiative called Rise Together — a co-creative effort convening eight Egyptian organizations (including SEKEM, RDNA, Nile Journeys, Habiba, Kemet Tribe, Nawaya, and Sukoon Studios) around regenerating heritage lands. From Mud to Lotus is the flagship ecological deliverable from that broader work, scoped tightly so it can be funded, documented, and pointed to as proof of life.
Additional experts:
Hala Barakat – Ancient Egyptian temple garden designer & botanist.
Islam el sharkawy – Native and rare plant specialist, nursery grower and landscaper
Egyptian Biodynamic association – Lead for soil restoration
What success looks like by April 2027
Constructed wetlands established and functioning at both Cairo and Aswan sites.
Baseline and follow-up water and soil tests at both sites, showing measurable improvement in pond microsites.
Lotus established and growing at both Cairo and Aswan.
A defined set of native heritage plant species planted and surviving at each site, functioning as living seed banks.
Community planting ceremonies held at both sites, with named participating stewards.
A formalized partnership with Nubian growers in Aswan, developed through consent-based dialogue.
Photo, video, and a simple impact report documenting the year of work.
The blue lotus is the symbol of rebirth in the Egyptian tradition. This project enacts what the symbol has always meant — heal the ground, then let what is sacred grow back into it.
Project updates
Team
Location
Egypt