Arab News

Former Dutch envoy to hold lecture on Bedouin culture and poetry

- RODOLFO C. ESTIMO JR.

RIYADH: The Netherland­s Embassy will hold a lecture on Bedouin culture and poetry on Monday night in Riyadh.

Dutch Ambassador Joost Reintjes said the lecture, titled “The Last Bedouin,” will be delivered by Marcel Kurpershoe­k, former Dutch deputy ambassador to Saudi Arabia and former ambassador to Turkey, Pakistan and Poland.

“Dr. Marcel Kurpershoe­k... will be in Riyadh to give a presentati­on about Arabian Bedouin culture and poetry,” Reintjes said in a statement.

Kupershoek’s desert adventures began 30 years ago when he became a Dutch diplomat to the Kingdom. In a span of four years, he familiariz­ed himself with Bedouin poetry and dialect, and establishe­d cordial relations with local tribesmen.

In a documentar­y, the former ambassador recalled his Saudi desert expedition­s. “It is my homeland… I sometimes regard myself a Bedouin,” he said.

He added: “When I am in the Netherland­s during winter season and it gets dark, and people are in a hurry to go to work, my thoughts take me back to Al- Nefud desert and the Arabian Peninsula.”

Al- Nefud desert is in the northern part of the Arabian Peninsula, occupying a great oval depression.

In Arabic, Kurpershoe­k at one point narrated a poetic verse from a famous pre- Islamic ode by Imru’ Al- Qais, considered the father of Arabic poetry; Al- Qais was an Arab poet in the 6th century, and the son of one of the last Kindite kings.

Kurpershoe­k is said to be the first westerner to visit ad- Dakhul and Hawmal, the two mountains mentioned in Imru’ Al- Qais’ ode.

He said his expedition made him understand that in Arabic poetry, “everything holds a meaning.”

 ??  ?? Marcel Kurpershoe­k
Marcel Kurpershoe­k

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia