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HOW SON’S BIG DHOW BUILDS ON FATHER’S LEGACY

The world’s biggest dhow is fast taking shape on Dubai Creek. The man building it tells Anna Zacharias what drove him to tackle the project

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Majid Obaid makes it clear from the beginning that he is not building the largest dhow in the world for prestige, but for his father, Obaid Majid.

Mr Obaid does not particular­ly like attention and does not like to be photograph­ed, although among the newspaper clippings lining the walls of his office halls is an enlarged, twopage report by Emarat Al Youm featuring a blurred photo of Mr Obaid being filmed.

He has been interviewe­d by CNN, Reuters, and others of global prominence, he says. “You don’t know how many times Bentley [Motors Limited] have been here.”

Mr Obaid is fond of luxury brands, as is evident by the sparkling Cartier cufflinks he wears with his simple kandura, to match his Cartier watch. “Tomorrow will be Rolex,” he says, and compares these luxury brands to his family’s shipbuildi­ng company, the Obaid Juma bin Suloom Establishm­ent, because of its renowned craftsmans­hip.

Yet above all, Mr Obaid values the lessons taught by his late father, a humble dhow builder who founded the business that he, the eldest son of 17 children, has carried on with his brother Ahmed. “You have to understand, my father is why I have done everything,” he says.

Two dhows are currently under constructi­on at the yard on the banks of Dubai Creek in Al Jaddaf. One is a 4,500-tonne capacity dhow, which, in most dhow yards, would draw attention for its size. Yet on these sandy shores it is dwarfed by the dhow beside it, which is 91 metres in length and 11m tall, with a beam of 20m.

Mr Obaid, the company’s chairman, hopes it will set a Guinness World Record. “Its carrying capacity is approximat­ely 6,500 tonnes, which has, like, never, ever been done by anyone.”

His office is just a few metres from the dhow. Photos of his father adorn its wood-panelled walls, and the office is decorated with marine trinkets and model ships of all sizes. “You can see [my father], he is a very down-to-earth man,” he says. “He worked with his hands. He’s actually a craftsman and a seaman and he’s the one who changed the history of dhow building.”

Mr Obaid’s father began an apprentice­ship at the age of nine in the mid-1940s after he was withdrawn from school for fighting too much with the other children. “My grandfathe­r decided to take him out because he had a lot of energy. He put him to work where he could take out his energy.”

And later, when Mr Majid came of age, he went to sea. The 1950s were the final days for the sailing of dhows in the Gulf and he travelled to India and East Africa as a master carpenter on a trade dhow, overseeing repairs as it sailed the Indian Ocean.

In the 1960s, he assembled his own team of builders, attracting the best by paying a generous wage for the time – 10 Saudi riyals a day.

He travelled to Pakistan in 1975, where he watched the constructi­on of a 280-tonne capacity dhow, a ship that was 100 tonnes larger than the average dhow on Dubai Creek. Mr Majid got hooked on the idea of the mega-dhow and soon secured his first contract for a 300-tonne capacity dhow.

“Everybody was wondering, ‘Oh, Obaid, what you are doing?’ All the dhow owners and all the captains, they used to be local and all of them said, ‘where will you bring cargo from?’

“And to all of this he said, ‘Allah kareem [God is generous], not a problem’.”

Mr Majid began building dhows of 400 to 600-tonne capacity, incorporat­ing elements of Pakistani dhow-building to increase the cargo hold. He perfected his engineerin­g by going below deck in stormy weather to listen to the ship’s vibrations. As waves battered the hull, he would learn which areas needed reinforcem­ent.

“He liked competitio­n,” Mr Obaid says. “He liked always to build the biggest, like Sheikh Mohammed [bin Rashid]. Here, Dubai people, they like a challenge.

“He used to cut the logs, work with the normal people and run the crane. He did everything. He was very strong and always smiling and liked to help everyone.”

When steel ships and fibreglass boats replaced wooden dhows, he kept building.

“There was demand until the late eighties. After that, he did not stop working. He would put the keel, get started. If any buyer comes, OK, we’re good. If no buyer comes, OK. We run it. So he did not stop working,” Mr Obaid says.

As the city grew and property prices rose, Mr Majid’s shipyard shifted from Al Ras, near his original family home, to Al Gharhood and Al Hamraniya Port, before settling at the current shipyard in Al Jaddaf in 1990.

“He made a brand for himself. Like Rolls-Royce. He always used to tell me that when you agree to make something for someone and you give them a price, don’t try to reduce any of the material or try to save money. You make a dhow as if you are making it for yourself. Consider yourself the customer.”

Mr Obaid grew up at his father’s shipyard and was later trusted to procure the wood. After he took over the business in 1995, he began production of wooden yachts.

Mr Majid passed away in 2009 and the family began to build a dhow in his honour in January 2015. A crew of about 20 men have worked on the dhow for the past two and a half years, from 8am until sunset with a midday break.

“Put in mind that we lost almost six months of work,” says Mr Obaid. He had laid the keel and announced his intentions to Guinness, only to be informed that there was already a bigger dhow in Kuwait.

“But it’s attached to a hotel and that one is for conference­s and not even in the water,” Mr Obaid says. “It’s used for weddings and dinners. It’s not even in the sea. I can make you one like that that is, like, 20 or 100 kilometres long.”

Guinness checked with their London office, who said a “dhow is a dhow”. So his crew redid the keel and now, in his opinion, the record will be unbeatable.

“Nobody can reach this number. Nobody is able to, nobody. Nobody in the world.”

As for the expense – “whatever it costs, it costs”.

Mr Obaid will put the award in the name of Dubai or the UAE, rather than his own name. He wants the ship to be named by Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, when it launches this year.

Once seaworthy, it will carry mixed cargo such as cars, cattle and scrap metal around the Arabian Peninsula and the Gulf of Aden.

And what then? A museum, Mr Obaid says. He points to the office around him. He has been collecting. It will be named after his father.

 ??  ?? Majid Obaid – with son Obaid Majid and brother Ahmed Al Falasi – in front of the dhow he is building in honour of his late father
Majid Obaid – with son Obaid Majid and brother Ahmed Al Falasi – in front of the dhow he is building in honour of his late father
 ??  ?? An old picture of Obaid Majid, who founded the family business, at his dhow-building company on Dubai Creek
An old picture of Obaid Majid, who founded the family business, at his dhow-building company on Dubai Creek
 ?? Photos Chris Whiteoak / The National ?? The giant dhow under constructi­on at Obaid Juma bin Suloom Establishm­ent on Dubai Creek
Photos Chris Whiteoak / The National The giant dhow under constructi­on at Obaid Juma bin Suloom Establishm­ent on Dubai Creek

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