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Vanishing in the desert: Traditiona­l Bedouin culture moves online

AFTER 50 YEARS OF FIELDWORK IN THE NEGEV AND SINAI DESERTS, AN ISRAELI RESEARCHER DONATES HIS RARE ARCHIVE

- JERUSALEM BY ISABEL KERSHNER

I decided to try to capture the culture of the Bedouins. I could already see it was beginning to disappear… It was a story of survival going back 4,500 years.”

Clinton Bailey | Israeli researcher

When Clinton Bailey first began documentin­g Bedouin life in the 1960s, the nomadic tribes lived pretty much as their ancestors, raising livestock, wandering in search of pastures and pitching tents under the stars.

Bailey would join their migrations in the southern Israeli Negev desert and the Sinai Peninsula for weeks on camel back. They would try their luck at planting grains in the winter, he said, then return months later for the harvest. With a tape recorder, camera and jeep, he spent the next 50 years recording Bedouin oral poetry, tribal negotiatio­ns and trials, interviews with elders, weddings and rituals, proverbs and stories. “I decided to try to capture that culture,” Bailey said. “I could already see it was beginning to disappear.”

Now 84, Bailey recently donated his archive of 350 hours of audio tape, photos and slides to the National Library of Israel.

Broad portrait of lives

Providing a broad portrait of the lives, art, law, economics, history and customs of what was a largely illiterate society, the archive is being fully digitized and cataloged online. Believed to be unique in depth and scope, the archive will be freely accessible to scholars and researcher­s everywhere and preserve the trove for posterity.

“It was a story of survival going back 4,500 years,” Bailey said, describing his fascinatio­n with life adapted to the harsh conditions of the wilderness. “I lived among the Bedouin, travelled with them, listened to them and asked them questions.”

Bailey’s work has won praise from Bedouins, including Daham Al Atawneh, a retired publisher from the Bedouin town of Hura in the Negev. Atawneh said Bailey had done “very sacred work,” particular­ly in collecting poetry. “This preserves it for eternity,” he said. “Maybe my children will want to go back to their history one day. There is a record now.”

Cusp of abrupt transition

With the imposition of modern borders, government restrictio­ns on movement and the encroachme­nt of economic and technologi­cal change in the region, traditiona­l Bedouin society and culture, then on the cusp of an abrupt transition, has all but vanished since Bailey began his work.

“As the National Library, our mandate is to document and preserve all the cultures in this land,” said Raquel

Ukeles, head of collection­s at the library and the longtime curator of its Islam and Middle East collection. “We have a lot of holes. This is the first step to filling in Bedouin culture and hopefully not the last.”

Navigating dialects

It is a complex challenge. Transcript­ion involves navigating between colloquial Bedouin dialect and standard literary Arabic. Besides identifyin­g recordings by subject, date and location, the aim is to make them searchable according to tribal confederat­ion and sub-confederat­ion, and by the particular tribe and clan.

Aided by the recent historic normalisat­ion of diplomatic relations between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, Ukeles has been in contact with archivists in the UAE about possible collaborat­ion.

Bailey, a native of Buffalo, New York, who also advocated for Bedouin civil rights in Israel, practicall­y stumbled into his lifelong pursuit.

After having studied Islamic history and Arabic in Israel and earning a Ph.D. from Columbia University, he returned to Israel in 1967.

A chance encounter with the wife of David Ben-Gurion, the founder of the Israeli state, led to a job teaching

English at an educationa­l center in the Negev desert. Out jogging, he would encounter Bedouin shepherds and talk to them. They would invite him back to their tents. After the 1967 war, he could access even more remote tribes.

A classic set-up

“I realised in visiting them that they really had a different culture that might have been as old as the Bible,” he said. “I have since discovered that their culture is about 2,000 years older than the Bible and made a very big contributi­on to Judaism and Islam.”

He was speaking in his classic apartment in an old neighbourh­ood of Jerusalem. The bookshelve­s of his small office were crammed with dictionari­es and the chronicles of early travellers to Arabia. A laptop was perched on a cluttered desk. Drawers were filled with labelled cassette tapes.

Bailey has written books on Bedouin poetry, proverbs, law and, most recently, Bedouin culture in the Bible. It all took patience. Describing some of his subjects as “great poets and smugglers,” he said, “I often had to hang around with them for a day or so before I’d maybe hear a poem.”

Growing up the traditiona­l way

By about 2008, when he stopped working in the field, it had become harder to find such people since many who had grown up in the traditiona­l way had died. Some of their children inherited the memory of the culture, he said, but that too gradually faded as distance and communicat­ion changed with the advent of transistor radios, cars and mobile phones.

The archive is already proving of value to younger generation­s of Bedouins who live a more modern life, but for whom the traditiona­l culture remains a source of pride.

Atawneh, the retired publisher, recently approached Bailey for help with researchin­g a book he was writing about his late father, Mousa, the shaikh of the small Atawneh tribe. Bailey would come to his father and play recordings of poems, Atawneh recalled, and the shaikh would interpret them. Many contained vocabulary and allusions that few outsiders could understand. Bailey annotated the works in his book on poetry.

Centuries of history and heritage

Most Bedouins currently living in the Negev are thought to have migrated to the area centuries ago from Saudi Arabia, Egypt and the Syrian desert.

Atawneh was born in 1945, before the establishm­ent of the state of Israel. For the Bedouins, that was not a happy experience. “We used to be a free people who roamed the Negev and had land,” he said, “but no documents, being an illiterate society.”

Ebrahim Nsasra, 39, a business and social entreprene­ur from the Bedouin town of Lakia and the chairman of Tamar Center Negev, a nonprofit organisati­on that works in the southern region to help young Bedouins close educationa­l gaps, said he missed aspects of the old culture, including the respect for, and the wisdom of, the elders.

The son of a Bedouin judge, he said he remembered listening to the trials as a child. He used to feed the sheep before school and shepherd them at weekends. His own children, he said, were more attached to screens.

“What [Bailey] did is very worthy of appreciati­on, and not to be taken for granted,” Nsasra said. “Usually, the strong write history from their point of view. He is writing from the field and providing a mirror of what was, and how things were, for us and for the children yet to be born.”

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 ??  ?? With a tape recorder, camera and a four-wheel drive, Clinton Bailey has spent 50 years recording Bedouin oral poetry, tribal negotiatio­ns, weddings and rituals, proverbs and stories – like in the pictures above, seen with Bedouin men in the Negev Desert, southern Israel.
With a tape recorder, camera and a four-wheel drive, Clinton Bailey has spent 50 years recording Bedouin oral poetry, tribal negotiatio­ns, weddings and rituals, proverbs and stories – like in the pictures above, seen with Bedouin men in the Negev Desert, southern Israel.
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New York Times

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