Gulf News

CHANGING PHASES OF EMIRATI LIFE

The UAE’s history is diverse, brimming with tales of nomadic Arabs who once inhabited the region |

- RAS AL KHAIMAH BY ALI AL SHOUK Senior Reporter

The cold weather in the UAE’s Adhen village gave chills to Rashid as he walked for a kilometre outside his modern villa to his ancestors’ old house. The sound of his walking stick on the stones created a symphony of sorts with the chirping of birds and the livestock around as he waved at them, before his three elderly friends joined him in the walk towards a long-forgotten spot.

It was early hours of the morning as the leader of Emirati’s Al Mazari tribe and his friends reached the traditiona­l Emirati house on the edge of a small mountain in Wadi Al Aim area in Ras Al Khaimah. The sky was clear as the sun light gently touched a tent made of mud brick, dry stone, wood and thatch.

Amir of Al Mazari opened the wooden door to enter the second section of the house called ‘Arish’ — a shaded shelter used by the Bedouin during the hot summer months. “A tent used in the winter to protect people from the cold weather, ‘Arish’ was our shelter in the summer where a family used to sit and have food,” Rashid said. “This is a traditiona­l Emirati house that still exists, even after all these days. Our tribe, living in a modern village nearby, had left their old houses.”

A big smile spread across Rashid’s face, making the wrinkles on his face even deeper, as he was pointed to the forgotten old house, while his friends sat on the mat to have their traditiona­l Emirati breakfast. The four elderly persons had survived the hardships of a desert life before the discovery of oil and the establishm­ent of UAE in the early 1970s, sat with Gulf News to share the story of an ambitious nation that is now busy exploring space.

Life in the UAE

The history of the UAE is diverse, brimming with tales of nomadic Arabs who once inhabited the region. Known for their unique lifestyle, they are an intrinsic part of the region and its heritage. They are famous for their sense of respect, hospitalit­y and courage.

Rashid Al Mazroui, Amir of the tribe in Ras Al Khaimah, told Gulf News that his tribe lived for centuries in Wadi Al Aim and Wadi Al

Ais. “Over centuries, we survived the scarcity of water and other resources, to create a life full of simple but beautiful traditions. Life was full of hardships for Emiratis in the harsh desert climates before the discovery of oil and the establishm­ent of the Union in the early 1970s,” said Rashid Al Mazroui, who has two wives, eight sons, 13 daughters and many grandchild­ren. He pointed that there wasn’t even a marked road system to connect people who lived in the different emirates. People used camel or donkey to travel for several days to sell or buy goods in Sharjah, Dubai, Ras Al Khaimah and Abu Dhabi.

“Life was hard, but people were happy. Some people used to do farming while others used to be lumberjack­s who collected woods for two days to sell it for less than one rupee [the currency in use during those days].

In the past, around 10 rupees a month would be enough for a family to survive,” Rashid Al Mazroui added. Families would share dates and bread because of the difficulti­es in having money to buy items of basic need. He recounts that when he was a young boy, he would travel to Dubai with his father to sell goods.

Challenges for Emirati life

From leading a camel cavalcade across the UAE to being a solider in the British Army in the 1960s, Saeed Rashid Al Mazroui, 87-year-old Emirati joined RAK Police and retired after 23 years in the force. “We suffered lack of water. Women would go to fetch water from the few wells in the area. We used to go to Ras Al Khaimah with camels or donkeys to exchange the woods and farming products for bread, dates and fish,” Saeed said.

Obaid bin Saeed Al Mazroui, 71, said that the First and Second World Wars had a negative impact on the economic life in the UAE. “The poverty started with the World Wars. There was not much work back then. People either worked as farmers in the handful of farms in the area or collected wood to sell them. We used to get dates from Basra in Iraq as it reached the villages close to the sea,” Obaid said.

How Emiratis defended

Obaid, who wore a long loose Arabic shirt with a long cartridge belt wrapped around the waist with a heavy silver-sheath dagger tucked in, said that tribes would gather at one place to defend themselves from enemy attacks. “We used to defend ourselves from enemies by carrying a dagger, sword and rifle.

We defended our convoys from outlaws who would attack us for the goods and the food,” Obaid said. He added that his dagger belonged to his ancestors and it’s been used in his family for generation­s — all the way down to him.

Food habits of Emiratis

62-year-old Emirati woman Umm Mariam said that her mother and grandmothe­r used to primarily consume rice and food made from flour, while also relishing tea, nuts, dried fruit, dates and goat meat.

“People used to cook food on the campfires. Women used to make both, thick as well as thin bread, to be served with dates and coffee — especially for breakfast,” said Umm Mariam. “Our mothers used to make butter and buttermilk by churning milk in a bag made of animal skin. Boiling the milk for long would produce a cheese-like substance called ‘Teget’.”

Young Emiratis’ gratitude

The UAE has come a long way from being part of a nomadic culture to being a high-tech oil rich nation in just 50 years. By the time Gulf News completed its ‘journey’ down memory lane along with members of the Al Mazari tribe in Adhen village, there were young people passing by.

A group of three teenagers greeted the elderly with respect and admiration.

You can surely say that amid the abundance of God’s bounties, the new generation of Emiratis is very much attuned to the sacrifices made by their forefather­s who lived in this land and who secured the lives of the generation­s that followed after them.

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 ??  ?? Top: Umm Maryam, 62, from Al Mazroui tribe prepares a snack.
Top: Umm Maryam, 62, from Al Mazroui tribe prepares a snack.
 ??  ?? Women at a traditiona­l house of the Al Mazroui tribe.
Women at a traditiona­l house of the Al Mazroui tribe.
 ??  ?? (Left to Right) Saeed Rashid Al Mazroui, Rashid Al Mazroui, Obaid Al Mazroui and Ahmad Al Mazroui share a meal.
(Left to Right) Saeed Rashid Al Mazroui, Rashid Al Mazroui, Obaid Al Mazroui and Ahmad Al Mazroui share a meal.
 ?? Ahmed Ramzan /Gulf News ?? Men of the Al Mazroui tribe at a gathering.
Ahmed Ramzan /Gulf News Men of the Al Mazroui tribe at a gathering.
 ??  ?? Obaid Al Mazroui shows the dagger, which is a family heirloom.
Obaid Al Mazroui shows the dagger, which is a family heirloom.
 ?? Ahmed Ramzan /Gulf News ?? ■ Saeed Rashid Al Mazroui from Al Mazroui tribe in the mountains of Wadi Al Aim.
Ahmed Ramzan /Gulf News ■ Saeed Rashid Al Mazroui from Al Mazroui tribe in the mountains of Wadi Al Aim.
 ?? Ahmed Ramzan /Gulf News ?? ■ Traditiona­l churning in one of the old Emirati traditiona­l house of Al Mazroui tribe.
Ahmed Ramzan /Gulf News ■ Traditiona­l churning in one of the old Emirati traditiona­l house of Al Mazroui tribe.
 ?? Ahmed Ramzan /Gulf News ?? ■ Camels from the Al Mazroui tribe in middle of the mountains of Wadi Al Aim.
Ahmed Ramzan /Gulf News ■ Camels from the Al Mazroui tribe in middle of the mountains of Wadi Al Aim.
 ?? Ahmed Ramzan /Gulf News ?? ■ Rashid Al Mazroui Amir of Al Mazroui tribe (left) and Obaid Al Mazroui of Al Mazroui tribe.
Ahmed Ramzan /Gulf News ■ Rashid Al Mazroui Amir of Al Mazroui tribe (left) and Obaid Al Mazroui of Al Mazroui tribe.
 ?? Ahmed Ramzan / Gulf News ?? Saeed Rashid Al Mazroui (right), 87, Obaid Al Mazroui (middle), 81, and Rashid Al Mazroui, 80, Amir of Al Mazroui tribe in middle of the mountains of Wadi Al Aim in Ras Al Khaima.
Ahmed Ramzan / Gulf News Saeed Rashid Al Mazroui (right), 87, Obaid Al Mazroui (middle), 81, and Rashid Al Mazroui, 80, Amir of Al Mazroui tribe in middle of the mountains of Wadi Al Aim in Ras Al Khaima.
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