The National - News

A brand-new textbook version of UAE history

- PETER HELLYER

Alittle over eight years ago, I wrote a column for this paper titled “When textbooks are this bad, students can’t learn”. It was, I like to think, a comprehens­ive demolition of a book prepared by the Ministry of Education for the teaching of UAE history to school pupils.

“The book,” I wrote, “reduced me to a state of near-apoplexy. It is out of date, full of spelling errors and poorly printed, so that the place names on some of the maps are unreadable. How on earth are students supposed to learn them? Perhaps worst of all, it has numerous errors.”

Some of those errors were elementary in nature – so much so that I am almost embarrasse­d to repeat them. Of particular note was the failure, in a book published in 2007-2008, to acknowledg­e the death a couple of years earlier of Sheikh Maktoum bin Rashid and the succession of Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid as Vice President, Prime Minister and Ruler of Dubai. Three years later, in 2011, the book was still being used in schools, on Ministry of Education instructio­ns.

Like many newspaper columnists, I wonder occasional­ly whether anyone takes any notice of what I write. On this particular occasion, however, partly out of my absolute fury, I made sure that at least a few relevant people saw the column, by emailing it to them and following up.

Later, I was asked to help prepare a new textbook on UAE history that could be taught in schools. It was, I was told, something in which Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, had a personal interest.

After taking soundings from leading specialist­s in the UAE’s archaeolog­y and history, we recruited Professor Peter Magee, both an archaeolog­ist with extensive experience of the UAE and a brilliant teacher, to take on the task of writing the bulk of the material.

The eventual result was the launch earlier this month by Sheikh Saif bin Zayed, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Interior, of the new book

The Emirates – Our History, by Magee, myself and Mohammed Al Mubarak, chairman of the Abu Dhabi Department of Culture and Tourism. While working as chairman of the private schools group Aldar Academies, Mohammed had responded, back at the beginning, to my article and brought it to the attention of key decision-makers.

The book, I’m delighted to say, is to serve as the basis of a new history curriculum, in both Arabic and English. It will also be part of a broader campaign to promote knowledge of the UAE’s past, along with another new initiative, a fivepart film documentar­y series entitled History of the Emirates and produced by Abu Dhabi’s Image Nation.

It remains my hope in 2019 that UAE history will eventually be taught, properly and effectivel­y, to all of the country’s residents. This should be done through schools and through higher educationa­l institutio­ns, as well as through a variety of cultural and other outreach programmes, to reach the older generation­s who lacked the opportunit­y to learn that history as part of their own education. Above all, though, it is important that the generation­s of the present and future are not similarly deprived.

Teaching about the UAE’s past will be a more complex process now than it was one or two decades ago. Work by archaeolog­ists and historians, both local and from abroad, has uncovered much new informatio­n over the years.

Excavation­s on key sites such as those from the Neolithic period on Abu Dhabi’s western island of Marawah or the early Christian church on Sir Bani Yas have yielded new insights into the distant past.

Historical studies of Khor Fakkan, undertaken at the initiative of Sharjah’s Ruler, Dr Sheikh Sultan bin Mohammed Al Qasimi, have drawn attention to the port town’s prominence at the time of the devastatin­g Portuguese attacks at the beginning of the 16th century. They have also shed light on its long-forgotten but extensive trade in horses with India and on the presence of a large and important Indian merchant community – a timely reminder in this Year of Tolerance of the UAE’s diverse population­s of the past.

It now looks as though our school students will soon be learning some proper UAE history. The next challenge is to ensure that they can continue to do so at our colleges and universiti­es.

A couple of years ago, Zayed University, for some reason, abruptly brought to an end the only special course of its kind in the country, its BA in Emirati Studies. Now, apparently, proposals for a revamped course are being put forward. I hope they’re rapidly approved. As Government displays an ever-growing commitment to the need to teach our history, there is a growing need for people to be educated, so that they can pass it on to others.

Peter Hellyer is a consultant specialisi­ng in the UAE’s history and culture

 ?? Lee Hogland / The National ?? A Christian monastery on Sir Bani Yas, whose foundation predates the coming of Islam
Lee Hogland / The National A Christian monastery on Sir Bani Yas, whose foundation predates the coming of Islam
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates