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Bedouins Of Egypt: The Final Chapter Of An Ancient Tradition


 

 

www.touregypt-net By Ruth Shilling:  Bedouins are, of course, not limited to Egypt, nor are they limited to a specific region of Egypt, though the more traditional Bedouins do normally inhabit the desert regions, including the Sinai and the Eastern and Western Deserts. However, these days, they can also be found in many of the resort communities of the Sinai and even in the larger cities of Egypt, such as Cairo.

Explaining the Bedouin life and culture is really a tricky topic, a moving target at best. The reason for this is that they are an ancient people, with ancient customs and traditions, who these days are often subjected to a modern and changing world. Some Bedouins have become completely modern, with modern trappings such as cell phones and color TVs, perhaps most influenced by the Egyptian tourism trade and by various government policies. For example, up until recently, Bedouin men were obligated to do military service with other Egyptian men. Of course, they came back to the desert very much changed. Others live their lives in a tradition that dates back thousands of years, and are really very little changed from bygone days.

Today, we tend to group Bedouins into one cultural group, which is a bit misleading. Some of them, such as the Alagat tribe, wander throughout Egypt's deserts, continually searching for fresh grazing for their camels and goats and water for their families, though they generally stay in one overall region. They don't wander aimlessly, but return annually to various locations in their territory where the land and water can sustain them for the season. These days at least, others are not nomads at all. For example, the Hamada tribe are miners who generally stay in one place, while the Gebelieh tribe, originally of Balkan descent from what is now Yugoslavia, remain near the
St. Catherine's monastery in the Sinai. This actually sets them apart from most of the tribes, who originated in Saudi Arabia long ago.

For the more traditional Bedouin, little in the desert escapes his eye. He knows where and when he can find water and whether it's just brackish or toxic. Shrubs tell him when it last rained and how much. Signs left in the sand proclaim who has been there before him, when, the directions from which they came and departed, the size of their flocks, and perhaps even the ages of their camels. Bedouins navigate by the stars, familiar landmarks, and stone markers left on a previous trek. They travel light, leaving caches hanging in trees. Other travelers, if in need, are welcome to the food and water but are bound not to touch the remaining articles.

Clothes

Though how they dress depends on the weather and on personal taste, the Bedouin dresses for the desert, his layered and flowing robes absorbing the sun's hot rays while allowing cooling breezes to circulate. He winds a cloth around his head and neck to retard moisture loss that can lead to heat stroke and to shield his face against the harsh, dry sand. Women wear black dresses and head covers embroidered in tiny cross-stitch designs: blue for unmarried women, red for married. They cover their faces with a veil highlighted in the same stitches and often decorated with shells and coins. Most of the traditional Bedouins dress very modestly.

However, more typically today, Bedouin children often wear modern clothing rather than the traditional dress worn by their parents.

Homes

Many traditional Bedouin live in tents of goat and camel hair panels that the women have woven on their narrow ground looms and stitched together. The tents are usually divided into two rooms, one for greeting guests and such, and one specifically for the women.

When the tribe moves, the Bedouin wife is in charge of dismantling the tent, packing it on the camels, and reassembling it at the new site. She can roll up the sides so that the cool breeze enters, or stake them down, making it secure in a sand storm. However, these days, even many traditional Bedouins build very simple houses, most frequently of stone or today, brick, in a more or less seasonal location where they may return as a base camp.

Nomadic Life

The Bedouin often band into small, tightly knit tribes and in some tribes, their leaders, picked for their wisdom and judgment, retain their positions by finesse and largesse, for their proud Bedouin brethren would find direct commands insulting. However, that is certainly not always the case, and perhaps some of these traditions are changing. For example, in the Alagat tribe the leader, or Sheikh, is not chosen; it is passed from father to oldest son. The same also applies to the Hamada tribe.

The family unit is the basis for domestic life. Strong family ties and taking responsibility for ones relatives is expected. Both boys and girls usually marry in their late teens, and some men have more than one wife. In the event that there is more than one wife, they do not live in the same household, and the man is expected to divide his time equally among them. These days, therefore, he may have one wife in town and an apartment there, and one wife in the desert. Having more than one wife is therefore a rather expensive proposition.

Marrying of first cousins is common, but there are also marriages between tribes. Divorce is possible for both men and women. In case of divorce, at least in olden times the tent belonged to the woman, while the man took his domestic animals. However, we know that this is not always true today. At least in the Alagat tribe, the party who gets the children is decided by the Sheikh, and both husband and wife get a meeting with the leader to explain their point of view.

To the traditional Bedouin, hospitality is mandatory, and guests are welcomed to a tent for three days and three nights. The teapot or coffee pot is always on for either kinsman or stranger. In exchange, the host expects conversation, for the Bedouin thus keeps abreast of the news.

If water is far away, the men and boys make the trip with camels, or these days pickups, bringing it back in goatskins, or more modern vessels. They also go into the nearest town to exchange news and barter, trading rugs, cheese, milk, goats, and camels for cloth, jewelry, rifles, flour, rice, tea, sugar and coffee.

Modern inroads into the desert are changing the Bedouin's life. Over the past, some rulers of Egypt have provided farm land to the Bedouin, and encouraged their settlement. Many families have settled, building houses, and the handmade tents are disappearing. Trucks bring water in 100-gallon barrels and move goats to pasture. The Bedouin is investing in land and businesses, and sending his sons to school in Cairo and Alexandria and the nearby governorates, where more higher institutes and universities were set up recently. Although the more typical Bedouin still keeps himself apart from the sedentary Egyptian, his ancient desert lifestyle is vanishing; the Toyota pickup is steadily replacing the camel. Nevertheless, even modernized Bedouins will, at times, seek out the desert to escape the trappings of their modern world.

In the final analysis, Bedouin life goes on, but is being encroached upon by our modern world. Today, one may still travel through the Sinai, or the Western Desert and find trail markings beside roads, or see the isolated traditional Bedouin family. These may represent the final chapter of an ancient tradition.

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2.7 hectare ‘Crystal Lagoons’ to be built in US$600 million Sharm El Sheikh luxury resort
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UNWTO welcomes new Egyptian President’s support for tourism
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The articles which appeared in Islamic Tourism magazine

Egyptian Museum's incredible treasures dazzle visitors

  Issue 69

Balloon's give bird's-eye views of glorious Luxor

  Issue 69

The Glory Of The Pharaohs Lives On In Luxor

  Issue 68

Ashmolean
Age of the Pharaohs in all its glory
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Nile cruises showcase the incredible legacy of the Pharaohs

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Egypt's incredible archaeological sites and gorgeous beaches are expected to lure tourists back

  Issue 65

Adventure Travel: Crossing Egypts Western Desert With Satnav

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SHARM EL SHEIKH

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Journey Through The Afterlife
Ancient Egyptian Book Of The Dead
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Mystical, Magical Cairo

  Issue 55

Famed Egyptian archeologist really digs his work

  Issue 52

Petrie Museum
Showcasing life in Ancient Egypt
  Issue 51

El Gouna
Red Sea Coast, Egypt
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The Nile, the mysterious source of life

  Issue 44

Egypt's most popular coffee shop chain challenges Europe

  Issue 42

Egypts glorious past serves tourism trade well

  Issue 41

The Talaat Moustafa Group
Leading real estate and tourism investment organization
  Issue 37

Sukaina Bint Al-Hussein
Oppressed by the Umayyad’s, Welcomed By Egypt
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Advert
MTC television
  Issue 30

The eighth meeting
of Pan-Arab tourism in Cairo
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The new seven wonders of the world

  Issue 28

Advert
MTC
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Advert
MTC
  Issue 27

The 7th Mediterranean Travel Fair

  Issue 26

Egypt’s Eastern Desert
The Final Frontier For Tourists
  Issue 26

Celebrating The Saints’ Birthdays In Egypt
Transforming Nights Into Illuminated Days
  Issue 26

Tourism
A revolution in Egypt's red sea
  Issue 25

Luxor
The 'Open-Air Museum'
  Issue 24

Pharaohs'
Village
  Issue 23

The Hajj and Umrah Fair
2006 in Cairo
  Issue 23

Mediterranean Travel Fair
Infinite Ideas, Endless Inspiration
  Issue 23

International Conference
On Food And Tourism
  Issue 23

Food & Tourism
An Approach To The World Of The Future
  Issue 22

Greenery In The Desert
The Other Side Of Egypt
  Issue 22

Advert
al-Multaqa advert
  Issue 22

Tourism in Egypt
From Islamic and economic points of view
  Issue 21

Travel Fair
The mediterranean Travel Fair
  Issue 20

Aswan
A journey to the land of the pharaohs
  Issue 20

Pyramids
Treasures and Traffic
  Issue 19

Advert
Mediterranean Travel Fair - www.mtfcairo.com
  Issue 18

Oases Tourism
Nature, Culture and Adventure
  Issue 18

Cairo
6th International Forum of Hadj, Umrah and Inter-Arab Tourism
  Issue 18

El-Alameen
Soldiers' hell metamorphosis into a paradise for tourists
  Issue 18

Tourism Related
Foreign Investments Economic Opening of the Arab World?
  Issue 16

Integrated Tourist Complexes in Egypt
From El-Goun to Port Ghalib
  Issue 14

The Mediterranean Travel Fair

  Issue 14

Mosques of Cairo
Marvelous models of Islamic architecture
  Issue 13

Health Tourism
in Egypt
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Ramadan in Egypt
Stories, Spirituality, Festivities and fellowship
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Exhibitions
Mediterranean Travel Fair
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Cairo
Great success despite the shadow of war
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News
Arab ministers of tourism discuss: Liberalization of Arab services in Tourism
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Cairo
The mediterranean travel fair
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Alexandria
Bride of the mediterranean
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Progressive Improvement in promoting Tourism in Egypt
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Cairo
An Academic Tour of Cairo
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The Agha Khan
Award for architecture 2001
  Issue 2

Tourism news
in Staggeric Tourism & Aviation
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5.5 Million Tourists a year to Egypt before 11 September 2001
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