Culture
of United Arab Emirates
Here
you will find a most important informations about
UAE's culture
CULTURE
Islam is the official religion
and Arabic the official language. The majority
of the local population is Sunni. The communities
have their own schools and social and cultural
institutions. English, Urdu/Hindi and Farsi are
also spoken. Traditionally, the people of Abu
Dhabi are courteous, kind and friendly and quite
hospitable both in social matters and in business.
Foreigners. especially tourists and visitors are
treated with generosity. But they in turn are
expected to respect local customs, especially
religious practice. and abide by the law of the
land. During Ramadan, the holy month of fasting,
non--Muslim foreigners are expected to refrain
from eating. drinking and smoking in public places
during the hours of fasting. In Ramadan official
working hours are reduced. Shops compensate for
the loss of business by staying open longer. The
two Eids arc also the period when many people
go abroad for holidays. It is, therefore, advisable
to book flights in and out of the UAE well in
advance.

NATIONAL
DRESS
Native menfolk of the Arabian peninsula
have a distinct form of dress. They wear an ankle-length
shirt (dishdasha), usually white (or colored or
striped in winter), a white, or sometimes red-chequered,
headcloth (ghutra) and the twisted, black rope
piece (agal), holding the gutra in place. Men
of distinction and the Sheikhs also wear on top
of their dishdasha a flowing cloak (abba or bisht)
edged with gold braid. It may he black or brown.
UAE women are very particular about their dress.
They generally cover themselves from head to feet
with a black cloak called the ahaya'.

CAMEL
RACING
Reflecting the traditions of the
desert, the role of the camel has been given much
attention. Once it carried the people across the
sands, providing at the same time milk, meat and
leather, while its shoulder-blades were used as
little 'blackboards' for children studying. Now
proper school equipment is available from other
sources, as is leather, but many local families
still keep a few for meat and for milk. To encourage
them to do so, the government offers subsidies
to those who still keep this noble and historic
beast of burden. The camel will more easily be
noticed by the visitor, however, during the great
camel races held in various locations throughout
the country in the winter months, when owners
from the Emirates and the rest of Arabia pit their
fastest steeds one against the other. The major
festivals attract many hundreds of camels to compete
for prizes that total several million dollars.
The top steeds can each fetch well over a million
dollars. Camel-racing has become one of the country's
most popular spectator sports.
BOAT
RACING
Another tradition that has taken
on new life in the years since the UAE was established
is that of boat racing, now given substantial
encouragement by the government in the form of
handsome cash prizes. Two kinds of boats are used.
The first is powered by a single sail that catches
the wind to drive wooden boats of shallow draught
fast across the surface of the sea. A couple of
dozen such sailing boats scudding across the waves,
their sails shining in the sun, is one of the
most romantic sights to be seen anywhere. The
other boats are powered by men, not the wind,
great rowing boats of 20 meters or more in length,
rowed by up to a hundred oarsmen straining every
muscle to reach the finishing line. Boat races
are held on special occasions throughout the year,
to commemorate events such as the annual National
Day holiday, and have proved a popular attraction
for visitors, while, at the same time, keeping
alive the maritime traditions of the UAE's sturdy
people.

FALCONRY
More of an individual sport is
that of falconry, whose origins among the Arabs
date back many centuries, and are lost in the
mists of time. Flying Saker or peregrine falcons
prized for their strength or speed, the people
of the Emirates practiced falconry in the past
not merely as a sport but as a way of providing
a useful supplement to their diet, or a tasty
hare, or a well-fed bustard. Today, it is purely
a sport. and one which is popular from the highest
to the lowest in the land. Like other hinters,
however, the people of the Emirates are concerned
with the need to) understand and protect the environment,
and the quarry which they hunt, lest it disappears.
FOLK
MUSIC AND DANCE
Folk dances and music are integral
to any celebration. Most dances are male-oriented.
Everybody present at a joyous occasion is expected
to join in. Dancers sway together in a line or
a circle or clapping to the accompaniment of tambourines
of various sizes, with rings or bells attached.
Drums are an integral part of classical and folk
music. A popular dance for females has young girls
in flowing black tresses swing their heads in
a hypnotic, undulating movement. Many popular
songs are sung on special occasion. Both music
and words, usually of a bedu dialect, are simply
composed. The wedding provide the most popular
occasions for traditional dancing. Dance groups
may begin performing a week or more before the
event. Most wedding music and dance is of local
origin but some brought by immigrants have also
been absorbed into the folklore. At functions
attended by local dignitaries and state guests
a particular folksong - the Ayyalah - is performed.
This is basically developed from a war song whose
purpose was to raise the morale of the fighting
men.