A group of camels look to their successor.
A group of camels look to their successor.
A group of camels look to their successor.
A group of camels look to their successor.

This year's muse


  • English
  • Arabic

Cars are replacing camels in the verses of Bedouin poets. It's nine o'clock at night and the crowd at the giant Moreeb Dune is enveloped in billowing clouds of barbecue smoke. Clusters of Emirati spectators huddle around fires for warmth, and tables of shisha smokers stare up at the giant mound of sand, when suddenly the dull hum of conversation is rent by the hysterical vroom of an engine as a 4x4 the size of a small bus roars, struggles and fishtails up the 300m-tall dune.

Across the Arabian Penninsula, events like this one - the Moreeb Dune Cars and Motorbikes Championship, part of the recent Liwa International Festival - have firmly established themselves alongside the more traditional Bedouin pursuits of camel and horse racing. Moreover, such festivals aren't the only cultural institutions where hoofs and headlights exist side by side. Motorised vehicles have long since taken over the functional role once played by horses and camels in Bedouin life. But as the years go by, scholars say, cars are also taking on something similar to the animals' cultural significance - particularly in Bedouin poetry.

"In the Bedu worldview, the ability to get from A to B is an important thing," says Sam Liebhaber, an assistant professor of Arabic and international studies at Middlebury College in the US. "Any means that facilitates that movement is welcome." Liebhaber is one of a handful of scholars who have studied mentions of vehicles in Bedouin poetry. They've found that, in metaphor as in transport, cars are the new camels.

In traditional Nabati (or Bedouin) verse, horses, camels and falcons often function as "messengers" - delivering wedding invitations, love notes or challenges from an adversary, says Clive Holes, a scholar of contemporary Arabic literature and linguistics at Oxford. And in some recent Bedouin poetry, he says, cars have come to play a remarkably similar role. Vehicles that serve as such poetic "messengers" are even described in ways that mirror traditional descriptions of animals.

"With the camel there are any number of typical kinds of things you can comment on, such as the camel's speed, thick tail hair, its nature, pedigree and various anatomical details," says Holes, who spoke earlier this year on Nabati poetry at the Abu Dhabi Cultural Foundation. "They transpose the type of anatomical detail on the camel to describe a car. They talk about the chassis being really strong, which is a bit like the bone structure, or how the leather seats are of particularly fine quality, while with a camel we'd talk about its skin. It's a question of the transposition. It's pretty common in Saudi poetry," Holes explains over the phone from London.

For other poets, cars and trucks have become a subject in their own right; some poems discuss the modern-day annoyances of radar guns, or the hardship of having your car stuck at the garage until you can find enough cash to pay the mechanic. Liebhaber, who specialises in the language and poetry of the Mahra in south-east Yemen, quotes from one particular poem that describes a vehicle using the metaphor of a milk camel. In the poem, by the Mahra poet Isa Kedheyt, a man is constantly giving people rides in his car but then must ask his passengers to pony up cash to help pay for the vehicle:

In my lockbox there's not even any pocket-change; We have already massaged the udder of the milch-camel, may God increase Anss! [the name of a milch-camel] But then she refused and lifted up her head, She didn't even give suck to her child. "He is tying a traditional motif of a cow, which implies milk and abundance, with a car that brings sustenance or livelihood," says Liebhaber. Such marriages of natural and mechanical, old and new, have energised Bedouin poetry, Liebhaber says. While in other parts of the world tradition and modernity square off head to head, he thinks modernity has helped colloquial poetry flourish in several ways. "Poetry accrued this aura of being an important cultural aspect that Bedouin Arabs have held onto in the race to modernity - and recording technology actually makes it easy for these poems to be transmitted," he says. "The genre is strong and vibrant enough to accept the contemporary material culture and insert it into contemporary cultural practices."

In other words, you might say that colloquial Bedouin poetry, backed by an eight-cylinder engine, centrifugal supercharger and Michelin Rally tyres, has a plenty of miles left on it.

Analysis

Members of Syria's Alawite minority community face threat in their heartland after one of the deadliest days in country’s recent history. Read more

Cultural fiesta

What: The Al Burda Festival
When: November 14 (from 10am)
Where: Warehouse421,  Abu Dhabi
The Al Burda Festival is a celebration of Islamic art and culture, featuring talks, performances and exhibitions. Organised by the Ministry of Culture and Knowledge Development, this one-day event opens with a session on the future of Islamic art. With this in mind, it is followed by a number of workshops and “masterclass” sessions in everything from calligraphy and typography to geometry and the origins of Islamic design. There will also be discussions on subjects including ‘Who is the Audience for Islamic Art?’ and ‘New Markets for Islamic Design.’ A live performance from Kuwaiti guitarist Yousif Yaseen should be one of the highlights of the day. 

BMW M5 specs

Engine: 4.4-litre twin-turbo V-8 petrol enging with additional electric motor

Power: 727hp

Torque: 1,000Nm

Transmission: 8-speed auto

Fuel consumption: 10.6L/100km

On sale: Now

Price: From Dh650,000

APPLE IPAD MINI (A17 PRO)

Display: 21cm Liquid Retina Display, 2266 x 1488, 326ppi, 500 nits

Chip: Apple A17 Pro, 6-core CPU, 5-core GPU, 16-core Neural Engine

Storage: 128/256/512GB

Main camera: 12MP wide, f/1.8, digital zoom up to 5x, Smart HDR 4

Front camera: 12MP ultra-wide, f/2.4, Smart HDR 4, full-HD @ 25/30/60fps

Biometrics: Touch ID, Face ID

Colours: Blue, purple, space grey, starlight

In the box: iPad mini, USB-C cable, 20W USB-C power adapter

Price: From Dh2,099

BORDERLANDS

Starring: Cate Blanchett, Kevin Hart, Jamie Lee Curtis

Director: Eli Roth

Rating: 0/5

Skoda Superb Specs

Engine: 2-litre TSI petrol

Power: 190hp

Torque: 320Nm

Price: From Dh147,000

Available: Now

Who is Mohammed Al Halbousi?

The new speaker of Iraq’s parliament Mohammed Al Halbousi is the youngest person ever to serve in the role.

The 37-year-old was born in Al Garmah in Anbar and studied civil engineering in Baghdad before going into business. His development company Al Hadeed undertook reconstruction contracts rebuilding parts of Fallujah’s infrastructure.

He entered parliament in 2014 and served as a member of the human rights and finance committees until 2017. In August last year he was appointed governor of Anbar, a role in which he has struggled to secure funding to provide services in the war-damaged province and to secure the withdrawal of Shia militias. He relinquished the post when he was sworn in as a member of parliament on September 3.

He is a member of the Al Hal Sunni-based political party and the Sunni-led Coalition of Iraqi Forces, which is Iraq’s largest Sunni alliance with 37 seats from the May 12 election.

He maintains good relations with former Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki’s State of Law Coaliton, Hadi Al Amiri’s Badr Organisation and Iranian officials.

The%20specs
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EEngine%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3ESingle%20front-axle%20electric%20motor%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EPower%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3E218hp%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ETorque%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3E330Nm%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ETransmission%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3ESingle-speed%20automatic%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EMax%20touring%20range%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3E402km%20(claimed)%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EPrice%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3EFrom%20Dh215%2C000%20(estimate)%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EOn%20sale%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3ESeptember%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
Itcan profile

Founders: Mansour Althani and Abdullah Althani

Based: Business Bay, with offices in Saudi Arabia, Egypt and India

Sector: Technology, digital marketing and e-commerce

Size: 70 employees 

Revenue: On track to make Dh100 million in revenue this year since its 2015 launch

Funding: Self-funded to date

 

Tributes from the UAE's personal finance community

• Sebastien Aguilar, who heads SimplyFI.org, a non-profit community where people learn to invest Bogleheads’ style

“It is thanks to Jack Bogle’s work that this community exists and thanks to his work that many investors now get the full benefits of long term, buy and hold stock market investing.

Compared to the industry, investing using the common sense approach of a Boglehead saves a lot in costs and guarantees higher returns than the average actively managed fund over the long term. 

From a personal perspective, learning how to invest using Bogle’s approach was a turning point in my life. I quickly realised there was no point chasing returns and paying expensive advisers or platforms. Once money is taken care off, you can work on what truly matters, such as family, relationships or other projects. I owe Jack Bogle for that.”

• Sam Instone, director of financial advisory firm AES International

"Thought to have saved investors over a trillion dollars, Jack Bogle’s ideas truly changed the way the world invests. Shaped by his own personal experiences, his philosophy and basic rules for investors challenged the status quo of a self-interested global industry and eventually prevailed.  Loathed by many big companies and commission-driven salespeople, he has transformed the way well-informed investors and professional advisers make decisions."

• Demos Kyprianou, a board member of SimplyFI.org

"Jack Bogle for me was a rebel, a revolutionary who changed the industry and gave the little guy like me, a chance. He was also a mentor who inspired me to take the leap and take control of my own finances."

• Steve Cronin, founder of DeadSimpleSaving.com

"Obsessed with reducing fees, Jack Bogle structured Vanguard to be owned by its clients – that way the priority would be fee minimisation for clients rather than profit maximisation for the company.

His real gift to us has been the ability to invest in the stock market (buy and hold for the long term) rather than be forced to speculate (try to make profits in the shorter term) or even worse have others speculate on our behalf.

Bogle has given countless investors the ability to get on with their life while growing their wealth in the background as fast as possible. The Financial Independence movement would barely exist without this."

• Zach Holz, who blogs about financial independence at The Happiest Teacher

"Jack Bogle was one of the greatest forces for wealth democratisation the world has ever seen.  He allowed people a way to be free from the parasitical "financial advisers" whose only real concern are the fat fees they get from selling you over-complicated "products" that have caused millions of people all around the world real harm.”

• Tuan Phan, a board member of SimplyFI.org

"In an industry that’s synonymous with greed, Jack Bogle was a lone wolf, swimming against the tide. When others were incentivised to enrich themselves, he stood by the ‘fiduciary’ standard – something that is badly needed in the financial industry of the UAE."

Ziina users can donate to relief efforts in Beirut

Ziina users will be able to use the app to help relief efforts in Beirut, which has been left reeling after an August blast caused an estimated $15 billion in damage and left thousands homeless. Ziina has partnered with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees to raise money for the Lebanese capital, co-founder Faisal Toukan says. “As of October 1, the UNHCR has the first certified badge on Ziina and is automatically part of user's top friends' list during this campaign. Users can now donate any amount to the Beirut relief with two clicks. The money raised will go towards rebuilding houses for the families that were impacted by the explosion.”