Page 181 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 181

Chapter Four


                      number of boys and girls in a kullab, a Koranic school, which could
                      be conducted in his house or anywhere convenient, even under a tree.
                      The scarcity of copies of the Holy Book and the shortage of writing
                      material54 often restricted the schooling to learning by rote verses of
                      the Koran which the teacher read or recited to the children. A child
                      was often considered to have completed his education only when he
                      could recite the entire Koran.55 In many kutlah the emphasis was
                      more on reading than on writing, for it was important to be able to
                      read the Holy Book and other religious books; but some people
                      regarded it as being undesirable for girls to be able to write and
                       thereby to communicate with the outside world by letter.
                        The urban surroundings of Dubai, Sharjah and Abu Dhabi since
                      early this century gave many families the incentive to want their
                      children to be taught basic mathematics so that they could later enter
                       the family business. Because teachers were always respected men in
                       the community, not only for their religious knowledge but also as
                      good honest citizens, therefore the pupils were expected to learn
                       from them adab: how to behave responsibly and to appreciate
                       current affairs beyond the confines of their community.
                         In general the teachers were not formally employed by the ruler nor
                       paid for by endowments of a public benevolent institution. In some
                       cases the mulawiva' was also the imam in a small mosque
                       maintained by the waqf, and as a further source of income he would
                       teach children in the mosque. But more frequently the teacher just
                       used his courtyard or gathered the children under a tree for
                       instruction. The teachers were quite often paid by the parents of the
                       pupils their previously-agreed tuition fees in kind: that is, food, cloth
                       or small domestic animals. As far as the author is aware there were
                       no purpose-built kullab in any of the Trucial States.56 There was also
                       no madrasah for higher religious studies; the nearest such school for
                       studies of Islam and for the training of qudah was surprisingly
                       enough in Bukhah in the Ru’us al Jibal on the Musandam Peninsula,
                       and another famous one was on Qishim island.

                      The role of Shari ah

                      Sharf ah as a guide for the local Muslim’s way of life
                      Sharf ah is more than the instrument which enables judges to deal
                      with the cases which are brought to them for trial. “It comprises,
                      without restrictions, as an infallible doctrine of duties the whole of

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