Page 253 - UAE Truncal States
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Chapter Six

                at the same time adequate to satisfy the requirements of only a
                modest population. The skill of the beduin tribesman in mastering
                the rigours of I he burning summer desert and in maximising his
                economic benefits from the various resources in the ages before
                world trade agreements and instant communications is often
                overlooked or just not understood today. Baskets are now rarely
                made from the fronds of the palm, truffles are left uncollected in the
                sand, and as in most other societies in the world that enjoy the
                benefits of modern civilisation, the simpler pleasures of the past are
                rapidly forgotten.
                  During the last hundred years there were three factors which led to
                an influx of foreigners, all arising out of new economic opportunities.
                These were: the years of exceptional prosperity in the pearling
                industry, particularly during the first two decades of this century;
                the transfer of trade from Persian ports to Dubai after 1902; and the
                more recent development of the oil industry. The decline and collapse
                of the market for Gulf pearls had a devastating effect on the fortunes
                of the wealthy families and reduced many other people nearly to
                starvation. This development, which happened within the memory of
                many living people, demonstrates the extent to which the population,
                both original and immigrant, had come to rely on one resource which,
                when it failed, could not be made up for by the conventional use of
                the territory’s remaining natural resources.
                  Whenever the delicate balance between resources, economic
                opportunity and the number of people who could live thereby was
                upset, which happened several limes during the recorded history of
                this region, many people tightened their bells and made do, while
                others emigrated to neighbouring countries or returned to where
                they had come from. A period of economic decline also brings forth a
                few soldiers of fortune, and this area was no exception.

                Factors leading to raids and maritime ghazu
                For several centuries the settled population of the entire Musandam
                promontory was so small that, even without much trade, the then
                modest needs of the beduin and the village communities were
                secured. Under the leadership of the Qawasim many people of the
                coastal villages and the hinterland benefited from the growing share
                of the trade in the area as sailors, boat-builders, and traders in ever-
                increasing numbers.
                  The Qasimi hold over the naturally-favoured trading places such

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