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Chapter Six

                following season’s catch. Thus after a series of bad years the divers
                too became increasingly indebted.
                  During the half century when the pearling industry was relatively
                prosperous, men were attracted to this industry, settling in the
                coastal towns and abandoning their traditional economic activities.
                They earned enough in the summer to see them through the winter
                when little other employment was available in the towns. Although
                they generally did not become sufficiently wealthy to enter into
                business themselves, a sequence of good seasons thus encouraged
                them to adopt a slightly more extravagant life style which however
                did not better the lot of the divers and their families in the long run.
                Sometimes following a poor season a diver might request even larger
                advances from his nukhada, gambling on the hope that the next year
                would be good again. In the event of the death of a diver a nukhada
                sometimes lost considerable sums of money which he had lent.
                  Depending on how powerful a particular group within the pearling
                community was at a particular lime and how well connected it was to
                the shaikh, the rules governing intricate debt relationships could be
                changed in favour of one or another group. Thus at times in the ports
                of the Trucial States the nawakhidah were free to recover the debts of
                a deceased diver from members of his family or by employing his son
                as a diver without pay until the debt was repayed. The son was
                treated like a diver who owed money to the nukhada and he was not
                normally allowed to take up employment with another nukhada, or if
                he did the second nukhada had to pay all the diver’s debts to the first
                one.
                  After some bad seasons or as a result of excessive speculation a
                musaqqam or even a merchant might experience financial difficulties
                which made it imperative for him to insist that the nukhada repaid
                his debts in full or in instalments arranged by the salifah al ghaus.
                Sometimes when a nukhada was insolvent he was forced to sell his
                boat and other property; only the family’s house and other private
                belongings were exempt from seizure.
                  In the Trucial States the pearling industry provided the most
                important reason for continuing to keep slaves. Because some of
                them had been on the pearling boats every season since they were
                young, they became the most expert of the divers, while many tribal
                Arabs who may not have been able to leave their camels or their date
                gardens every summer worked as haulers. Slaves thus played an
                important role within the industry, and while it expanded slaves

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