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Chapter Three

                     as his permanent residence; it then became necessary to put  someone
                     in charge of daily affairs in the LTwa, which was several days’ camel
                     journey away. At the beginning of the 20lh century the Ruler, Shaikh
                     Zayid bin Khalifah, appointed his eldest son KhalTfah to be his
                     representative and to live in the LTwa every summer during the date
                      harvest. When his brother Tahnun bin Zayid became the Ruler in
                      1909, a representative by the name of Bin Ya’aruf officiated in the
                      LTwa and continued during the rule of Hamdan bin Zayid
                     (1912-1922). While Sultan bin Zayid was Ruler (1922-1926) Abu
                     Daham was wali in the LTwa, and he remained in office until the death
                     of the next Ruler, Saqr bin Zayid, in 1928.59 At times of war with
                      neighbouring Qatar and when raiding Saudi tribes threatened Abu
                     Dhabi’s western borders, a number of watch-towers overlooking the
                     approach routes (as on the island of Sir Bani Yas and at Ra’s
                     Ghumaish) were manned by tribesmen. During the rule of Zayid bin
                     Khalifah their commander (omlr al jaish) was Suwaidan bin Za’al al
                     Mahairibi, and until many of the members of this Bani Yas sub-tribe
                     dispersed to neighbouring countries in the 1950s, the sons and
                     grandsons of Suwaidan appear to have maintained a prominent
                     position and obtained payment for their services from the Ruler.
                     Shaikh Shakhbut’s first wali in the LTwa was Hilal bin Sa'Td al
                     Ghafiri, an Al Bu Falah, who was replaced in 1949 by Ahmad bin
                     Fadil al Mazru'i of the Bani Yas. In 1955 Rashid bin Jabir al Hamili
                     was appointed to the LTwa.
                       Rashid bin Jabir was succeeded in 1964 by Saif bin Musa al-
                     Hamili, who still in the early 1980s looked after the affairs of the
                     inhabitants in the LTwa villages. As in past generations the present
                     amir’s residence is in al Mariyah, which is not among the few fortified
                     settlements in the LTwa. Like all other houses in the LTwa until about
                     1977, when the first concrete buildings went up. the government post
                     in al Mariyah was a palm-frond hut on a gentle sand dune,
                     distinguishable only by the flagpole outside and a few rifles in
                     canvas bags inside, ready for use by the handful of part-time tribal
                     raskars who are attached to the post. Each of the larger villages has
                     also always had its headman, who would act as spokesman and
                     receive visitors who might be passing by.
                       When during the final years of the 1960s Bida' Zayid was built,
                     some  40 kilometres north of the LTwa, as a modern centre where the
                     population of Dhafrah could obtain medical facilities and formal
                     schooling, the amir of the LTwa established a second residence there.

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