Page 166 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 166

The Islamic Basis of Society

        chorus of bolh rows responds, singing, chanting and exclaiming, the
        drums accompany the human voices; the enthusiasm of the per­
        formers and the rhythm of the music may leave the beholder
        spellbound.
          In another ceremony, which is traditional for the same time in this
        area, men gathered in a majlis take turns reading aloud the
        description of the birth of the Prophet Muhammad written in the 18lh
        century by 'Abdul Rahim al Barzanji. The reading culminates in a
        prayer and exclamations, al which moment everybody, including the
        women who have gathered behind the curtain wall to listen, rises to
        their feel.
        Burials
        Simplicity and absence of pomp and ceremony also marked the
        traditions for burial of the dead. The deceased was buried as soon as
        possible, and certainly before sunset of the day he died. His body was
        taken to the graveyard, which was recognisable only by the many
        stones pointing up out of the ground, marking the head and foot of
        each grave. Relatives and friends carried the body, which was
        wrapped in a white cloth, to the grave, accompanied by only the male
        mourners. Near the grave they would line up for a prayer, which in
        the absence of a q adi or mutciwwa' could be led by any respected man
        in the group, and after the body was lowered into the grave it was
        filled again with stones and sand and the head and footstone were
        placed upright. After another prayer the mourners would disperse.
        The wife and close female relatives might relieve their grief with a
        few spontaneous wailing shouts, but otherwise the family accepted
        the death of one of its members composedly as the very will of God,
        being confident that the deceased would remain in the hands of God.

        Pilgrimage (Hajj)
        The pilgrimage to Mecca at least once during a lifetime is one of the
         five obligations which a Muslim should endeavour to fulfil. But for
        people living in the eastern parts of the Peninsula the hajj was an
        extremely arduous and long journey, and on account of this not many
        people undertook it in the days before motorisation.39 There were
        various routes to Mecca: one could take a boat to Aden and then
        another boat from there to Jiddah; or else one went by boat to Basra
        and joined the Iraqi pilgrim caravan travelling on foot or by hired
        camel all the way across Arabia. Towards the end of Shaikh Zayid
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