Page 178 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 178

The Islamic Oasis of Society

        done.51 But when the boom in the pearling industry began to wane
        the slaves still depended on their master to provide for them, while
        the free men who had to rely exclusively on their share in the annual
        dive became destitute. In the later 1930s it became increasingly
        difficult for the few households where there was a considerable
        number of slaves to provide for them; to liberate them seemed a ready
        solution to the master’s problem. In the bigger population centres of
        the coast quite a few people thus suddenly found themselves without
        a home or any means of support, and work was not easy to come by.52
          In most cases families had only one or two slaves as domestic
        servants, whose status changed very little when they were liberated.
        They were then free to go and seek employment elsewhere, but
        hardly any of them ever did. They remained in the families of their
        former masters where all their daily needs were still cared for as
        before, even if it meant tightening the belt for the entire family. Before
        and after they were liberated most domestic servants of slave origin
        were part and parcel of the family, and as such were also part and
        parcel of the same tribal affiliation. The difference in status usually
        mattered only when it came to marriage; the tribal Arab did not
        normally marry a slave girl, but the head of the family could quite
        legally become the father of a female slave's children, who were then
        brought up with the other children and treated as equal—except,
        again, when they came to marry.
          It has been mentioned above how in the Trucial States, as
        elsewhere in Arab countries, slaves could rise to important positions
        on the political scene, as trusted servants of Rulers or as important
        individuals.53 Being Muslims and often very devout indeed, the
        descendants of slaves were easily integrated into the Arab society
        through their integration into their master’s family.

        Local Muslims at home
        The ordering of one’s family life in the way described above was the
        norm and was therefore hardly ever questioned. If it were ques­
        tioned, people would have been quick to observe that this was the
        way in which a Muslim was expected to live. For the majority of
        people it was quite inconceivable that any other social order or any
        other type of relationship between the individual in his family and
        the outside world could be at all in keeping with the spirit of Islam.
        This absolute certainty that there is no conflict between their concept
        of life and the spirit of Islam precluded the need to reflect on how and
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