Page 59 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 59

Chapter Two

                   is within this tribal confederation considerable difference in the way
                   of life between those sections which rely on the sea for their
                   livelihood and those who are predominantly nomadic. And yet this
                   tribal confederation was the basis for the creation of a nation-state
                   within a large and geographically very varied territory.33 The
                   coherence of the confederation was due to certain characteristics of
                   the Bani Yas. First of all, the subsections and allied groups did not
                   live separate existences; they shared, mingled and intermarried in
                   the villages of the LTwa, they had arrangements by which the nomads
                   of one section cared for the camels of another section, and those who
                   had no pearling boats of their own went on the boats of others.
                   Secondly, most families of the Bani Yas had some members living
                   permanently in Abu Dhabi town, so that all the sections mixed there
                   easily at all times. During the summer the LTwa and Dalma Island
                   were further meeting points where the common bonds were yearly
                   renewed by close contact and common concern for the few sources of
                   livelihood. The interchange between Abu Dhabi, the LTwa, Dalma
                   and Buraimi, although it meant time-consuming journeys by camel or
                   sailing boat, was by necessity very frequent, with daily new arrivals
                   and departures in all these places particularly before and after the
                   date harvest and the pearling season. It is therefore not surprising
                   that it became a characteristic of the Shaikhdom of Abu Dhabi that
                   their ruler could almost without fail rely on the loyalty of all Bani Yas
                   sections in times of war.34 This in turn meant that he was invariably
                   made responsible for and had to stand by any Bani Yas group which
                   had created or got into trouble. Last but not least the policy of the
                   Bani Yas not to claim exclusive possession of any of their traditional
                   dar, of the wells therein or of the pearling banks near Abu Dhabi’s
                   coast, resulted in their winning for themselves a number of strong
                   allies, who in the course of time became undisputably subjects of the
                   A1 Bu Falah Rulers and eventually citizens of the modern State of
                   Abu Dhabi and the UAE.

                   ManasTr
                   The ManasTr are, after the Bani Yas, the most important of the tribes
                   which constitute the local population of the Shaikhdom of Abu
                   Dhabi. This numerous tribe contributed many fighting men and the
                   Rulers of Abu Dhabi could usually count on their support; also the
                   ManasTr co-operated closely with some of the Bani Yas in the use of
                   the scant economic resources.35

                  34
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