Page 62 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 62

The Tribal Structure of Society

         Abu Dhabi, who was considered to be responsible for the beduin
         Manaslr.
           In the decades following the rapid decline of the pearling industry
         the Manaslr beduin turned to seeking at least temporary employment
         with the oil companies in the region. Those who had often taken their
         camels to al Hasa for winter grazing found themselves work with the
         Arabian American Oil Company (ARAMCO); others worked in Doha
         or with the Qatar Petroleum Company, while their animals were left
         in the desert of Abu Dhabi in the charge of relatives. Petroleum
         Development (Trucial Coast), Ltd, had some 40 Manaslr on its payroll
         in Abu Dhabi al any one time during the early 1950s. But like the Bani
         Yas tribesmen, the Manaslr considered such employment as a
         temporary arrangement to earn enough for a particular purpose: to
         buy a date garden, some camels, a new wife or in later years a
         Landrover. During the first few years they hardly ever worked for
         more than a couple of years at a time, and then they returned to their
         previous way of life.
           As has been described earlier in this chapter, the Manaslr have
         shared the area and its resources for many generations with the Bani
         Yas in such a way that, when circumstances made it necessary to
         replace the system dependent on tribal loyalties and customary
         economic usages with a system requiring citizenship and State
         boundaries, the majority of the Manaslr could only be called Abu
         Dhabians. The fact that throughout the 19th and 20th centuries the
         Manaslr have joined forces with the Rulers of Abu Dhabi, who have
         equally consistently acted on behalf of the Manaslr,40 and the
         occasional marriage between members of the Manaslr families and
         the Al Bu Falah had the effect that the Manaslr could demand some
         say in the choice of a Ruler. This became particularly obvious when
         some of the successors of Zayid bin Khallfah neglected the custom of
         paying subsidies to the leaders of the Manaslr. Shaikh Shakhbut and
         his brother Shaikh Zayid, who became his governor in the Buraimi
         area in 1948 were very aware of the necessity to recognise the
         somewhat special relationship with the Manaslr. One way of doing
         this was to employ a large number of them as retainers. During the
         war between Abu Dhabi and Dubai in 1945-7, the Manaslr fought on
         the side of Abu Dhabi and sustained heavy losses.
           When the community which had so eagerly seized the jobs, which
         became available once the search for oil had begun, was transformed
         into a State with a multitude of opportunities for nationals to have
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