Bedouins in the Jordan desert
admin August 15th, 2007
Here is part of a thoughtful post on Jordan’s Bedouins in the Culturemop Blog:
On the road between Amman and the old Nabataean city of Petra in Southern Jordan, there are dots of color scattered across the flatness. From antiquated depictions like the one above, I knew they were Bedouin tents without having to ask. It’s hard to avoid romanticized notions about the free-roaming lifestyle of Bedouins; the simplicity, the rootlessness. But times are changing. 90% have settled permanently and switched to farming, and 10% continue to travel as nomads with flocks of goats or sheep, inhabiting woven tents. Someone asked our 18-year-old volunteer guide what the Bedouins own and how they survive. He said “They own this land, as far as you can see. It has been passed down by families for hundreds of years.” I tried to imagine what it would be like to belong to a stretch of desert without ever claiming one particular plot as home.
The photo of fringing on a Bedouin tent is from a Flickr set by shortbeardedduck.


