Galilee Bedouin Explained

Group:Galilee Bedouin
Population:50,000
Languages:Native language: Levantine Bedawi Arabic Secondary language: Modern Hebrew
Religions:Islam
Related:Other Bedouin

Galilee Bedouin (Arabic: بدو الجليل; Hebrew: בדואי גלילי) are Bedouin living in the Galilee region of Northern Israel. In contrast to Negev Bedouin, Galilee Bedouin come from the Syrian desert.[1] As of 2020, there are about 50,000 Galilee Bedouin,[1] living in 28 recognized settlements and also living in mixed cities with other non-Bedouin Arabs.[2]

For more see Bedouin: Israel.

Demographics

It is important to note that Galilee Bedouins were overlooked in population estimates and surveys due to their nomadic nature and small numbers.

"The Arab clans in Philistia and Sharon are too numerous and insignificant to require notice; and in Galilee also there is a large number of very small tribes"[3]

1800s

Galilee Bedouins numbered 5,000 in 1880 and were estimated at 8,740 for 1880-1883 by the C.R. Conder and H.H. Kitchener Survey 1881-1883.[4] A wide range likely due to the nomadic and seminomadic nature of these tribes.

"Description de L'Egypte" (1812) published a list of Jaubert's statistics of nomadic tribes. The table below is the selection of the graph on the tribes of Galilee. Ghazi Falah notes that:

!Tribes!Horsemen
Berārych200
Mesaid200
Halef(few)
Samkyeh(many)
Soumerat(many)
Gāātyn(many)
Khayt Beouādy 1000
Bechātoueh (few)
Ghaur300
Sekhour el Ghaur300
Ghaouarheh(unknown)
Sabyeh(unknown)
Nemyret(unknown)
Mohammedat(unknown)
Tribal groups camping in Shafa 'Amr vicinity and Marj Ibn 'Amir (1881 - 1883) by C.R. Conder and H.H. Kitchener. "The Survey of Western Palestine Memoirs of the Topography, Orography, Hydrology and Archaeology", The Committee of the Palestine Exploration. Fund, London,

1900s

Bedouins numbers 30,000 in 1981. "[...] In 1980 the settled Bedouin in the Negev and Galilee formed 12% of Israel's Arab population. They also formed 2% of the total population of the state in the same year."

!Year!1922!1931!1945!1948
Persons13,42011,78617,1005,000
* The tribal groups of Beisan (Beit She'an) subdistrict are excluded.

List of Tribes

Clothing

Womens Clothing

Thobe or Shirsh

The clothing of Galilee Bedouins differed greatly from the clothing of the Negev Bedouins and of Galilee villagers and townspeople. [6]

Women wore thobes with long, straight, and narrow sleeves. The thobes have a long, triangle opening in the front extending from the collar to the waist (the opening was covered by a garment worn underneath). The dresses were originally made from local cotton dyed blue in the 19th century but by the late 19th century imported black cotton became more popular. Younger women transitioned to black satin and black velvet in the 1960s and 1980s respectively.

Unlike other Palestinian ensembles, Galilee Bedouin thobes do not have girdles or a cloth belt. The thobe was usually made of cotton and reached around 131 centimeters, 52 inches, or about 4’ 4’’; reaching the ankle or grazing the floor.[7] [8]

Embroidery

The thobes had very little embroidery. Most of that embroidery was focused on the seams, collar, and the bottom of the skirt. The seams of the dress often had a fishbone stitch, the neck opening often had a stem stitch, the pocket opening had a buttonhole stitch, and the skirt (especially the hem) often had a zigzag stitch with large gaps creating triangle and diamond patterns. Other stitches that featured on the dress were the satin stitch, reverse stem stitch, and herringbone stitch. However, occasionally women embroidered four or five bands above the hem.Apart from embroidery, dresses were decorated with light blue bands of fabric being inserted above the hems and in the sleeves of dresses after the switch to black dresses by the end of the 19th century. Perhaps as a way of reusing the light blue fabric.

In the 1930s embroidery thread came in white, however, by the 1960s a wide variety of colors was used. Hand embroidery faded out and was almost entirely replaced by machine embroidery by the 1980s. However, the style of embroidery did not change majorly with the new use of machines. This style of embroidery is said to be similar to village women in South Syria and North Jordan, likely due to Galilee Bedouins having pastured their livestock east of Lake Tiberias.

Jackets

Over this they optionally wore dura’ah or jillayeh, a short-sleeved jacket with short, raised collar. The jackets are made from wool or cotton dyed a dark indigo blue. The jackets usually had some trimming with braided cord on the edges, in colors such as black or an orange-red. Some jackets also had vents along the sides, about 3.5 inches long.[9] [10] [11] The jackets usually came with no embroidery, when embroidery did appear it was sparce and featured as a narrow strip on the sides. This embroidery used a basic stem stitch and a zigzag stitch. The embroidery thread could come in many colors.

Headscarves

The women wore a headscarf that covered the neck with a triangle fold of fabric. The headscarf could be tied with an asbeh, a stiff headband used to hold their headscarves in place, occasionally decorated with coins on the front. The asbeh was 13 wide and 3.5 inches in height.

Sometimes women didn’t wear a headband and wrapped their head scarfs similar to the Taureg people, folded in a crisscross manner over the forehead, occasionally a spare length of fabric was thrown over the shoulder down the back. Women often showed fringe through the front of their headscarf.[12]

See also

References

  1. Web site: The Bedouin in Israel . 2022-11-01 . www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org.
  2. Zevulun . D. . 2008 . Home Is Where The Hatred Is? Sense of belonging and exclusion of Galilee Bedouin with regard to the Jewish state, Israeli-Jewish and Israeli-Arab citizens. . en.
  3. Tent Work in Palestine: A Record of Discovery and Adventure. London: Bentley, 1879.
  4. Conder, C.R., & Kitchener, H.H. (1881-1883). The Survey of Western Palestine: Memoirs of the Topography, Orography, Hydrology, and Archaeology (Vol. II). The Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund.
  5. Web site: 2021-09-12 . Galilee Bedouin accuse National Park Authority of discrimination . 2024-08-17 . The Jerusalem Post JPost.com . en.
  6. Book: Munayyer, Hanan . Traditional Palestinian costume: origins and evolution . Sayers . Nathan . 2020 . Olive Branch Press, an imprint of Interlink Publishing . 978-1-62371-924-1 . Northampton, Massachusetts.
  7. Web site: dress . live . August 10, 2024 . The British Museum.
  8. Web site: August 10, 2024 . dress . live . August 10, 2024 . The British Musuem.
  9. Web site: jacket . live . August 10, 2024 . The British Museum.
  10. Web site: August 10, 2024 . jacket . August 10, 2024 . The British Museums.
  11. Web site: August 10, 2024 . jacket . live . August 10, 2024 . The British Museum.
  12. Web site: Palestinian Traditional Costumes » Women’s . 2024-08-11 . en-US.