Friday, 2 May 2014

In Pictures: Jordan tourism threatens Bedouin

With 630,000 tourists visiting Petra in 2013, local Bedouin tribes fear they are losing their traditional way of life.


When the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) designated the ancient city of Petra a World Heritage Site in 1985, the Jordanian government relocated over 300 families from Petra’s caves to the neighbouring village of Umm Sayhoun.


Now, Petra is one of Jordan’s most famed tourist attractions, and thousands of visitors pay a hefty entrance fee to look at the ancient city and get a taste of traditional Bedouin life. The same is true for Jordan’s Wadi Rum desert, granted a similar UNESCO designation in 2011.


Where there once was only rock, desert and sparse pockets of Bedouin camps, there are now tour groups from every continent and a growing population of once-nomadic Bedouin whose livelihoods depend on tourism.


“We are paying the consequences of that choice until now,” said Giorgia Cesaro, project manager in UNESCO’s culture sector in Amman. “I can see a cultural threat to their traditions related to high contact with tourists and it somehow contaminating their traditions.”


Five years ago, UNESCO added the Bedouin of Petra and Wadi Rum to a running list of intangible heritages – folklore and traditions not found anywhere else in the world – that are in need of urgent safekeeping. Beyond potential cultural threats, there is a sense that the commodification of Bedouin culture for tourist purposes has devalued education among the communities that work at the sites.


“Bedouins don’t see the point of staying in school for long; it doesn’t seem relevant for them,” said John Shoup, an anthropology professor at Al Akhawayn University in Morocco. “Young men are looking at people who have degrees, who are not making much more than their uneducated parents working in tourism.”


But tourism has slowed, and a shrinking economy has brought into focus a struggling local education system and literacy rates far behind the rest of Jordan. “In 2009 and 2010 things were great,” said Ibrahim Zalabi, a Bedouin who runs a camp for tourists in Wadi Rum. “After [uprisings in] Tunisia, Libya and Egypt… that’s when it all went downhill.”


Al-Deir

Al-Deir, or “the Monastery”, is Petra’s largest carved monument and is located at the top of a one-hour walk up rocky steps.


Petra

An estimated 630,000 tourists visited Petra in 2013, according to the Petra Development and Tourism Regional Authority.


Wadi Rum desert

Tours in the Wadi Rum desert, located about an hour from Petra, usually cost between 15-20 Jordanian dinars ($30) per hour.


Ibrahim Zalabi

Ibrahim Zalabi, 41, raises sheep and runs a camp for tourists in Wadi Rum. He worries about tourism’s impact on traditional Bedouin culture. “There are young men who try and imitate tourists. They get drunk, [and] dress like them. This isn’t a good thing.”


Abdullah Zalabi

10-year-old Abdullah Zalabi says he enjoys his studies, but many children in Wadi Rum eventually stop going to school to work in tourism.


Rashed Zalabi

Rashed Zalabi, 19, says that all his friends have a phone with Internet and a Facebook account. “I don’t always dress like this, but foreigners like it. Kids in the village wear all kinds of brands these days,” he says.


 



In Pictures: Jordan tourism threatens Bedouin

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