Berliner Boersenzeitung - Little-known bullfighting tradition lives on in UAE village

EUR -
AED 3.8674
AFN 72.51661
ALL 98.235115
AMD 415.772645
ANG 1.898697
AOA 960.681351
ARS 1070.046624
AUD 1.652741
AWG 1.896338
AZN 1.793366
BAM 1.956555
BBD 2.127221
BDT 125.89859
BGN 1.956114
BHD 0.397057
BIF 3049.830214
BMD 1.052936
BND 1.412705
BOB 7.27936
BRL 6.365737
BSD 1.053507
BTN 89.396955
BWP 14.294635
BYN 3.447732
BYR 20637.552976
BZD 2.123579
CAD 1.492906
CDF 3022.980581
CHF 0.929459
CLF 0.037204
CLP 1026.581507
CNY 7.633052
CNH 7.64276
COP 4599.75256
CRC 531.905287
CUC 1.052936
CUP 27.902814
CVE 110.821292
CZK 25.092629
DJF 187.127906
DKK 7.457501
DOP 63.755066
DZD 140.67482
EGP 53.125322
ERN 15.794046
ETB 133.715953
FJD 2.436286
FKP 0.831101
GBP 0.824294
GEL 2.946243
GGP 0.831101
GHS 15.531113
GIP 0.831101
GMD 75.811716
GNF 9086.840846
GTQ 8.11998
GYD 220.401457
HKD 8.186017
HNL 26.698797
HRK 7.510868
HTG 138.00064
HUF 410.232965
IDR 16769.064729
ILS 3.779178
IMP 0.831101
INR 89.378768
IQD 1379.346653
IRR 44328.621579
ISK 145.905283
JEP 0.831101
JMD 164.995246
JOD 0.746954
JPY 159.796255
KES 136.356211
KGS 91.394671
KHR 4234.910166
KMF 490.800003
KPW 947.64234
KRW 1510.610937
KWD 0.323851
KYD 0.877885
KZT 538.602526
LAK 23048.777293
LBP 94343.099075
LKR 305.788018
LRD 188.974296
LSL 18.710448
LTL 3.109048
LVL 0.636911
LYD 5.127996
MAD 10.537263
MDL 19.289254
MGA 4963.82148
MKD 61.52771
MMK 3419.896278
MNT 3577.87775
MOP 8.438436
MRU 41.933218
MUR 48.993246
MVR 16.217001
MWK 1825.269008
MXN 21.241296
MYR 4.662928
MZN 67.278554
NAD 18.710509
NGN 1660.806838
NIO 38.774965
NOK 11.742878
NPR 143.035128
NZD 1.815893
OMR 0.405366
PAB 1.053457
PEN 3.92272
PGK 4.260685
PHP 61.217884
PKR 292.532033
PLN 4.258959
PYG 8219.015978
QAR 3.83321
RON 4.970805
RSD 116.93863
RUB 108.506657
RWF 1460.422754
SAR 3.956641
SBD 8.812572
SCR 15.063374
SDG 633.341135
SEK 11.546848
SGD 1.412625
SHP 0.831101
SLE 24.007986
SLL 22079.55433
SOS 601.751977
SRD 37.067537
STD 21793.65712
SVC 9.21847
SYP 2645.534084
SZL 18.710727
THB 35.505344
TJS 11.482923
TMT 3.695807
TND 3.319383
TOP 2.466084
TRY 36.707973
TTD 7.149624
TWD 34.275715
TZS 2621.8111
UAH 43.917667
UGX 3857.488781
USD 1.052936
UYU 45.888146
UZS 13563.492404
VES 51.646029
VND 26707.731185
VUV 125.006722
WST 2.939368
XAF 656.169739
XAG 0.032992
XAU 0.000391
XCD 2.845613
XDR 0.799486
XOF 656.216496
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.628967
ZAR 18.758235
ZMK 9477.702665
ZMW 28.997815
ZWL 339.045084
  • RBGPF

    -1.1800

    59.32

    -1.99%

  • SCS

    -0.3000

    13.16

    -2.28%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2200

    7.18

    -3.06%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    24.62

    +0.2%

  • RELX

    0.0900

    47.07

    +0.19%

  • GSK

    -0.7800

    35.21

    -2.22%

  • AZN

    -1.4000

    67.18

    -2.08%

  • BCC

    -2.8900

    142.43

    -2.03%

  • NGG

    -0.6400

    60.94

    -1.05%

  • RIO

    -0.0700

    64.82

    -0.11%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    24.39

    +0.12%

  • BCE

    -0.4400

    26.46

    -1.66%

  • VOD

    -0.0800

    8.84

    -0.9%

  • JRI

    -0.1100

    13.31

    -0.83%

  • BP

    0.0100

    30.1

    +0.03%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    37.73

    -0.34%

Little-known bullfighting tradition lives on in UAE village
Little-known bullfighting tradition lives on in UAE village

Little-known bullfighting tradition lives on in UAE village

Far from Dubai's gleaming skyscrapers and renowned camel races, a bullfight is under way in the emirate of Fujairah, where the tradition continues unbeknown to most in the United Arab Emirates.

Text size:

"Look at them fight!" a commentator shouts into a microphone as the first bovine battle of the day kicks off, sending up clouds of dust in the village of Al-Qurayyah.

Two bulls, each weighing in at hundreds of kilograms (pounds), charge at each other while assistants hold ropes attached to their necks or legs for safety.

Sometimes the huge animals come dangerously close to the spectators, sending them fleeing from their chairs.

About 200 men, women and children are gathered in a large field to watch, with children perched on the roofs of 4X4 vehicles and pick-ups.

Trucks carrying bulls have converged from all over the region on the arena, a dirt field wedged between rocky mountains and the Gulf of Oman.

About 50 of the beasts are scattered around, and their bellowing echoes across the area.

"There are no rules," explained Issa, 34, whose family owns a nearby farm and has been involved in bullfighting for decades.

"The winner is the one that shows the most courage and doesn't run away," added the man whose nephews stream the bouts on TikTok and Instagram.

In the better-known emirates of Abu Dhabi and Dubai, camel beauty contests and races are popular, but "here it is the bullfights", said Majid, 36, whose animal scored a draw in the fight.

- Cruel and abusive? -

Unlike the bullfights popular in Spain and Mexico, where the animals are typically slain by matadors, in Fujairah two beasts go head-to-head with far less fatal consequences.

The competition typically ends after about an hour, with each fight lasting just one or two minutes.

Animal welfare groups have however denounced the sport as cruel and abusive.

Elsayed Mohamed, the regional director of the International Fund for Animal Welfare, argued that just because something has been part of a society for so long does not make it right.

"Every culture has many bad traditions, but because it's a tradition, we have to follow?" he asked, noting that animal fights are prohibited under UAE law.

Those who promote the fights, he said, argue that "it is 'not a bloody' competition... comparing these fights to the ones in Spain that end with the killing of the animal.

"Even if they are taking precautions to prevent any harm, wounds will happen," said Mohamed.

Standing in the audience at the recent bullfight event was a German tourist couple who had learnt about it in an "alternative tourist guide book".

"We thought it would be interesting to see that -- it's unusual for us," said Gunter Beelitz, who works in theatre.

"This is a bit like the fights in Spain except that here it is just one bull against one bull and not a man," he said. "And the bull doesn't die. We don't like the Spanish bullfights."

- Family tradition -

The bulls were once imported from South Asia for agricultural work, but the emergence of new technologies has rendered them obsolete to farming.

Issa's family breed the animals or buy them for between 5,000 and 40,000 dirhams (about $1,360 to $10,900).

With help from a number of farm employees he readied about 17 beasts to fight every Friday after prayers.

He said he has been preparing bulls for battle since he was "just a child".

"We go to the animals, we check if they are okay... we take their temperatures and we feed them," he said.

He rolled up his sleeves and dipped his arm into a large pot of bovine powerfood -- a boiled mixture of wheat, dates, herbs and fish.

"This is what gives the bulls their strength," said Issa, clad in a traditional Emirati "kandoura", an ankle-length shirt.

Issa and his family said they have no intention of ending the pastime that has been passed down from generation to generation.

"People did not have much to do, and they would get the animals and get them to fight, a form of entertainment," said Issa.

"It would bring people together," he continued, adding that he plans to pass the practice down to his six children.

(G.Gruner--BBZ)