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Bedouin
Al Sadu
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The Bedouin
The Bedouins were, and are known, for their hospitality, pride, honour, courage and endurance. Their precarious, wandering existence demanded these traits as they tended their camels, sheep and goats, protected their extended family and honoured tribal allegiances. The Bedu women wove the black tents in which they lived. These long and low tents were made of strips woven out of goat's hair or sheep's wool or a mixture of both. The Bedouin's livestock was also a mobile source of fresh meat. Besides livestock and dairy products, the woven items made by the women and known as 'sadu' work, were an important source of income.
   
The modernization of Kuwait changed the lifestyle of the desert Bedouins. With amazing adaptability, they took advantage of the new work opportunities and the prosperity created by the discovery of oil. Each succeeding year saw fewer and fewer black tents in the desert as tribesmen opted for government sponsored education and professional training. The Bedouin made the journey from tents and camels to houses and air-conditioned cars, but retained their traditions, their cultural identity and their character traits. Today, as they go to University, go abroad for a Masters, and help in the further development of their country, these traits are kept intact.   

Al Sadu
In 1979, the Al Sadu Society, based at Sadu House, was formed to protect and preserve Bedouin culture, particularly Bedouin crafts, from extinction in the wake of the changes brought about by modernisation. The weaving of wool is the oldest craft practised by the Bedouins of Kuwait. The weaving process is known as 'Al Sadu', a term also used for the Bedouin loom.
 
The 'sadu', or bedu weaving, has a long history in the Middle East. It is the speciality of Bedu women who made the tent in which they lived, and its furnishings, such as rugs and cushions. They also made articles like men's cloaks, saddlebags etc that suited the Bedu migratory lifestyle.
 
It is a craft that requires a high degree of dexterity and skill. The designs reflect the austerity of the natural environment of the desert and are governed by the wider principles of Islamic culture.

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