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Qatar / Culture

Katara Dhow Festival introduces visitors to region's maritime history

Published: 30 Nov 2022 - 09:08 am | Last Updated: 30 Nov 2022 - 09:23 am
Participants prepare fishing nets during the Traditional Dhow Festival at Katara beach.

Participants prepare fishing nets during the Traditional Dhow Festival at Katara beach.

The Peninsula

Doha: The Katara Traditional Dhow Festival, organised by the Cultural Village Foundation, Katara and based on the region’s maritime heritage continues to dazzle as patrons and visitors explore its many beautiful activities being held along the Katara beach promenade.

The 12th edition of the popular festival is being held until December 18.

Nine participating nations have set up several attractive pavilions which see a daily influx of thousands of visitors to the cultural neighbourhood for an enjoyable and exciting tour of the festival which highlights maritime heritage, tradition, voyage into the sea in the past, pearl diving methods, sea-side marketplace of the past and related culture and handicrafts.

The Qatari house, which is in the centre of the Katara Traditional Dhow Festival, embodies a model of the heritage house reflecting the character of ancient marine of ancestral generations — lived in the glorious past during an era of hunting and pearl diving. 

Well-preserved cooking pots, water pots, mattresses, utensils for preparing Arabic coffee, stove, sailors’ supplies, ropes, fishing and diving equipment, cages, a housing box, and a box of pearl kit are also on display.

The Omani house also conveys an image with the fragrant past and the treasures of maritime heritage and Omani originality in detail. Rare exhibits and collectibles document the bright era of wooden ship making, traditional dhows and pearl diving, forming a wonderful museum that provides tourists a deep insight and amazement.

The Saudi House receives guests of the World Cup warmly, welcoming them with Arabic coffee and accompanying them on an interesting tour of its exhibits and integrated collections of marine heritage masterpieces and traditional folk industries, especially the manufacture of ropes, fishing nets, gargoyles and wedges.

Kuwait pavilion has many crafts and supplies that were used in the past and are closely related to the sea, such as the manufacture of wicker and baskets that are made of palm fronds - baskets and barns, earlier used to store fish and to keep food on board on ships.

Tanzanian house is distinguished by an exhibition that highlights the ancient maritime heritage of the Zanzibar region. It provides bright glimpses of the lives of ancestors and the stories of the first sailors. 

These pictures document the traditional dhows used in the past and the spices they carried, along with pictures of Arab sailors on the coast of Zanzibar.

They were photographed by the Coutinho Brothers and photographer Pierre de Lourdes dating back to the period between 1890 and 1950, which embodies an integrated heritage museum with a rich history of fishing, diving and maritime trade.