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Table Salt and Other Folktales From Yemen


Article # : 14215 

Section : CULTURE
Issue Date : 7 / 1988  4,338 Words
Author : Daniel Martin Varisco
Daniel Martin Varisco is an anthropologist and consultant in international development. He is a member of the board of directors of the American Institute for Yemeni Studies, and was principal author of the Social and Institutional Profile of North Yemen for the U.S. agency for International Development.

       The Middle East is best known for the tales of The Thousand and One Nights, but a rich variety of Arabian folk literature also exists. The stories, proverbs, rhymes, and jokes that people use in everybody conversation are largely undocumented, since most scholars concentrate on the written literary tradition. The folktales of South Arabia, comprising the modern states of North and South Yemen, are virtually unknown to Western audiences. While attention has been given to the folklore of Yemeni Jews living is Israel, few of the stories till told in Islamic South Arabia have been collected. Three of these tales, which shed light on dominant themes in South Arabian culture, are translated here.
       
        Folktales often appear dry and hard to understand in translation, owing mainly to readers' lack of familiarity with the culture and the difficulty of matching puns and rhymes between languages. It is important to remember that the themes and story lines developed in such folktales have as much significance and relevance to the people involved as our novels and movies have for us. Even when there is no obvious punch line, the tales emphasize what is important to the people of Southern Arabia.
       
        The first tale in this collection concerns one of the major folk heroes of North Yemen, Ali ibn Zayid. The theme of the story is one of simple rustic faith in the mercy of God, a reminder that Islam, more than any other worldview, has shaped life in South Arabia.
       
        Yemen is still very much a traditional society, despite recent political and economic changes. The second tale deals with tribal life: To be tribal in Yemen is to be bound by a rigid standard of ... (1998 of 22351 Characters)
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