The
Kingdom of Bahrain ( , , literally: "Kingdom of
the Two Seas") is a small island
country in the Persian
Gulf
ruled by the Al Khalifa
royal family. Saudi Arabia
lies to the west and is connected to Bahrain via
the King Fahd
Causeway
, which was officially opened on 25 November
1986. Qatar
is to the
southeast across the Gulf of
Bahrain. The planned Qatar Bahrain Causeway
will link Bahrain and Qatar as the longest fixed
link in the world. Bahrain is also popular for its
oil and
pearls.
The country is also
the home of many popular structures such as the Bahrain World
Trade Center
and the Bahrain Financial Harbour
, and also the home of many tall
skycrapers, including the proposed high supertall Murjan Tower. The Bahrain
International Circuit
is also located here, and is the place where the
popular Bahrain F1 Grand Prix takes place.
History
Pre-Islamic
Bahrain is the
Arabic term for "
two
seas",referring to the freshwater springs that are found
within the salty seas surrounding it. Bahrain has been inhabited
since ancient times.
Its strategic location in the Persian Gulf
has brought rule and influence from the Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, and the Arabs,
under whom the island became Islamic.
Bahrain may have been associated with
Dilmun which is mentioned by
Mesopotamian civilizations. During its history
it was called by different names such as
Awal, then
Mishmahig, when it was a part of the
Persian Empire. From the 3rd to 6th
century
BC, Bahrain was included in
Persian Empire by
Achaemenians, an
Iranian dynasty. From the 3rd century
BC to the arrival of
Islam in the 7th century
AD, Bahrain was controlled by two other
Iranian dynasties of
Parthians and
Sassanids.
By about
250 BC, the Parthian dynasty brought
the Persian Gulf under its control and extended its influence as
far as Oman
.
Because they needed to control the Persian Gulf trade route, the
Parthians established garrisons in the
southern coast of Persian Gulf. In the 3rd century
AD, the
Sasanids
succeeded the
Parthians and held the area
until the rise of
Islam four centuries later.
Ardashir, the first ruler of the Iranian
Sassanian Dynasty marched forward on Oman
and Bahrain, and defeated
Sanatruq. At this
time, Bahrain incorporated the southern
Sassanid province covering the Persian Gulf's
southern shore plus the archipelago of Bahrain.
The southern province
of the Sassanid empire was
subdivided into the three districts of Haggar (now al-Hafuf province, Saudi Arabia
), Batan Ardashir (now al-Qatif province, Saudi Arabia
), and Mishmahig (Which in Middle-Persian/Pahlavi means
"ewe-fish"). Until Bahrain adopted
Islam in 629
AD, it was a
center of
Nestorian Christianity. Early Islamic sources describe it as
being inhabited by members of the
Abdul
Qays,
Tamim, and
Bakr
tribes, worshiping the
idol Awal.
Islamic conversion and Portuguese control
In 899
AD, a
millenarian Ismaili sect,
the
Qarmatians, seized the country and
sought to create a utopian society based on reason and the
distribution of all property evenly among the initiates.
The
Qarmatians caused disruption throughout
the Islamic world; they collected tribute from the caliph in
Baghdad
, and in 930 AD sacked Mecca
and Medina
, bringing
the sacred Black
Stone
back to their base in Ahsa, in
medieval Bahrain where it was held to ransom. According to the
historian Al-Juwayni, the Stone was
returned twenty-two years later, in 951, under mysterious
circumstances; wrapped in a sack, it was thrown into the Friday
Mosque of Kufa
accompanied
by a note saying "By command we took it, and by command we have
brought it back." The Black Stone's abduction and removal
caused further damage, breaking the stone into seven pieces. "Black
Stone of Mecca." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2007. Encyclopædia
Britannica Online. 25 June 2007
/www.britannica.com/eb/article-9015514>.
The
Qarmatians were defeated in 976
AD by the
Abbasids.
The final end of the Qarmatians came at the hand of the Arab Uyunid dynasty of al-Hasa
, who took over the entire Bahrain region in
1076. They controlled the Bahrain islands until
1235, when the islands were briefly occupied by the ruler of
Fars
. In
1253, the
bedouin Usfurids brought down the Uyunid dynasty and gained
control over eastern
Arabia, including the
islands of Bahrain.
In 1330, the islands became tributary to the
rulers of Hormuz, though locally the islands
were controlled by the Shi'ite Jarwanid dynasty of Qatif
.
Until the
late Middle Ages, "Bahrain" referred to
the larger historical region
of Bahrain that included Ahsa, Qatif (both now within the
Eastern
Province of Saudi Arabia
) and the Awal Islands (now the Bahrain
Islands). The region stretched from Basrah to the Strait of Hormuz in Oman
. This
was Iqlīm al-Bahrayn "Bahrayn Province". The exact date at which
the term "Bahrain" began to refer solely to the Awal archipelago is
unknown. In the mid-15th century, the islands came under the rule
of the
Jabrids, a
bedouin dynasty that was also based in
al-Ahsa and ruled most of eastern
Arabia.
The
Portuguese invaded Bahrain in
1521 in alliance with
Hormuz, seizing it from
the Jabrid ruler
Migrin ibn Zamil,
who was killed in battle. Portuguese rule lasted for nearly 80
years, during which they depended mostly on
Sunni Persian governors.
The Portuguese were expelled from the islands
in 1602 by Abbas I of the Safavid dynasty of Iran
, who
instituted Shi'ism as the official religion
in Bahrain. The Iranian rulers retained sovereignty over the
islands, with some interruptions, for nearly two centuries.
For most
of that period, they resorted to governing Bahrain indirectly,
either through Bushehr
or through immigrant Sunni
Arab clans, such as the Huwala, who where
returning to Arabian side of the Gulf from the Persian territories
in the north, namely Lar and Bushehr
(whence the name, Hawilah, "the returnees").
During
this period, the islands suffered two serious invasions by the
Ibadhis of Oman
in 1717 and
1738. In 1753, the
Huwala clan of
Al Madhkur invaded Bahrain on behalf of
the Iranians, restoring direct Iranian rule.
Origin of the Bani Utbah Tribe
The
Al Bin Ali Tribe are the original
descendants of
Bani Utbah tribe being
that they are the only tribe to carry the last name
Al-Utbi in their Ownership's documents of Palm
gardens in Bahrain as early as the year 1699 - 1111 Hijri. They are
specifically descendants of their great grand father Ali
Al-Utbi who is a descendant of their great grand
father Utbah hence the name
Bani Utbah
which means sons of Utbah. Utbah is the great grandfather of the
Bani Utbah which is a section of Khafaf
from Bani Sulaim bin Mansoor from Mudhar from Adnan. The plural
word for
Al-Utbi is
Utub
and the name of the tribe is
Bani
Utbah.
In 1783,
Nasr Al-Madhkur lost the
islands of Bahrain to
Bani Utbah tribe
whom which Shaikh
Isa Bin Tarif, Chief
of
Al Bin Ali belongs to.
Shaikh Isa Bin Tarif was a desecendant of the
original uttoobee conquereres of Bahrain This took place after the
defeat of Nasr Al-Madhkur to the
Bani Utbah in the battle of Zubarah
that took place in the year 1782 between the
Al Bin Ali from the Bani Utbah Tribe and the Army of Nasr Al-Madhkur Ruler of Bahrain and
Bushire.Zubarah was originally the center of power
of the Bani Utbah in which the Al Bin Ali Tribe in Bahrain, Qatar
, Kuwait
, Saudi Arabia
, and U.A.E derives
from. The Al Bin Ali
were the Arabs that were occupying Zubarah, they were the original
dominant group of Zubara
Arabia's
Frontiers: The Story of Britain's Boundary Drawing in the Desert,
John C. Wilkinson, p44 .
The Islands of Bahrain were not new to the
Bani Utbah, they were always connected to this
island, whether by settling in it during summer season or by
purchasing date palm gardens. The
Al Bin
Ali were a politically important group that moved backwards and
forwards between Qatar and Bahrain. The
Bani
Utbah had been present in the banks of Bahrain in the
seventeenth century. During that time, they started purchasing date
palm gardens in Bahrain. One of the documents which belongs to
Shaikh Salama Bin Saif Al Utbi, one of the Shaikh's of the
Al Bin Ali, backs this statement about the
presence of the
Bani Utbah in Bahrain in
the seventeenth century. It states that Mariam Bint Ahmed Al Sindi,
a shia women has sold a Palm Garden in the Island Of Sitra at
Bahrain to Shaikh Salama Bin Saif Al Utbi dating to the year 1699 -
1111 Hijri before the arrival of Al-Khalifa to Bahrain by more than
90 years..
1783: rising power of Bani Utbah
After the
Bani Utbah gained power in
1783, the
Al Bin Ali had a practically
independent status in Bahrain as a self governed tribe.
They
carried a flag with four red stripes with three white stripes
called the Al-Sulami flag as they
call it in Bahrain, Qatar
, Kuwait
, and Eastern
province in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
.It was raised on their ships during wartime and in
the pearl season and on special occasions such as weddings and
during Eid and in the “ Ardha of war ”. Al Bin Ali were known for their courage,
persistence, and abundant wealth.
Later, different Arab family clans and
tribes mostly from Qatar
moved to
Bahrain to settle there since the Persian sovereignty there had
come to an end with the fall of the Zand
Dynasty of Persia
.
These families and tribes included the
Al
Khalifa, Al-Ma'awdah, Al-Fadhil, Al-Mannai, Al-Noaimi,
Al-Sulaiti, Al-Sadah, Al-Thawadi, and other families and tribes.
Most of
these tribes settled in Muharraq
, the capital of Bahrain and the center of power at
that time since the Al Bin Ali lived
there. There is still a neighborhood in Muharraq city named
Al Bin Ali. It is the oldest and biggest
neighborhood in Muharraq, members of this tribe lived in this area
for more than three centuries.
Al Khalifa ascendancy to Bahrain and their treaties with the
British
Fourteen
years later after gaining power of Bani
Utbah, the Al Khalifa family moved to
Bahrain in 1797 as settlers in Jaww
, and later
moved to Riffa
. They
were originally from Kuwait but had left it in 1766. According to a
tradition preserved by the Al-Sabah family, the reason why the
ancestors of their section and those of the Al-Khalifa section came
to Kuwait was that they had been expelled by the Turks from Umm
Qasr upon Khor Zubair, an earlier seat from which they had been
accustomed to prey as brigands upon the caravans of Basra and as
pirates upon the shipping of the Shatt Al Arab.
In the
early nineteenth centuriy, Bahrain was invaded by both the Omanis
and the Al
Sauds
, and in 1802 it was governed by a twelve year old
child, when the Omani ruler Sayyid Sultan installed his son, Salim,
as Governor in the Arad
Fort
.
In 1820, the
Al Khalifa rule to Bahrain
became active, but it was buttressed when it entered into a treaty
relationship with Britain, which was by then the dominant military
power in the Persian Gulf. This treaty granted the
Al Khalifa the title of Rulers of Bahrain. It was
the first of several treaties including the 1861
Perpetual Truce of Peace
and Friendship, which was further revised in
1892 and
1951. In the 19th century,
the Al-Khalifas controlled the main archipelago of Bahrain, the
Hawar Islands and the section of the Qatar peninsula around Zubarah
called the Zubarah Bloc. The
Al Bin Ali
played a part in helping the
Al Khalifa
to retain possession of their new territory in the early days.
Between 1869 and 1872 Midhat Pasha brought the islands nominally
under the authority of the Ottoman Empire with coordination with
the British and Ottoman ships starting appearing in the area.
This
treaty was similar to those entered into by the British Government
with the other Persian
Gulf
principalities. It specified that the ruler
could not dispose of any of his territory except to the United
Kingdom and could not enter into relationships with any foreign
government without British consent. In return the British promised
to protect Bahrain from all aggression by sea and to lend support
in case of land attack. More importantly the British promised to
support the rule of the Al Khalifa in Bahrain, securing its
unstable position as rulers of the country.
According to SOAS
academic,
Nelida Fuccaro:
Peace and trade brought a new prosperity. Bahrain was no longer
dependent upon pearling, and by the mid-19th century it became the
pre-eminent trading centre in the Persian Gulf, overtaking rivals
Basra, Kuwait, and finally in the 1870s, Muscat. At the same time,
Bahrain’s socio-economic development began to diverge from the rest
of the Persian Gulf: it transformed itself from a tribal trading
centre in to a modern state.
This process was spurred by the attraction
of large numbers of Persian, Huwala, and Indian
merchant
families who set up businesses on the island, making it the hub of
a web of trade routes across the Persian Gulf, Persia and the
Indian
sub-continent. A contemporary
account of Manama
in 1862
found:
Palgrave’s description of Manama’s coffee houses in the mid-19th
Century portrays them as cosmopolitan venues in contrast to what he
describes as the ‘closely knit and bigoted universe of central
Arabia’. Palgrave describes a people with an open – even urbane –
outlook: "Of religious controversy I have never heard one word. In
short, instead of Zelators and fanatics, camel-drivers and
Bedouins, we have at Bahrain [Manama] something like ‘men of the
world, who know the world like men’ a great relief to the mind;
certainly it was so to mine."
The great trading families that emerged during this period have
been compared to the
Borgias and
Medicis and their great wealth - long before the oil
wealth the region would later be renown for - gave them extensive
power, and among the most prominent were the Persian Al Safar
family, who held the position of Native Agents of Britain in 19th
Century. The Al Safar enjoyed an 'exceptionally close' relationship
with the Al Khalifa clan from 1869, although the al-Khalifa never
intermarried with them - it has been speculated that this could be
related to political reasons (to limit the Safars’ influence with
the ruling family) and possibly for religious reasons (because the
Safars were Shia).
Bahrain’s
trade with India
saw the
cultural influence of the subcontinent grow dramatically, with
styles of dress, cuisine, and education all showing a marked
Indian
influence. According to Exeter University’s James
Onley “In these and countless other ways, eastern Arabia’s ports
and people were as much a part of the Indian
Ocean world
as they were a part of the Arab world.”
Bahrain underwent a period of major social reform between 1926 and
1957, under the
de facto rule of
Charles Belgrave, the British advisor to
Shaikh
Hamad ibn
Isa Al-Khalifa . The country's first modern school was
established in 1919, with the opening of the Al-Hiddaya Boys
School, while the Arab Persian Gulf's first girls school opened in
1928. The American Mission Hospital, established by the
Dutch Reform Church, began work in 1903.
Other reforms include the abolition of
slavery, while the pearl diving industry developed
at a rapid pace.
These reforms were often opposed vigorously by powerful groups
within Bahrain including sections within the ruling family, tribal
forces, the religious authorities and merchants. In order to
counter conservatives, the British removed the Emir,
Isa bin Ali Al Khalifa, replacing him
with his son in 1923. Some Sunni tribes such as the
al Dossari were forcibly removed from Bahrain and
sent to mainland Arabia, while clerical opponents of social reforms
were exiled to Saudi and Iran, and the heads of some merchant and
notable families were likewise exiled. The Britain’s interest in
pushing Bahrain’s development was motivated by concerns about
Saudi-Wahabbi and Iranian ambitions.
Discovery of petroleum
Oil was discovered in 1932 and brought rapid
modernization to Bahrain. This discovery made relations with the
United Kingdom closer, as evidenced by the British establishing
more bases there. British influence would continue to grow as the
country developed, culminating with the appointment of
Charles Belgrave as an advisor; Belgrave
established modern education systems in Bahrain. After
World War II, increasing anti-British sentiment
spread throughout the Arab World and led to riots in Bahrain. The
riots focused on the Jewish community, which counted among its
members distinguished writers and singers, accountants, engineers
and middle managers working for the Oil Company, textile merchants
with business all over the peninsula, and free professionals.
Following
the events of 1947, most members of Bahrain's Jewish community
abandoned their properties and evacuated to Bombay
, later
settling in Palestine (later Israel
- Tel Aviv
's Pardes Chana neighborhood) and the United
Kingdom
. As of 2007, 36 Jews remained in the
country. The issue of compensation was never settled.
In 1960, the United
Kingdom
put Bahrain's future to international arbitration
and requested that the United Nations
Secretary-General take on this responsibility.
In 1970,
Iran
laid claim to Bahrain and the other Persian Gulf
islands. However, in an agreement with the
United Kingdom it agreed "not to pursue" its claims on Bahrain if
its other claims were realized. The following
plebiscite saw Bahrainis confirm their Arab
identity and independence from Britain. Bahrain to this day remains
a member of the
Arab League and
Cooperation
Council for the Arab States of the Gulf. The British withdrew
from Bahrain on 16 December 1971, making Bahrain an independent
emirate. The oil boom of the 1970s greatly benefited Bahrain, but
its downturn hurt.
However, the country had already begun to
diversify its economy, and had benefited from the Lebanese civil war that began in the
1970s; Bahrain replaced Beirut
as the
Middle East's financial hub as Lebanon
's large banking sector was driven out of the
country by the war. After the 1979 Islamic revolution in Iran
, Bahraini
Shī'a fundamentalists in 1981 orchestrated a failed coup attempt under the
auspices of a front organization, the Islamic Front for
the Liberation of Bahrain. The coup would have installed
a Shī'a cleric exiled in Iran,
Hujjatu
l-Islām Hādī al-Mudarrisī, as
supreme leader heading a
theocratic
government. In 1994, a wave of rioting by disaffected Shīa
Islamists was sparked by women's
participation in a sporting event.
During the mid-1990s, the Kingdom was badly affected by sporadic
violence between the government and the cleric-led opposition in
which over forty people were killed. In March 1999,
King Hamad ibn Isa Al Khalifah
succeeded his father as head of state and instituted elections for
parliament, gave women the right to vote, and released all
political prisoners. These moves were described by
Amnesty International as representing
an "historic period of human rights". The country was declared a
kingdom in 2002. It formerly was considered a State and
officially called a "Kingdom".
Politics
Bahrain is a
constitutional
monarchy headed by the King,
Shaikh Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa;
the head of government is the Prime Minister,
Shaikh Khalīfa bin Salman al
Khalifa, who presides over a cabinet of twenty-five members,
where 80% of its members are from the royal family. Bahrain has a
bicameral legislature with a lower house,
the Chamber of Deputies, elected by universal suffrage and an upper
house, the Shura Council, appointed by the king. Both houses have
forty members. the first round of voting in the
2006 parliamentary
election took place on 25 November 2006, and second round
Islamists hail huge election victory,
Gulf
News, 27 November 2006 The opening up of politics has seen big
gains for both Shīa and Sunnī Islamists in elections, which have
given them a parliamentary platform to pursue their policies. This
has meant parties launching campaigns to impose bans on female
mannequins displaying lingerie in shop windows, sorcery, and the
hanging of underwear on washing lines. Analysts of democratization
in the
Middle East cite the Islamists'
references to respect for human rights in their justification for
these programmes as evidence that these groups can serve as a
progressive force in the region. Islamist parties have been
particularly critical of the government's readiness to sign
international treaties such as the
United
Nation's International Convention on Civil and Political
Rights. At a parliamentary session in June 2006 to discuss
ratification of the Convention, Sheikh
Adel
Mouwda, the former leader of
salafist
party,
Asalah, explained the party's
objections: "
The convention has been tailored by our enemies,
God kill them all, to serve their needs and protect their interests
rather than ours. This why we have eyes from the American
Embassy watching us during our sessions, to ensure things are
swinging their way".
Both
Sunnī and Shī'a Islamists suffered a setback in March 2006 when 20
municipal councillors, most of whom represented religious parties,
went missing in Bangkok
on an unscheduled stopover when returning from a
conference in Malaysia
. After the missing councillors eventually
arrived in Bahrain they defended their stay at the Radisson Hotel in Bangkok
, telling journalists it was a "fact-finding
mission", and explaining: "We benefited a lot from the trip to
Thailand
because we saw how they managed their transport,
landscaping and roads". Bahraini liberals have
responded to the growing power of
religious parties by
organizing themselves to campaign through civil society in order to
defend basic personal freedoms from being legislated away. In
November 2005,
al Muntada, a grouping of
liberal academics, launched "
We Have
A Right", a campaign to explain to the public why personal
freedoms matter and why they need to be defended.
Women's political
rights in Bahrain saw an important step forward when women were
granted the right to vote and stand in national elections for the
first time in the 2002 election. However, no women were elected to
office in that year’s polls and instead Shī'a and Sunnī Islamists
dominated the election, collectively winning a majority of seats.
In response to the failure of women candidates, six were appointed
to the Shura Council, which also includes representatives of the
Kingdom’s indigenous
Jewish and
Christian communities. The country's first female
cabinet minister was appointed in 2004 when
Dr. Nada Haffadh became Minister of Health,
while the quasi-governmental women's group, the
Supreme Council for Women, trained
female candidates to take part in the 2006 general election. When
Bahrain was elected to head the
United Nations General
Assembly in 2006 it appointed lawyer and women's rights
activist
Haya bint Rashid Al
Khalifa as the
President of
the United Nations General Assembly, only the third woman in
history to head the world body. The king recently created the
Supreme Judicial Council to regulate the country's courts and
institutionalize the separation of the administrative and judicial
branches of government; the leader of this court is Mohammed
Humaidan.
On 11–12 November 2005, Bahrain hosted the
Forum for the Future,
bringing together leaders from the Middle East and G8 countries to
discuss political and economic reform in the region. The near total
dominance of religious parties in elections has given a new
prominence to clerics within the political system, with the most
senior Shia religious leader, Sheikh Isa Qassim, playing what’s
regarded as an extremely important role; according to one academic
paper, “
In fact, it seems that few decisions can be arrived at
in Al Wefaq – and in the whole country, for
that matter – without prior consultation with Isa Qassim, ranging
from questions with regard to the planned codification of the
personal status law to participation in elections. In 2007, Al
Wefaq-backed parliamentary investigations are credited with forcing
the government to remove ministers who had frequently clashed with
MPs: the Minister of Health, Dr
Nada
Haffadh (who was also Bahrain’s first ever female cabinet
minister) and the Minister of Information, Dr Mohammed Abdul
Gaffar.
Governorates
- For further information, see from the Bahrain official
website.
Bahrain is split into five governorates. These governorates are:
Economy
In a region experiencing an oil boom, Bahrain has the fastest
growing economy in the Arab world, the
United
Nations Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia found
in January 2006. Bahrain also has the freest economy in the
Middle East according to the 2006
Index of Economic Freedom
published by the
Heritage
Foundation/
Wall Street
Journal, and is twenty-fifth freest overall in the world. In
2008, Bahrain was named the world’s fastest growing financial
center by the City of London’s
Global Financial Centres
Index. Bahrain's banking and financial services sector,
particularly Islamic banking, have benefited from the regional
boom. In Bahrain,
petroleum production and
processing account for about 60% of export receipts, 60% of
government revenues, and 30% of
GDP.
Economic
conditions have fluctuated with the changing fortunes of oil since
1985, for example, during and following the Persian Gulf
crisis of 1990-91. With its highly developed
communication and transport facilities, Bahrain is home to
multinational firms. A large share of exports consists of petroleum
products made from imported crude oil. Construction proceeds on
several major industrial projects. In 2004, Bahrain signed the
US-Bahrain Free Trade
Agreement, which will reduce certain barriers to trade between
the two nations. Unemployment, especially among the young, and the
depletion of both oil and underground water resources are major
long-term economic problems. In 2008, the jobless figure was a
3.8%, but women are over represented at 85% of the total. Bahrain
in 2007 became the first Arab country to institute
unemployment benefits as part of a
series of labour reforms instigated under Minister of Labour, Dr.
Majeed Al Alawi.
Geography
Desert landscape in Bahrain.
Bahrain
is a generally flat and arid archipelago, consisting of a low desert plain rising gently to a low central
escarpment, in the Persian
Gulf
, east of Saudi Arabia
. The highest point is the Jabal ad
Dukhan
. Bahrain has a total area of , which is
slightly larger than the Isle of Man
, though it is smaller than the nearby King Fahd
International Airport
near Dammam, Saudi Arabia ( ). As an
archipelago of thirty-three islands, Bahrain does not share a land
boundary with another country but does have a coastline and claims
a further of
territorial sea and a
contiguous zone.
Bahrain's largest
islands are Bahrain
Island
, Muharraq
Island
, Umm an
Nasan
, and Sitrah
.
Bahrain has mild winters and very hot, humid summers. Bahrain's
natural resources include large quantities of oil and natural gas
as well as fish stocks. Arable land constitutes only 2.82% of the
total area. Desert constitutes 92% of Bahrain, and periodic
droughts and dust storms are the main natural hazards for
Bahrainis. Environmental issues facing Bahrain include
desertification resulting from the degradation of limited arable
land, coastal degradation (damage to coastlines,
coral reefs, and sea vegetation) resulting from
oil spills and other discharges from large tankers, oil refineries,
distribution stations, and illegal
land
reclamation at places such as
Tubli
Bay. The agricultural and domestic sectors' over-utilization of
the Dammam Aquifer, the principal
aquifer in
Bahrain, has led to its
salinization by
adjacent brackish and saline water bodies.
Climate
Bahrain
is an Island located in west to the mainland
of Saudi
Arabia
. Jabal ad Dukhan
is the highest point in Bahrain with hills up to
above sea level. The Zagros
hills
in Iraq
cause low
level winds to be directed to the Bahrain Island
. The dust bowls from
Iraq
and Saudi
Arabia
make fine dust particles easily transported by
northwesterly winds which cause visibility reductions in the months
of June and July. The summer is very hot since the Persian Gulf
waters provide low levels of moisture
supply. Seas around Bahrain are very shallow, heat up
quickly in the summer, and produce high
humidity, especially in the summer nights. In those
periods, summer temperatures may reach about . Rainfall in Bahrain
is minimal and irregular. Most rainfalls occur in the winter
season, recorded maximum of .
Climate charts
File:Daily temperature in bahrain.PNG|Average
temperature in BahrainFile:Monthly rainfall in bahrain.PNG|Average
rainfall in Bahrain in
mmFile:Daily hours
of sunshine in bahrain.PNG|Average hours of sunshine in
Bahrain
Demographics
In 2008, Bahrain's population stood at 1.05 million, out of which
more than 517,000 were non-nationals. Though majority of the
population is ethnically
Arab, a sizable number
of people from
South Asia live in the
country. In 2008, approximately 290,000
Indian nationals lived in Bahrain,
making them the single largest expatriate community in the
country.
The official religion of Bahrain is
Islam,
which the majority of the population practices.
However, due to an
influx of immigrants and guest workers from non-Muslim countries,
such as India
, Philippines
and Sri
Lanka
, the overall percentage of Muslims in the country
has declined in recent years. According to the 2001 census,
81,2% of Bahrain's population was
Muslim, 9%
were
Christian, and 9.8% practiced
Hinduism and other religions. There are no
official figures for the proportion of
Shia and
Sunni among the
Muslims of Bahrain.
Unofficial sources, such as the British
Foreign and Commonwealth Office
, estimate it to be approximately 33% Sunni and 66% Shia.
A
Financial Times article published on 31 May 1983 found
that "
Bahrain is a polyglot
state, both religiously and racially. Leaving aside the
temporary immigrants of the past ten years, there are at least
eight or nine communities on the island". The present
communities may be classified as:
Culture
Bahrain is sometimes described as "Middle East lite" because it
combines modern infrastructure with an Arabian Gulf identity and,
unlike other countries in the region, its prosperity is not solely
a reflection of the size of its oil wealth, but is also related to
the creation of an indigenous middle class.
This unique
socioeconomic development in the Persian Gulf
has meant that Bahrain is generally more liberal
than its neighbours. While
Islam is the
main religion, Bahrainis have been known for their tolerance, and
Churches,
Hindu temples,
Sikh
Gurdwara and a
Jewish
synagogue can be found alongside
mosques. The country is home to several communities
that have faced persecution elsewhere.
It is too early to say whether political liberalisation under
King Hamad bin Isa Al
Khalifa has augmented or undermined Bahrain's traditional
pluralism. The new political space for
Shia and
Sunni Islamists has meant that they are now
more able to pursue programmes that often seek to directly confront
this pluralism, yet political reforms have encouraged an opposite
trend for society to become more self critical with more
willingness to examine previous social taboos. It is now common to
find public seminars on once unheard of subjects such as marital
problems and sex and child abuse. Another facet of the new openness
is Bahrain's status as the most prolific book publisher in the Arab
world, with 132 books published in 2005 for a population of
700,000. In comparison, the average for the entire Arab world is
seven books published per one million people in 2005, according to
the
United Nations
Development Programme.
Ali Bahar is
the most famous singer in Bahrain. He performs his music with his
Band
Al-Ekhwa (
The Brothers).
On 20
October 2005, it was reported that Michael Jackson intended to leave the
United
States
permanently in order to seek a new life in
Bahrain. Jackson reportedly told friends that he felt
"increasingly Bahraini", after buying a former PM's
mansion in Sanad
, and was
seeking another property by the seashore. Jackson reportedly
moved to Las
Vegas
, Nevada
, in
2006. Other celebrities associated with the Kingdom include
singer
Shakira, and Grand Prix driver
Jenson Button, who owns property
there. In Manama lies the new district of
Juffair, predominantly built on
reclaimed land. This is the location of the
U.S. Naval Support Activity which
hosts the headquarters for
U.S. Naval Forces Central
Command and
U.S. Fifth Fleet.
The concentration of
restaurants, bars and nightlife make this area a magnet for
U.S.
service
members and Saudi
weekend
visitors.
Language and religion
Arabic is the official language of Bahrain
though
English is widely used.
Bahrain's primary
religion is
Islam.
Formula One and other motorsports events
Bahrain has a
Formula One race-track,
hosting the first
Gulf Air Grand Prix on 4 April 2004,
the first for an Arab country.
This was followed by the Bahrain
Grand Prix
in 2005. Bahrain has successfully hosted the
opening Grand Prix of the 2006 season on 12 March. Both the above
races were won by
Fernando Alonso of
Renault. The 2007 event took place on April
13, 14th and 15th
In 2006, Bahrain also hosted its inaugural
Australian V8 Supercar
event dubbed the "
Desert 400". The V8s will return every
November to the
Sakhir circuit.
The Bahrain
International Circuit
also features a full length drag strip, and the Bahrain Drag Racing Club has
organised invitational events featuring some of Europe's top drag racing teams to try and raise the
profile of the sport in the Middle
East.
Holidays
On 1 September 2006, Bahrain changed its weekend from being
Thursdays and Fridays to Fridays and Saturdays, in order to have a
day of the weekend shared with the rest of the world. Other
non-regular holidays are listed below:
Military
The kingdom has a small but well equipped military called the
Bahrain Defense Force .
The BDF
is primarily equipped with U.S.
equipment,
such as F16 Fighting Falcon,
F5 Freedom Fighter, UH60 Blackhawk, M60A3
tanks, and the ex-USS
Jack Williams , an Oliver Hazard Perry class
frigate renamed the RBNS Sabha.
The
Government of Bahrain has a cooperative agreement with the United States Military and has
provided the United
States
a base in Juffair since the
early 1990s. This is the home of the headquarters for
Commander, United States Naval Forces Central Command
(COMUSNAVCENT) / United States
Fifth Fleet (COMFIFTHFLT), and about 1500 U.S.
and coalition military personnel.
Education
At the beginning of the 20th century, Quranic schools
(
Kuttab) were the only form of education in Bahrain. They
were traditional schools aimed at teaching children and youth the
reading of the
Qur'an. After
World War I, Bahrain became open to western
influences, and a demand for modern educational institutions
appeared.
1919 marked the beginning of modern public
school system in Bahrain when Al-Hidaya Al-Khalifia School
for boys was opened in Muharraq
. In 1926, the Education Committee opened the
second public school for boys in Manama
, and in 1928
the first public school for girls was opened in Muharraq
. In 2004 King
Hamad ibn Isa Al Khalifa introduced
a project that uses
Information Communication Technology
(ICT) to support
K–12
education in Bahrain. This project is named
King Hamad
Schools of Future. The objective of this project is to connect
and link all schools within the kingdom with the
internet. In addition to British intermediate
schools, the island is served by the
Bahrain School (BS).
The BS is a United
States Department of Defense
school that provides a K-12 curriculum including
International
Baccalaureate offerings. There are also private schools
that offer either the
IB
Diploma Programme or
UK A-Levels.
In 2007,
St. Christopher's School Bahrain became the first
school in Bahrain to offer a choice of
IB or
A-Levels for students. Numerous international educational
institutions and schools have established links to Bahrain.
A few
prominent institutions are DePaul University
, Bentley
College
, Ernst & Young
Training Institute, NYIT
and
Birla
Institute of Technology International Centre (See also:
List of universities in
Bahrain). Schooling is paid for by the government.
Primary and secondary attendance is high, although it is not
compulsory.
Bahrain also encourages institutions of higher learning, drawing on
expatriate talent and the increasing pool of Bahrain Nationals
returning from abroad with advanced degrees. The
University of Bahrain has been
established for standard undergraduate and graduate study, and the
College of Health
Sciences; operating under the direction of the Ministry of
Health, trains
physicians,
nurses,
pharmacists, and
paramedics. The national action charter,
passed in 2001, paved the way for the formation of private
universities.
The first few private universities were
Ahlia University situated in
Manama
and University College of Bahrain
, Saar . In 2005, The Royal University
for Women (RUW) was established. RUW is the first private,
purpose-built, international University in the Kingdom of Bahrain
dedicated solely to educating women. The
University of London External has
appointed
MCG as the regional representative office in
Bahrain for distance learning programs.
MCG is one of the
oldest private institutes in the country. Institutes have also been
opened which educate
Asian students,
such as the
Pakistan Urdu
School, Bahrain, the
Indian
School, Bahrain.
Tourism
Bahrain is a tourist destination with over eight million tourists a
year.
Most of the visitors are from the
surrounding Arab states but there is an increasing number of
tourists from outside the region due to a growing awareness of the
kingdom’s heritage and its higher profile with regards to the
Bahrain
International F1 Circuit
. The
Lonely
Planet describes Bahrain as "
an excellent introduction to
the Persian Gulf", because of its authentic Arab heritage and
reputation as liberal and modern. The kingdom combines Arab
culture, gulf glitz and the archaeological legacy of five thousand
years of civilization.
The island is home to castles including
Qalat Al
Bahrain
which has been listed by UNESCO
as a
World Heritage Site.
The
Bahrain
National Museum
has artifacts from the country's history dating
back to the island's first human inhabitatants 9000 years
ago.
See also
External links
References
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website
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Political Geography By Pirouz Mojtahed-Zadeh, page 119
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the Coming of Islam, Routledge 2001, p. 28
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Elites in ... By Jamsheed K. Choksy, 1997, page 75
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The Geoarchaeology of an Ancient Society University Of Chicago
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Rowman Altamira, 2001. ISBN 0759101906
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Iranica (online version)
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Eastern Arabia, 1300-1800", p. 194
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Iranica (online version)
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Bahrain belonging to Shaikh Salama Bin Saif in which the owner
carries the Al-Utbi last
name dated 1699 - 1111 Hijri,
http://www.albdoo.info/imgcache2008/3af882fe7cb2511eb935435895e1a566.gif,
also Ownership's Document of a Palm Garden in Island of Nabih
Saleh, Bahrain belonging to Shaikh Mohamed Bin Derbas in which the
owner carries the Al-Utbi last name dated 1804 - 1219 Hijri,
http://www.albdoo.info/imgcache2008/641cb18bbd2aae86c67ac578e2c1670a.jpg,
also in the Precis Of Turkish Expansion On The Arab Littoral Of The
Persian Gulf And Hasa And Katif Affairs. By J. A. Saldana; 1904,
I.o. R R/15/1/724, assertion by British Foreign Secretary Of State
in 1871 that Isa
Bin Tarif belongs to the Original Uttoobee's who conquered
Bahrain, which means that he differentiate's the Original
Uttoobee's who's desendants are the Al Bin Ali since they are the oldest and only
tribe who officially carried the Al-Utbi last name in their ownership's documents,
from the Utubi's who entered under its umbrella such as the
Al-Khalifa and
Al-Sabah and other
families
- the Precis Of Turkish Expansion On The Arab Littoral Of The
Persian Gulf And Hasa And Katif Affairs. By J. A. Saldana; 1904,
I.o. R R/15/1/724
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Bahrain belonging to Shaikh Salama Bin Saif Al Utbi dated 1699 -
1111 Hijri,
http://www.albdoo.info/imgcache2008/3af882fe7cb2511eb935435895e1a566.gif
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Geographical, Volume 1, 1905
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celebrated in Eid Al Fitr in Muharraq 1956 which was attended by
Shaikh Salman Bin Hamad Al-Khalifa, ex Ruler of Bahrain,
http://www.albdoo.info/imgcache2008/4ab9efef269d2d54873df27f7495a456.jpg
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Gordon Lorimer, Volume 1 Historical, Part 1, p1000, 1905
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The Arab Rulers and the British Resident in the Nineteenth Century,
Exeter University, 2004 p44
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The Arab Rulers and the British Resident in the Nineteenth Century,
Exeter University, 2004
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1869-1937, in Transnational Connections and the Arab Gulf by Madawi
Al-Rasheed Routledge 2005 p39
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Journey through Central and Eastern Arabia (1862-3) quoted in
Nelida Fuccaro, Persians and the space in the city in Bahrain
1869-1937, in Transnational Connections and the Arab Gulf by Madawi
Al-Rasheed Routledge 2005 p39
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Raban, Arabia through the looking
glass, William Collins & Sons, 1979, p56
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1869-1937, in Transnational Connections and the Arab Gulf by Madawi
Al-Rasheed Routledge 2005 p47
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Gulf: the case of the Safar family in Transnational Connections and
the Arab Gulf Ed Madawi Al-Rasheed, Routledge, p71-2
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nineteenth-century Gulf: the case of the Safar family in
Transnational Connections and the Arab Gulf Ed Madawi Al-Rasheed,
Routledge, p78
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Belgrave, Emirates Natural History Group, 2007
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1956
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- Stay just over the horizon this time, Time
Magazine, 25 October 1982
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International Affairs, March 1999
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Continue, Amnesty International, 13 March
2001
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News, April 11 2005
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Daily News, 11 March 2005
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Rights Human Rights Web
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June 2006
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News, 15 March 2006
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Gulf Daily News (via Bahrain.tv) 16 March 2006
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president. Zee News. June 8, 2006
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woman president', United Nations, June 8, 2006
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the Arab Judicial Forum 15-17 September 2003
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prosecutors Gulf News, 15 November 2005
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Department, 2005
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Street: Avenues of Political Participation in Bahrain, Katja
Niethammar, Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies,
European University Institute,
2006
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News, 25 September 2007
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February 2007
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Foundation
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-
http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/Story.asp?Article=225349&Sn=BNEW&IssueID=31137
-
http://www.khaleejtimes.com/darticlen.asp?xfile=data/middleeast/2008/August/middleeast_August80.xml§ion=middleeast&col=
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unemployment benefit scheme Gulf News, 22 June 2007
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- 290,000 Indians in Bahrain
- Bahrain's crown prince to visit India Overseas
Indian, 8 March 2007
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«ليتل إنديا», Alwasat Newspaper
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are Arabs or the descendants of Arabs onze resident on the Persian
coast; such are known as Huwala."
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Bearman , Th. Bianquis , C.E. Bosworth , E. van Donzel and W.P.
Heinrichs. Brill, 2008. Brill Online. 15 March 2008 [5]
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News, 22 January 2006
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states Gulf News, 4 January 2006
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Gulf Gulf News, 23 January 2006
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International Circuit
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