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Dabke

Dabke (Arabic: دبكة also spelled dabka, dubki, dabkeh, plural dabkaat)[1] is a Levantine Arab folk dance.[2] Dabke combines circle dance and line dancing and is widely performed at weddings and other joyous occasions. The line forms from right to left and leader of the dabke heads the line, alternating between facing the audience and the other dancers. In English, it can be transcribed as dabka, dabki, dabkeh.

Dabke
Palestinian girls dancing traditional dabke
MediumCircle dance and line dancing
TypesVariations
Originating cultureLevantine

Etymology and history

 
 
Depictions of dancing Phoenicians from Cyprus.

The etymology of 'dabke' is uncertain but is thought to be derived from the Levantine Arabic word dabaka (Arabic: دبكة) meaning "stamping of the feet"[3][4] or "to make a noise".[5]

The dabke jumps may have originated in ancient Canaanite fertility rituals related to agriculture, chasing off evil spirits and protecting young plants.[6] According to Lebanese historian Youssef Ibrahim Yazbec, the dabke descends from Phoenician dances thousands of years old.[5]

Another theory is that stomping part of dabke started out as a way of solidifying roofs made of mud.[7] People would stomp on the rooftops of houses together to help compress the material to compact it to prevent cracks from forming.[8] This eventually evolved into the dancing form of dabke that is known today.

Variations

 
Alawite men dancing dabke, 1880

Dabke is popular across the Levant,[9] where there are about twenty types of dabke, including but not limited to:[10]

  • Habel Mwadea’ (حبل مودع): is the Jordanian dabke of any type performed by men and women jointly.[10]
  • Al-Karaadiyya (الكرادية) also known as Al-Taiyyara (الطيارة): Is a type of dabke in Jordan, it is characterized by its fast rhythm in an open circle. It is performed from left to right.
  • Al-Tas’awiyya (التسعاوية) also known as Al-Ma’aniyya (المعانية): It Is performed in Ma'an city in South Jordan.
  • Al-Sha’rawiyya (الشعراوية): It is one of the simplest types of dabke and very close to the normal one.
  • Al-Darrazi (الدرازي): It is played on Mijwiz, widely famous in Jordan and Palestine.
  • Al-Shamaliyya (الشمالية): It consists of a lawweeh (لويح) at the head of a group of men holding hands and formed in a semicircle. The lawweeh is expected to be particularly skilled in accuracy, ability to improvise, and quickness (generally light on his feet). Typically, the dabke begins with a musician playing a solo on the mijwiz or yarghoul of a Dal Ouna piece, often with two singers accompanying his music. The dancers develop a synchronized movement and step and when the singers finish their song, the lawweeh breaks from the semicircle to dance on his own. When the leader of the dabke sees that the men's steps are one, in sync, he instructs the dancers to slow down and begin a movement crossing their right foot in front of the opposite one (their left foot). The lawweeh continues to inform the dancers of their basic rhythms, and at this point other guests at the wedding or event occurring will join in the dabke line. This form of dabke is danced for happy family celebrations, such as weddings, circumcisions, the return of travelers, release of prisoners, and also for national holidays, in which dabke becomes a demonstration of national personality.[11]
  • Al-’Askariyya (العسكرية):
  • Al-Joufiyya (الجوفية): it consists of two groups stand in opposition to each other: the first group sings and the second responses with Jordanian folkloric songs.
  • Al-Ghawarneh (الغوارنة) also known as Deir ’Ala (دير علا): performed in Jordan Valley, and it's one of the fastest types of dabke.
  • Wahad w Nos (واحد ونص)
  • Abu ’Alanda (أبو علنده)
  • Al-Aqabawiyya (العقباوية): It is performed in Aqaba in South Jordan.
  • Al-Ramthawiyya (الرمثاوية): It is performed in Ar-Ramtha in North Jordan.
  • Al-Sahja (السحجة) : is a popular Palestinian and Jordanian dance. Al-Sahja belongs mostly to northern and central Palestine, and in the south has two kinds: As-Samir (السامر) and Al-Dahiyya (الدحية). As-Samir's form involves 2 rows of men on opposite walls, competing with folk poetry, sometimes improvised and even exchanging insults, competing in cleverness of retorts. Al-Dahiyya is a Bedouin version of the same kind in which there is a professional dancer that dances between the two opposing walls of men who are competing for her attention, and at times give her money. Al-Sahja usually occurs the night before the wedding party of the groom (zafat al-'arees), with most of the men in the village participating, especially those who will be attending or are directly involved in the other wedding festivities.
  • Al-Dahiyya (الدحية) limited to men: It is close to Al-sahja dance. It's performed by southern Palestinians and Southern Jordanians.
  • Al-Hashi (الحاشي) limited to women
  • Al-Farradiyya (الفرّادية) limited to women
  • Al-Jamma’iyya (الجمّاعية) also limited to women
  • Al-’Adiyya (العادية) also known as Al-Dalo’una (دبكة الدلعونا) is a type of dabke danced in Palestine, Lebanon, Syria, and Jordan.[10]

Amongst Palestinians, two common types of dabke are the shamaliyya and sha'rawiyya – which have six measure phrases – and the karaadiyya which has square phrases (of four or eight measures). Another type is the dabke niswaniyyah, danced specifically by women. Each type of dabke dance has its own corresponding set of songs, the theme of which is often love.[12]

There are six main types of dabke:

  1. Al-Shamaliyya (الشمالية): It consists of a lawweeh (لويح) at the head of a group of men holding hands and formed in a semicircle. The lawweeh is expected to be particularly skilled in accuracy, ability to improvise, and quickness (generally light on his feet). Typically, the dabke begins with a musician playing a solo on the mijwiz or yarghoul of a Dal Ouna piece, often with two singers accompanying his music. The dancers develop a synchronized movement and step and when the singers finish their song, the lawweeh breaks from the semicircle to dance on his own. When the leader of the dabke sees that the men's steps are one, in sync, he instructs the dancers to slow down and begin a movement crossing their right foot in front of the opposite one (their left foot). The lawweeh continues to inform the dancers of their basic rhythms, and at this point other guests at the wedding or event occurring will join in the dabke line. This is the most popular and familiar form of dabke danced for happy family celebrations, such as weddings, circumcisions, the return of travelers, release of prisoners, and also for national holidays, in which dabke becomes a demonstration of national personality.[11]
  2. Al-Sha’rawiyya (الشعراوية): is limited to men and is characterized by strong steps or stomps. The lawweeh is the most important element in this type of dabke.[11]
  3. Al-Karaadiyya (الكرادية): is characterized by a lack of a lawweeh and slow movement with an azif (عازف) (flute player) in the middle of the circle.[11]
  4. Al-Farah (الفره): is one of the most active types of dabke and therefore requires a high degree of physical fitness.[11]
  5. Al-Ghazal (الغزل): is characterized by three strong stomps of the right foot, and is usually tiring for those dancing.[11]
  6. Al-Sahja (السحجة): is a popular Palestinian and Jordanian dance which became significantly more popular during the British Mandate for Palestine. Al-Sahja belongs mostly to northern and central Palestine, and in the south has two kinds: As-Samir (السامر) and Al-Dahiyya (الدحية). As-Samir's form involves 2 rows of men on opposite walls, competing with folk poetry, sometimes improvised and even exchanging insults, competing in cleverness of retorts. Al-Dahiyya is a Bedouin version of the same kind in which there is a professional dancer that dances between the two opposing walls of men who are competing for her attention, and at times give her money. Al-Sahja usually occurs the night before the wedding party of the groom (zafat al-'arees), with most of the men in the village participating, especially those who will be attending or are directly involved in the other wedding festivities.

The Oxford International Encyclopedia of Dance also mentions these additional kinds of line dances in its entry under "Middle East":

The Murdah was originally performed by women in Eastern Arabia, while the men of the community were away on extended fishing and pearling expeditions. It involves two lines of dancers who move toward each other with small steps and then retreat while singing rhymed couplets. These couplets were largely laments for absent loved ones. Although seafaring is no longer economically important in the region, women continue to perform this dance at social gatherings.

The Ahwash (Fr., ahouache) performed by Berber tribes of the Moroccan High Atlas Mountains, includes one or several curved lines of men and one or several curved lines of women, the whole forming a circle or ellipse around male drummers (Jouad and Lortat-Jacob, 1978; Lortat-Jacob, 1980). One line recites a poem that the other line responds to with another poem; then all move to the beat of the drums. Customarily, the whole community participates. While performing, women dancers hold themselves very straight and move with staccato steps, holding onto the weaving rod of the house. Women as well as men compose the poetry that is recited. A similar dance reported for Morocco is the dukkala. In one variation a man and woman facing each other compete to see which one can dance the longest (Mercier, 1927).[13]

Song genres

There are numerous kinds of songs that are sung during and specifically for dabke, by both men and women respectively, depending on the occasion, song, and audience. Some of the most popular of these songs, such as Dal Ouna (دلعونا), Al Jafra (الجفرا), Al Dahiyya (الدحية), and Zareef il-Tool (ظريف الطول), are actually entire genres in themselves, in the sense that lyrics can vary significantly in each performance but the basic rhythm of the music is consistent and recognizable. This variation can be seen in the hundreds of lyrical variations heard and recorded of these songs which regardless of specific lyrics, are recognized by their rhythm and at times, a single phrase, as in Ala Dal Ouna, Jafra, and others. For example, even though one might have heard Ala Dal Ouna sung previously telling a different story in this famous love song, people will still call another song ascribing to the same rhythm and theme as Dal Ouna.[14]

The majority of dabke music, being folk songs, is on maqam Bayati musical mode.

Instruments

The Oud (عود), from which the English word "lute" comes, is shaped like half a pear with a short non-fretted neck. It has six courses of two strings and played with a plectrum, usually a trimmed eagle's feather. This instrument creates a deep and mellow sound.

The mijwiz (مجوز) which means “double” in Arabic is very popular in Levantine music. It is a type of reed clarinet that is played by breathing smoothly through a circular aperture at the end and by moving the fingers over the holes down the front of the tube in order to create the different notes. The minjjayrah is similar to the mijwiz, an open ended reed flute played in the same style.

The tablah (طبلة) is a small hand-drum also known as the durbakke. Most tablahs are beautifully decorated, some with wood, tile or bone inlay, etched metal, or paintings in designs typical of the Near East. One of the most commonly played of the percussion instruments; the tablah is a membranophone of goat or fish skin stretched over a vase-shaped drum with a wide neck. Usually made of earthenware or metal, it is placed either under the left arm or between the legs and struck in the middle for the strong beats and on the edge for the sharp in-between beats. Though today fishskin heads are rarely used due to the climate. When used it becomes loose, you would have to heat the head to get the correct sound back. The membrane or head of the drum is now made out of plastic. The most common head is from Alexandria, Egypt.

The daff (دف), also known as the Riq (رق), is similar to the tambourine. It consists of a round frame, covered on one side with goat or fish skin. Pairs of metal discs are set into the frame to produce the jingle when struck by the hand. The sounds of this percussion instrument set the rhythm of much Arab music, particularly in the performances of classical pieces.[15]

The arghul, (يرغول) also known as the yarghoul, is commonly used in solos, often accompanied by singers, that begin dabke performances. Unlike the mijwiz, it only has finger holes in one of its pipes/reeds. (see Al-Shamaliyya, under Types).

The Shubabeh, (شبابة) is a woodwind instrument traditionally made from reed cane. It differs from the Mijwiz and Arghul in that it does not have a reed, instead the musician blows against the side of the instrument at an angle to produce the tone. The Shubabeh is traditionally played by herders in the wilderness.

Competitions and performances

 
Palestinian men dancing dabke

Dabke competitions or shows often consist of different cultural dances and various troupes performing dabke. For example, the International Fiesta, a well known festival at the University at Buffalo, consists of a series of clubs performing their cultural dances. This competition occurs every semester in the main stage theater of the UB Center for the Arts during the spring time, usually at the end of February or beginning of March. This allows the Organization of Arab Students to participate and promote the cultural awareness of dabke.

Many universities host events called Arab Night or a title to that effect. When these shows occur, dabke is either performed on stage (inside or outside), in a hall on the floor, or outside on the floor. There are different steps that comprise the Dabke dance: the belbel, the inzel, shemmel and taxi; a combination of each of these steps as well as the occasional jump and turn make the dance complete.[16]

In America, the tradition has not been lost and is held in the same places as it would in the original homeland and the dance music is also commonly played in America at Arab-community cultural centers and conventions such as the annual convention hosted by the American Federation of Ramallah Palestine.[17]

In her study titled Syrian Radical Dabka, ethnomusicologist Shayna Silverstein described the changes in social interpretations and performances of dabke as performed in Syria. In the 20th century and beyond, dabke has both been interpreted as an element of nationalist ideologies or as a modern and aesthetic form of folk dance, performed by academically trained dancers from the Higher Institute of Dramatic Arts. To reinforce these interpretations and the continuation of dabke in rural as well as in urban settings, performances have been promoted countrywide by government-sponsored folk dance ensembles as well as in educational programs disseminated by the Ministry of Culture. Since the beginning of the Syrian Civil War, dabke performances as a manifestation of community gatherings have futher accompanied protest meetings and demonstrations against the ruling government of Syria.[18]

World records

In August 2011, a group in a Lebanese village Dhour El Choueir, Lebanon set a new world record. Organized by Dhour El Choueir Summer Festival, a human chain of 5,050 was made and currently holds the world record.[19] This event broke the record set by Tollab, the Lebanese Student Federation in Montreal, with the participation of "La Troupe Folklorique Les Chevaliers du Liban" that had made a human chain of 4,475 people dancing the dabke for more than five minutes straight at Montreal's Marcelin Wilson Park.[20][21] Tollab had itself broken a record of 2,743 set by a group of Israeli Arabs in Acre, Israel. An earlier record of 1,700 had been set in Toronto.[22]

See also

References

  1. ^ . Karimnagi.com. Archived from the original on 2019-03-07. Retrieved 2017-01-07.
  2. ^
    • Veal, Michael E.; Kim, E. Tammy (2016). Punk Ethnography: Artists & Scholars Listen to Sublime Frequencies. Wesleyan University Press. ISBN 9780819576545.
    • Kabir, Nahid (2012). Young American Muslims: Dynamics of Identity. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 9780748669967.
    • York, Museum of the City of New (2002). A Community of Many Worlds: Arab Americans in New York City. Syracuse University Press. ISBN 9780815607397.
    • Stanton, Andrea L. (2012). Cultural Sociology of the Middle East, Asia, and Africa: An Encyclopedia. SAGE. ISBN 9781412981767.
    • Armstrong, Marian, ed. (2006). Peoples of Western Asia. Marshall Cavendish. p. 282. ISBN 9780761476771.
    • . Canadian Palestinian Association in Manitoba. Archived from the original on 2018-06-12. Retrieved 2017-06-29.
  3. ^ Cohen, Dalia; Katz, Ruth (2006). Palestinian Arab Music: A Maqam Tradition in Practice. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226112985.
  4. ^ . Canadian Palestinian Association in Manitoba. Archived from the original on 2018-06-12. Retrieved 2017-06-29.
  5. ^ a b The Arab World, Volume 8. Arab Information Center. 1962. But what is dabke and to which period can it be traced? According to Lebanese historian Youssef Ibrahim Yazbec, who is working on a book on folklore, the dabke comes from the Arabic dabaka meaning to make a noise. ... His theory is that the Phoenicians were the first teachers of the dance in the world, and the dabke is a representative descendant of the Phoenician dances left to us.
  6. ^ Kaschl, Elke (2003). Dance and Authenticity in Israel and Palestine: Performing the Nation. Brill. p. 82. ISBN 9789004132382.
  7. ^ Amawi, Sarah (2020-06-09). "Dabke : from Social Dance to Political Stance". Patrimoine d'Orient.
  8. ^ Greer, Gary (2020-03-30). "How to Spot the Different Types of Dabke Dancers". Kaleela.
  9. ^ Morris, Gay; Giersdorf, Jens Richard (n.d.). Choreographies of 21st Century Wars. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-020166-1 – via Google Books. Dabke is a folk dance "made up of intricate steps and stomps" (Rowe 2011, 364) performed by both men and women that is popular in areas such as Syria, Palestine, Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq. The dance is often performed at weddings and celebrations; however, it is also performed in theatrical or contemporary modes.
  10. ^ a b c "كل الاردن". Allofjo.net. Retrieved 2017-01-07.
  11. ^ a b c d e f (هشام عارف الموعد ومأمون احمد الموعد. فوكلور العرس و الغناء الشعبي: ليلة الحنا>.سلسلة التراث الشفوي الفلسطيني الجزء الأول.
  12. ^ Cohen, Katz, 2006, pp. 271–274.
  13. ^ [1][dead link]
  14. ^ وليد ربيع, عبد العزيز ابوهذبا, عمر حمدان, محمد علي احمد. قرية ترمسعيا. "الفصل العشرون – الاغاني".
  15. ^ Badley, Bill and Zein al Jundi. "Europe Meets Asia". 2000. In Broughton, Simon and Ellingham, Mark with McConnachie, James and Duane, Orla (Ed.), World Music, Vol. 1: Africa, Europe and the Middle East, pp 391–395. Rough Guides Ltd, Penguin Books. ISBN 1-85828-636-0
  16. ^ "Dabke appeals to Westerners, Arabs alike". Arabamericannews.com. 10 January 2009. Retrieved 2017-01-07.
  17. ^ . www.afrp.org. Archived from the original on 29 May 1997. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  18. ^ Silverstein, Shayna (2012). "Syria's Radical Dabke". Middle East Report (263, Summer 2012) – via www.academia.edu.
  19. ^ "Shweir". Shweir.com. 2013-12-07. Retrieved 2017-01-07.
  20. ^ "Naharnet — Lebanon's leading news destination". Naharnet.com. Retrieved 2017-01-07.
  21. ^ . chevaliersduliban.com. Archived from the original on 25 June 2009. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  22. ^ . www.haaretz.com. Archived from the original on 1 October 2007. Retrieved 15 January 2022.

Bibliography

  • Adra, Najwa. "Middle East" The International Encyclopedia of Dance. Ed. Selma Jeanne Cohen and the Dance Perspectives Foundation. Oxford University Press, 2003. Georgetown University. 3 December 2010[1]
  • Cohen, Dalia; Katz, Ruth (2006). Palestinian Arab music: a Maqām tradition in practice (Illustrated, annotated ed.). University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-11299-2.
  • Kaschl, Elke. Dance and Authenticity in Israel and Palestine: Performing the Nation. Leiden & Boston, MA: Brill; 2003.
  • Ladkani, Jennifer. "Dabke Music and Dance and the Palestinian Refugee Experience: On the Outside looking in." Ph.D. dissertation, Florida State University, 2001.
  • McDonald, David A. "Poetics and the Performance of Violence in Israel/Palestine." Ethnomusicology. 53:1, Winter 2009.
  • Rowe, Nicholas. "Dance and Political Credibility: The Appropriation of Dabkeh by Zionism, Pan-Arabism, and Palestinian Nationalism." Middle East Journal, 65.3 (2011): 363–80. Summer 2011. Web. 20 Mar. 2012. Print.
  • Rowe, Nicholas. “Raising Dust: a Cultural History of Dance in Palestine.” Publisher London ; New York, NY : I.B. Tauris ; New York, NY : Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.
  • Handelsman, JoEllen. 3, Dance Styles of the Middle East. “Near and Middle Eastern Dance Workbook.” 2nd ed. Tucson: Premium Source, 2012. 7. Print.

External links

  • A variety of The Jordanian Dabke performed by Al Yarmouk University Folk Troupe.
  • Jordanian Dabkeh Performed By Al-Ramth Youth Folk Troupe
  • Jordanian Dabke (Tas'awiya) – Ma'an 1975
  • El-Arish Dabka
  • Palestinian Dabkeh performed in London
  • La Troupe Folklorique Les Chevaliers du Liban (Montréal, Canada)
  • Palestinian Dabkeh Troupe (Hurriyah Dabkeh Troupe)[permanent dead link]
  • Al-Juthoor performs in the San Francisco Ethnic Dance Festival 2007-12-09 at the Wayback Machine

dabke, film, dabka, film, arabic, دبكة, also, spelled, dabka, dubki, dabkeh, plural, dabkaat, levantine, arab, folk, dance, combines, circle, dance, line, dancing, widely, performed, weddings, other, joyous, occasions, line, forms, from, right, left, leader, d. For the film see Dabka film Dabke Arabic دبكة also spelled dabka dubki dabkeh plural dabkaat 1 is a Levantine Arab folk dance 2 Dabke combines circle dance and line dancing and is widely performed at weddings and other joyous occasions The line forms from right to left and leader of the dabke heads the line alternating between facing the audience and the other dancers In English it can be transcribed as dabka dabki dabkeh DabkePalestinian girls dancing traditional dabkeMediumCircle dance and line dancingTypesVariationsOriginating cultureLevantine Contents 1 Etymology and history 2 Variations 3 Song genres 4 Instruments 5 Competitions and performances 6 World records 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksEtymology and history Edit Depictions of dancing Phoenicians from Cyprus The etymology of dabke is uncertain but is thought to be derived from the Levantine Arabic word dabaka Arabic دبكة meaning stamping of the feet 3 4 or to make a noise 5 The dabke jumps may have originated in ancient Canaanite fertility rituals related to agriculture chasing off evil spirits and protecting young plants 6 According to Lebanese historian Youssef Ibrahim Yazbec the dabke descends from Phoenician dances thousands of years old 5 Another theory is that stomping part of dabke started out as a way of solidifying roofs made of mud 7 People would stomp on the rooftops of houses together to help compress the material to compact it to prevent cracks from forming 8 This eventually evolved into the dancing form of dabke that is known today Variations Edit Alawite men dancing dabke 1880 Dabke is popular across the Levant 9 where there are about twenty types of dabke including but not limited to 10 Habel Mwadea حبل مودع is the Jordanian dabke of any type performed by men and women jointly 10 Al Karaadiyya الكرادية also known as Al Taiyyara الطيارة Is a type of dabke in Jordan it is characterized by its fast rhythm in an open circle It is performed from left to right Al Tas awiyya التسعاوية also known as Al Ma aniyya المعانية It Is performed in Ma an city in South Jordan Al Sha rawiyya الشعراوية It is one of the simplest types of dabke and very close to the normal one Al Darrazi الدرازي It is played on Mijwiz widely famous in Jordan and Palestine Al Shamaliyya الشمالية It consists of a lawweeh لويح at the head of a group of men holding hands and formed in a semicircle The lawweeh is expected to be particularly skilled in accuracy ability to improvise and quickness generally light on his feet Typically the dabke begins with a musician playing a solo on the mijwiz or yarghoul of a Dal Ouna piece often with two singers accompanying his music The dancers develop a synchronized movement and step and when the singers finish their song the lawweeh breaks from the semicircle to dance on his own When the leader of the dabke sees that the men s steps are one in sync he instructs the dancers to slow down and begin a movement crossing their right foot in front of the opposite one their left foot The lawweeh continues to inform the dancers of their basic rhythms and at this point other guests at the wedding or event occurring will join in the dabke line This form of dabke is danced for happy family celebrations such as weddings circumcisions the return of travelers release of prisoners and also for national holidays in which dabke becomes a demonstration of national personality 11 Al Askariyya العسكرية Al Joufiyya الجوفية it consists of two groups stand in opposition to each other the first group sings and the second responses with Jordanian folkloric songs Al Ghawarneh الغوارنة also known as Deir Ala دير علا performed in Jordan Valley and it s one of the fastest types of dabke Wahad w Nos واحد ونص Abu Alanda أبو علنده Al Aqabawiyya العقباوية It is performed in Aqaba in South Jordan Al Ramthawiyya الرمثاوية It is performed in Ar Ramtha in North Jordan Al Sahja السحجة is a popular Palestinian and Jordanian dance Al Sahja belongs mostly to northern and central Palestine and in the south has two kinds As Samir السامر and Al Dahiyya الدحية As Samir s form involves 2 rows of men on opposite walls competing with folk poetry sometimes improvised and even exchanging insults competing in cleverness of retorts Al Dahiyya is a Bedouin version of the same kind in which there is a professional dancer that dances between the two opposing walls of men who are competing for her attention and at times give her money Al Sahja usually occurs the night before the wedding party of the groom zafat al arees with most of the men in the village participating especially those who will be attending or are directly involved in the other wedding festivities Al Dahiyya الدحية limited to men It is close to Al sahja dance It s performed by southern Palestinians and Southern Jordanians Al Hashi الحاشي limited to women Al Farradiyya الفر ادية limited to women Al Jamma iyya الجم اعية also limited to women Al Adiyya العادية also known as Al Dalo una دبكة الدلعونا is a type of dabke danced in Palestine Lebanon Syria and Jordan 10 Amongst Palestinians two common types of dabke are the shamaliyya and sha rawiyya which have six measure phrases and the karaadiyya which has square phrases of four or eight measures Another type is the dabke niswaniyyah danced specifically by women Each type of dabke dance has its own corresponding set of songs the theme of which is often love 12 There are six main types of dabke Al Shamaliyya الشمالية It consists of a lawweeh لويح at the head of a group of men holding hands and formed in a semicircle The lawweeh is expected to be particularly skilled in accuracy ability to improvise and quickness generally light on his feet Typically the dabke begins with a musician playing a solo on the mijwiz or yarghoul of a Dal Ouna piece often with two singers accompanying his music The dancers develop a synchronized movement and step and when the singers finish their song the lawweeh breaks from the semicircle to dance on his own When the leader of the dabke sees that the men s steps are one in sync he instructs the dancers to slow down and begin a movement crossing their right foot in front of the opposite one their left foot The lawweeh continues to inform the dancers of their basic rhythms and at this point other guests at the wedding or event occurring will join in the dabke line This is the most popular and familiar form of dabke danced for happy family celebrations such as weddings circumcisions the return of travelers release of prisoners and also for national holidays in which dabke becomes a demonstration of national personality 11 Al Sha rawiyya الشعراوية is limited to men and is characterized by strong steps or stomps The lawweeh is the most important element in this type of dabke 11 Al Karaadiyya الكرادية is characterized by a lack of a lawweeh and slow movement with an azif عازف flute player in the middle of the circle 11 Al Farah الفره is one of the most active types of dabke and therefore requires a high degree of physical fitness 11 Al Ghazal الغزل is characterized by three strong stomps of the right foot and is usually tiring for those dancing 11 Al Sahja السحجة is a popular Palestinian and Jordanian dance which became significantly more popular during the British Mandate for Palestine Al Sahja belongs mostly to northern and central Palestine and in the south has two kinds As Samir السامر and Al Dahiyya الدحية As Samir s form involves 2 rows of men on opposite walls competing with folk poetry sometimes improvised and even exchanging insults competing in cleverness of retorts Al Dahiyya is a Bedouin version of the same kind in which there is a professional dancer that dances between the two opposing walls of men who are competing for her attention and at times give her money Al Sahja usually occurs the night before the wedding party of the groom zafat al arees with most of the men in the village participating especially those who will be attending or are directly involved in the other wedding festivities The Oxford International Encyclopedia of Dance also mentions these additional kinds of line dances in its entry under Middle East The Murdah was originally performed by women in Eastern Arabia while the men of the community were away on extended fishing and pearling expeditions It involves two lines of dancers who move toward each other with small steps and then retreat while singing rhymed couplets These couplets were largely laments for absent loved ones Although seafaring is no longer economically important in the region women continue to perform this dance at social gatherings The Ahwash Fr ahouache performed by Berber tribes of the Moroccan High Atlas Mountains includes one or several curved lines of men and one or several curved lines of women the whole forming a circle or ellipse around male drummers Jouad and Lortat Jacob 1978 Lortat Jacob 1980 One line recites a poem that the other line responds to with another poem then all move to the beat of the drums Customarily the whole community participates While performing women dancers hold themselves very straight and move with staccato steps holding onto the weaving rod of the house Women as well as men compose the poetry that is recited A similar dance reported for Morocco is the dukkala In one variation a man and woman facing each other compete to see which one can dance the longest Mercier 1927 13 Song genres EditThere are numerous kinds of songs that are sung during and specifically for dabke by both men and women respectively depending on the occasion song and audience Some of the most popular of these songs such as Dal Ouna دلعونا Al Jafra الجفرا Al Dahiyya الدحية and Zareef il Tool ظريف الطول are actually entire genres in themselves in the sense that lyrics can vary significantly in each performance but the basic rhythm of the music is consistent and recognizable This variation can be seen in the hundreds of lyrical variations heard and recorded of these songs which regardless of specific lyrics are recognized by their rhythm and at times a single phrase as in Ala Dal Ouna Jafra and others For example even though one might have heard Ala Dal Ouna sung previously telling a different story in this famous love song people will still call another song ascribing to the same rhythm and theme as Dal Ouna 14 The majority of dabke music being folk songs is on maqam Bayati musical mode Instruments EditThe Oud عود from which the English word lute comes is shaped like half a pear with a short non fretted neck It has six courses of two strings and played with a plectrum usually a trimmed eagle s feather This instrument creates a deep and mellow sound The mijwiz مجوز which means double in Arabic is very popular in Levantine music It is a type of reed clarinet that is played by breathing smoothly through a circular aperture at the end and by moving the fingers over the holes down the front of the tube in order to create the different notes The minjjayrah is similar to the mijwiz an open ended reed flute played in the same style The tablah طبلة is a small hand drum also known as the durbakke Most tablahs are beautifully decorated some with wood tile or bone inlay etched metal or paintings in designs typical of the Near East One of the most commonly played of the percussion instruments the tablah is a membranophone of goat or fish skin stretched over a vase shaped drum with a wide neck Usually made of earthenware or metal it is placed either under the left arm or between the legs and struck in the middle for the strong beats and on the edge for the sharp in between beats Though today fishskin heads are rarely used due to the climate When used it becomes loose you would have to heat the head to get the correct sound back The membrane or head of the drum is now made out of plastic The most common head is from Alexandria Egypt The daff دف also known as the Riq رق is similar to the tambourine It consists of a round frame covered on one side with goat or fish skin Pairs of metal discs are set into the frame to produce the jingle when struck by the hand The sounds of this percussion instrument set the rhythm of much Arab music particularly in the performances of classical pieces 15 The arghul يرغول also known as the yarghoul is commonly used in solos often accompanied by singers that begin dabke performances Unlike the mijwiz it only has finger holes in one of its pipes reeds see Al Shamaliyya under Types The Shubabeh شبابة is a woodwind instrument traditionally made from reed cane It differs from the Mijwiz and Arghul in that it does not have a reed instead the musician blows against the side of the instrument at an angle to produce the tone The Shubabeh is traditionally played by herders in the wilderness Competitions and performances Edit Palestinian men dancing dabke Dabke competitions or shows often consist of different cultural dances and various troupes performing dabke For example the International Fiesta a well known festival at the University at Buffalo consists of a series of clubs performing their cultural dances This competition occurs every semester in the main stage theater of the UB Center for the Arts during the spring time usually at the end of February or beginning of March This allows the Organization of Arab Students to participate and promote the cultural awareness of dabke Many universities host events called Arab Night or a title to that effect When these shows occur dabke is either performed on stage inside or outside in a hall on the floor or outside on the floor There are different steps that comprise the Dabke dance the belbel the inzel shemmel and taxi a combination of each of these steps as well as the occasional jump and turn make the dance complete 16 In America the tradition has not been lost and is held in the same places as it would in the original homeland and the dance music is also commonly played in America at Arab community cultural centers and conventions such as the annual convention hosted by the American Federation of Ramallah Palestine 17 In her study titled Syrian Radical Dabka ethnomusicologist Shayna Silverstein described the changes in social interpretations and performances of dabke as performed in Syria In the 20th century and beyond dabke has both been interpreted as an element of nationalist ideologies or as a modern and aesthetic form of folk dance performed by academically trained dancers from the Higher Institute of Dramatic Arts To reinforce these interpretations and the continuation of dabke in rural as well as in urban settings performances have been promoted countrywide by government sponsored folk dance ensembles as well as in educational programs disseminated by the Ministry of Culture Since the beginning of the Syrian Civil War dabke performances as a manifestation of community gatherings have futher accompanied protest meetings and demonstrations against the ruling government of Syria 18 World records EditIn August 2011 a group in a Lebanese village Dhour El Choueir Lebanon set a new world record Organized by Dhour El Choueir Summer Festival a human chain of 5 050 was made and currently holds the world record 19 This event broke the record set by Tollab the Lebanese Student Federation in Montreal with the participation of La Troupe Folklorique Les Chevaliers du Liban that had made a human chain of 4 475 people dancing the dabke for more than five minutes straight at Montreal s Marcelin Wilson Park 20 21 Tollab had itself broken a record of 2 743 set by a group of Israeli Arabs in Acre Israel An earlier record of 1 700 had been set in Toronto 22 See also EditAromanians have a virtually identical dance the Treambura pamporea Middle Eastern dance SyrtosReferences Edit Stomps Stciks Spins ARAB FOLK DANCE with KARIM NAGI Dabke Saidi Sufi Karimnagi com Archived from the original on 2019 03 07 Retrieved 2017 01 07 Veal Michael E Kim E Tammy 2016 Punk Ethnography Artists amp Scholars Listen to Sublime Frequencies Wesleyan University Press ISBN 9780819576545 Kabir Nahid 2012 Young American Muslims Dynamics of Identity Edinburgh University Press ISBN 9780748669967 York Museum of the City of New 2002 A Community of Many Worlds Arab Americans in New York City Syracuse University Press ISBN 9780815607397 Stanton Andrea L 2012 Cultural Sociology of the Middle East Asia and Africa An Encyclopedia SAGE ISBN 9781412981767 Armstrong Marian ed 2006 Peoples of Western Asia Marshall Cavendish p 282 ISBN 9780761476771 Dabke Canadian Palestinian Association in Manitoba Archived from the original on 2018 06 12 Retrieved 2017 06 29 Cohen Dalia Katz Ruth 2006 Palestinian Arab Music A Maqam Tradition in Practice University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226112985 Dabke Canadian Palestinian Association in Manitoba Archived from the original on 2018 06 12 Retrieved 2017 06 29 a b The Arab World Volume 8 Arab Information Center 1962 But what is dabke and to which period can it be traced According to Lebanese historian Youssef Ibrahim Yazbec who is working on a book on folklore the dabke comes from the Arabic dabaka meaning to make a noise His theory is that the Phoenicians were the first teachers of the dance in the world and the dabke is a representative descendant of the Phoenician dances left to us Kaschl Elke 2003 Dance and Authenticity in Israel and Palestine Performing the Nation Brill p 82 ISBN 9789004132382 Amawi Sarah 2020 06 09 Dabke from Social Dance to Political Stance Patrimoine d Orient Greer Gary 2020 03 30 How to Spot the Different Types of Dabke Dancers Kaleela Morris Gay Giersdorf Jens Richard n d Choreographies of 21st Century Wars Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 020166 1 via Google Books Dabke is a folk dance made up of intricate steps and stomps Rowe 2011 364 performed by both men and women that is popular in areas such as Syria Palestine Lebanon Jordan and Iraq The dance is often performed at weddings and celebrations however it is also performed in theatrical or contemporary modes a b c كل الاردن Allofjo net Retrieved 2017 01 07 a b c d e f هشام عارف الموعد ومأمون احمد الموعد فوكلور العرس و الغناء الشعبي ليلة الحنا gt سلسلة التراث الشفوي الفلسطيني الجزء الأول Cohen Katz 2006 pp 271 274 1 dead link وليد ربيع عبد العزيز ابوهذبا عمر حمدان محمد علي احمد قرية ترمسعيا الفصل العشرون الاغاني Badley Bill and Zein al Jundi Europe Meets Asia 2000 In Broughton Simon and Ellingham Mark with McConnachie James and Duane Orla Ed World Music Vol 1 Africa Europe and the Middle East pp 391 395 Rough Guides Ltd Penguin Books ISBN 1 85828 636 0 Dabke appeals to Westerners Arabs alike Arabamericannews com 10 January 2009 Retrieved 2017 01 07 American Federation of Ramallah Palestine Home Page www afrp org Archived from the original on 29 May 1997 Retrieved 15 January 2022 Silverstein Shayna 2012 Syria s Radical Dabke Middle East Report 263 Summer 2012 via www academia edu Shweir Shweir com 2013 12 07 Retrieved 2017 01 07 Naharnet Lebanon s leading news destination Naharnet com Retrieved 2017 01 07 Les Chevaliers du Liban chevaliersduliban com Archived from the original on 25 June 2009 Retrieved 15 January 2022 Israeli Arabs smash world record for largest Debke folk dance Haaretz Israel News www haaretz com Archived from the original on 1 October 2007 Retrieved 15 January 2022 Bibliography EditAdra Najwa Middle East The International Encyclopedia of Dance Ed Selma Jeanne Cohen and the Dance Perspectives Foundation Oxford University Press 2003 Georgetown University 3 December 2010 1 Cohen Dalia Katz Ruth 2006 Palestinian Arab music a Maqam tradition in practice Illustrated annotated ed University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 11299 2 Kaschl Elke Dance and Authenticity in Israel and Palestine Performing the Nation Leiden amp Boston MA Brill 2003 Ladkani Jennifer Dabke Music and Dance and the Palestinian Refugee Experience On the Outside looking in Ph D dissertation Florida State University 2001 McDonald David A Poetics and the Performance of Violence in Israel Palestine Ethnomusicology 53 1 Winter 2009 Rowe Nicholas Dance and Political Credibility The Appropriation of Dabkeh by Zionism Pan Arabism and Palestinian Nationalism Middle East Journal 65 3 2011 363 80 Summer 2011 Web 20 Mar 2012 Print Rowe Nicholas Raising Dust a Cultural History of Dance in Palestine Publisher London New York NY I B Tauris New York NY Palgrave Macmillan 2010 Handelsman JoEllen 3 Dance Styles of the Middle East Near and Middle Eastern Dance Workbook 2nd ed Tucson Premium Source 2012 7 Print External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dabke A variety of The Jordanian Dabke performed by Al Yarmouk University Folk Troupe Jordanian Dabkeh Performed By Al Ramth Youth Folk Troupe Jordanian Dabke Tas awiya Ma an 1975 El Arish Dabka Palestinian Dabkeh performed in London La Troupe Folklorique Les Chevaliers du Liban Montreal Canada Palestinian Dabkeh Troupe Hurriyah Dabkeh Troupe permanent dead link Al Juthoor Dabkeh Group Al Juthoor performs in the San Francisco Ethnic Dance Festival Archived 2007 12 09 at the Wayback Machine El Funoon Dabkeh Group 2 dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dabke amp oldid 1130013950, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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