Concrete, glass, cheap labour & loads & loads of money
on November 26, 2007
Category: The World, Travelogue, Journal
Arriving at Dubai airport you are first met by a huge red sign WELCOME TO TOMORROW. If this is the future, maybe I should bow out right now! Everything here is huge - the airport - the duty free shop, the immigration hall - endless free ways, glass skyscrapers reaching to the sky, and more cranes per sq meter than any other city (well it seems that way). I woke up the next day to find I had no voice. Lost and speechless in this material world I was taken to another Dubai phenomena, the Gigantic mall - what else do you do in Dubai? The Ibn Battutu Mall named after the famous explorer. The mall is divided into six sectors, China, India and Egypt, Tunisia, Persia and Turkey. My first thought was what happened to Morocco were Ibn Battutu was born? We entered at the India section, avoiding Starbucks on the way we sat and had very expensive but cosy chocolate cakes and skinny lattes - besides a huge elephant that looks like its made of paper mache and the top of which is encased in a wooden canopy that reaches up to the ceiling.

I am in a huge gated estate where every single house is exactly the same design and colour the only difference is the size. There are artificial lakes with ducks and beautiful flowers on the side, swimming pools for every block and private ones for those who can afford it. Each house has at least one huge silver grey 4X4 parked in the driveway and Hummers are everywhere. My hosts are saying they intend to buy one. I must have looked horrified as they made the excuse that driving was so dangerous only a Hummer would protect them from death and destruction on the road!
My throat got the better of me and I have not been out since but my voice is slowly returning. Enough for me to have a long conversation with Maria (not her real name) the maid who is from the Philippines. Maria has been in Dubai for three months. Before that she spent just over 2 years in Saudi Arabia, one of 25 maids for a high official. The whole time she was there she never went out on her own and whatever she needed to buy was bought by the driver. She worked 7 days a week sometimes up to 16 hours a day. She got the job through an agent in Manila and had to hand her passport over to her employers on arrival. Maria was lucky in that her employers were “good” people and she used to get extra tips from the family relatives but the other maids were beaten. She was spoken to in Arabic from the first day which she did not understand. But her madam would not speak to her in English so she spent the first few weeks in fear, trying to figure out what she was supposed to be doing until she eventually learned the language. There are many cases of employers and family members raping maids and of course there is nothing they can do as they would get beaten and end up being deported. Apparently less and less Filipino women are going to Saudi Arabia to work.
Maria had tried to ask permission to leave a number of times to visit her children and finally she was allowed to leave on the understanding she would return after two weeks. She never did and instead found a job in Dubai again via an agent.
Maria is a single parent with three children who are looked after by her mother in Manila. She works as an attendant, 6 days a week for 13 hours a day. With travel time she is lucky to get 4/5 hours sleep a night. On her day off, she works where I am staying and is saving up to get a small business concession which will give her some extra dirhams. Things are much better here and she is happier as she can dress as she likes and is free to go where she wants as well as take on extra work and business. After only three months she has the chance to become a supervisor and earn more money to send home.
Maria stays in a room owned by a Filipino man which she shares with 12 other people plus the landlord. The beds are single bunk beds with two people sharing each bed for 300 dirhams per month. If you do not have your wits about you and are not strong, you could end up having to sleep with the landlord. She shares a bed with her friend.
I really like Maria. She is completely focused on her goal which is to earn as much money as she can to pay for her children to attend private school so they can go to university. “Inshallah I will eventually return to the Philippines and start my own business”.
Dubai is a material world built on very cheap labour and oil. It’s all very gaudy and glitzy with Disney like castles, fountains and buildings in the shape of boats, estates in the shape of palm trees and the ultimate home for the super rich - a little piece of a fake world in the middle of the sea.. You can smell the money in the air where it forces itself down, stamping on the poverty of the hired help from Pakistan, the Philippines and other far off lands.

Links:
Ibn Battuta
Travels with a Tangerine: A Journey in the Footnotes of Ibn Battua - Excellent book
Tags:
Dubai















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1 Comments so far
1. links for 2007-12-04 « no snow here
December 4th, 2007 at 6:19 am
[…] Black Looks Sokari visits Dubai: “[Maria] was spoken to in Arabic from the first day which she did not understand. But her madam would not speak to her in English so she spent the first few weeks in fear, trying to figure out what she was supposed to be doing until s (tags: middleeast uae dubai migrantworkers) […]