Cover Story Together Style City Leisure Heritage Travel People Arabian Scope |
The Arabian Horse: Symbol of an Ancient People
"There are a few situations in a man?s life in which losses of this nature are felt most keenly; and this was one of them. It was not grief, but it was something very nearly approaching to it; and though I felt ashamed of the degrees of derangement I suffered from, yet it was several days before I could get over the loss. Let it, however, be remembered, that the poor animal had been my support and comfort, -- nay, I may say, companion, through many a dreary day and night; -- had endured both hunger and thirst in my service; and was so dicile (sic), that he would stand still for hours in the desert while I slept between his legs, his body affording the only shelter that could be obtained from the powerful influence of the noonday sun; he was yet the fleetest of the fleet, and ever foremost in the chase." It's not an unusual story. People love their Arabians, sometimes unreasonably. Today in Yemen, stories of the bonds that develop between horse and man, man and horse, are common. One of the most successful riders in Sana.a, says that on greeting his horses in the morning, he offers them handfuls of raisins and almonds. Why? They need love from him, he says. The Arabian, as people in this part of the world know, is the oldest pure bread horse. It was bread before there was such a thing as breeding. Legend has it that Noah.s great, great grandson, Baz, domesticated the first Arabian in 3000 BC, 400 years before the first pyramid. Probably this happened not far from Marib--the only extant city of any consequence at the time. Because of the relative isolation of Yemen, the Arabian didn't have much of a chance to dilute its bloodstream. The horse you see today is much like the horse of 2000 years ago. It is a fast, fearless, obedient animal with hooves that withstand the punishment of rocky deserts. When the expansion of Islam brought the Arabian to Spain, the horse was suddenly an extraordinary weapon, the engine behind the conquest of half of Europe.
Only in Yemen, however, can the horse be linked, intimately and truly, to the character of the people. There.s an obvious reason for this. The original desert breeders of the Arabian, having taken the wild beasts into their families, passed on a way of life. It was familial, disciplined, courageous, stark sometimes, loving at other times, and always invincibly loyal. This is the way of life in Yemen. This is how families have lived for centuries here. Indeed, Yemen is one of the few nations on earth in which such ancient familial structures are still utterly normal--adi. This way of life is simply part of the climate and the genes of al-Yemen; it.s the human geography of here. It.s also, by the way, in the language (think of the centrality of the words "mother" and "father" and "brother" in Arabic) and it.s everywhere in the religion. For these reasons, the Arabian is a fitting symbol of the nation of Yemen. And for these reasons, we, the editors, have chosen an especially noble one for the cover of Arabia Felix. |