|
Belly Dancing
Did you know the correct name
for belly dancing is actually "Oriental Dance"? The Arabic name for it is
raqs sharqi, which means "dance of the East/Orient", and the Turkish name
is Oryantal.
 |
Contrary to what many
Westerners believe, Oriental dance (the correct name for belly dancing)
did not originate as a dance of seduction done by concubines to
titillate the Sultan.
For centuries, the role
of Oriental dance in Middle Eastern society has been that of a folk
dance that people would do at joyous occasions such as weddings, the
birth of a child, community festivals, and other events that bring
people together to party. It was a dance that men, women, and children
did for fun, not a "performance" done to entertain an audience. Just as
Americans at a modern-day wedding reception might do waltzes, two-steps,
or even the chicken dance, so people in the Middle East would get up
with their friends to shimmy to their favorite music.
Following the rise
of Islam, people lived in segregated households. The men lived on one
side of the house, and the women lived with the children on the other
side.

|
The word "harem" does not refer
to some exotic seduction chamber filled with naked women lolling on pillows
awaiting their turn to seduce the Sultan. Instead, it simply refers to the
section of the home where women carried about their everyday business of
cooking, sewing, gossiping with friends, and minding the children. The word
"harem" comes from the word "haram", which means "forbidden": men who were not
part of the immediate family were forbidden to enter the women's quarters when
they visited their friends. The intent was to protect the women of the
household from strangers.
When festive occasions would
arise, the women would celebrate with other women, and the men would have a
separate party with other men. Historically, the two genders did not mix. In
some Muslim countries, that is still true today.
In the afternoons, after
feeding their men the big meal of the day at noon, women would sometimes
gather at the homes of their sisters, aunts, cousins, friends, or grandmothers
to enjoy some time together. In these informal get-togethers, they might take
turns getting up and dancing for each other. This was one way that the mothers
of marriageable young men could get to know the eligible young women of the
community.
There was generally no special
dance "costume" to wear--people simply danced in their party clothes, just as
we might dress up a little for our own friends' weddings. Dance was not seen
as something to be "performed" by a professional--it was just something people
got up and spontaneously did.
For more information on
belly dancing,
click
here
Site search engine
To contact us by email,
click here
|