Whenever one would pass by the waterfront part of the Kuwait Scientific Center, one cannot miss the old sailing boats in dhow harbour and the beautiful Fateh Al Khair, a surviving deep sea sailing ship from the pre-oil era, that is displayed as an exhibit. Fateh Al Khair is 19.8 meters long, 8.1 meters wide
and 4.9 meters high. This ship was designed and built in Kuwait in 1938. The building of the ship took 18 carpenters who
worked 60 days round the clock and cost approximately 17,000 rupees, which was the currency prevalent at that time. The dhow is made from Indian timber and weighs 95 tons when empty and can sail up to 13
knots.
Fateh-El-Khair travelled as a cargo ship from India to Africa. It had the capacity to approximately 226 tons. It carried dates from
Basra, Iraq and would trade them for tea in India and wood from Africa. The
journey took seven months and went to several exotic ports. Merchants on this
ship traded dates in Mangalore, India for tiles and in Zanzibar the ship would
take on mangrove poles to use in the building of Arabian houses. Fateh Al Khair travelled so until 1952, after which oil was discovered.
Here are some pictures I took.
Here are some pictures I took.
Fateh Al Khair |
1 comment:
Thanks for these pictures of Fath Al Khair. The ship was bought by someone in Bandar Kong, Iran. It was in use until Kuwait decided to buy it back and restore it for demo purposes.
I am interested in dhows and dhow sailing tradition. There is one Dr. Hijji یعقوب یوسف الحجی in Kuwait who is an authority on the subject. He used to work with Kuwaity Center of Research مرکز البحوث و الدراسات کویتیة. I have tried many times to find him, but was not successful. Could you help me to contact him? My email address is
aliparsa [at] yahoo [dot] com
Thanks again,
Ali Parsa
Tehran, Iran
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