Working in the Shadows of the World's Biggest Boomtown
(Page 2 of 2)
May 31, 2007
Natalie Hudson Utne.com
Shadid also quotes Mohammed al-Roken, one of Dubai's most
prominent human rights activists, who says that he is more
unsettled by the cultural alienation felt by natives in Dubai, who,
given the influx of wealthy foreigners and migrant workers, now
comprise a minority in their own land. In al-Roken's opinion, the
new developments are instilling in Dubai a foreign culture of
flagrant excesses. He warns, 'If we keep ourselves passive, the
identity, the culture will fade away very quickly.' Already the
luxury hotels and replicas of the Taj Mahal and Eiffel Tower are
casting tall shadows over the labor camps of Dubai's outskirts.
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