
Representative ListInscribed 2025Description
Between 2011 and 2023, a safeguarding programme was put in place to address the risk of disappearance of Al Sadu weaving, whose know-how is preserved by a dwindling number of older women. Thanks to the combined efforts and resources of social actors, research, documentation, knowledge transfer, dissemination, marketing support, and awareness-raising activities have been implemented in a concerted and participatory manner. This has ensured the continuity and transmission of the element while creating employment and income-generating opportunities for many people.
The element was first inscribed on the List of Intangible Cultural Heritage in Need of Urgent Safeguarding in 2011, as the rapid economic development and social transformations brought about by the advent of oil had caused a sharp decline in the practice of Al Sadu. Today, as a result of safeguarding efforts, the weavers often gather in small groups to spin and weave, exchanging family news and occasionally chanting and reciting poetry. Such gatherings are the traditional means of transmission of the related knowledge and skills: girls learn by watching, and are gradually given tasks to do, such as sorting the wool, before learning the more intricate skills involved. The element promotes unity among craftspeople while fostering intergenerational exchange and community dialogue.
The element was first inscribed on the List of Intangible Cultural Heritage in Need of Urgent Safeguarding in 2011, as the rapid economic development and social transformations brought about by the advent of oil had caused a sharp decline in the practice of Al Sadu. Today, as a result of safeguarding efforts, the weavers often gather in small groups to spin and weave, exchanging family news and occasionally chanting and reciting poetry. Such gatherings are the traditional means of transmission of the related knowledge and skills: girls learn by watching, and are gradually given tasks to do, such as sorting the wool, before learning the more intricate skills involved. The element promotes unity among craftspeople while fostering intergenerational exchange and community dialogue.
Country
United Arab EmiratesOther heritage elements in United Arab Emirates
Representative List · Inscribed 2025Arabic KohlRegister of Good Safeguarding Practices · Inscribed 2025Safeguarding programme for Al Sadu, traditional weaving skills in the United Arab EmiratesRepresentative List · Inscribed 2025Al Ahalla, a living performing art in the United Arab EmiratesRepresentative List · Inscribed 2025Bisht (men's Abaa): skills and practicesRepresentative List · Inscribed 2025The zaffa in the traditional weddingRepresentative List · Inscribed 2024Arabic coffee, a symbol of generosity
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Also inscribed in 2025
- Traditional Saree weaving art of Tangail
- Boreendo, Bhorindo: ancient dying folk musical instrument, its melodies, knowledge, and skills
- The zaffa in the traditional wedding
- Al-Muhaibis: social practices and traditions associated with it
- Bisht (men's Abaa): skills and practices
- Kithul Madeema/Kithul Kapeema, an ancient indigenous technology for tapping Kithul in Sri Lanka
Data Source: UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage · UNESCO listing