Okay - that time of year again - Kids and Kandora | ExpatWoman.com
 

Okay - that time of year again - Kids and Kandora

391
Posts
EW EXPLORER
Latest post on 16 November 2012 - 09:39

My kids want to wear the Kandora to school for National Day celebrations. Being Australian this is not something that already lives in our closet!

Where do I get some cheap ones for little kids. Aged 4 - 7????

Does Carrefour do little ones?

391
Posts
EW EXPLORER
Latest post on 17 November 2012 - 20:09
Our school has not said they HAVE to wear Emirati dress. It is optional but there will be celebrations. But I think it is a great thing to do for a day. We participated in Halloween for the first time ever this year and that's not an Australian tradition at all.... And I completely understand that the Kandora is not an Islamic dress but cultural relating to Middle Eastern traditions. We wear Aussie flag shirts on Australia Day and will be proud to wear Emirati dress on National Day. Well the kids will be....
Anonymous (not verified)
0
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EW NEWBIE
Latest post on 17 November 2012 - 15:35
I think you missed my point - not to worry....
Anonymous (not verified)
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EW NEWBIE
Latest post on 17 November 2012 - 14:23
I think you are referring to modern Emirati clothes rather than traditional islamic wear. We are not Emirati but our Islamic clothes are similar
195
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EW NEWBIE
Latest post on 16 November 2012 - 20:19
I don't understand why some schools ask their students to wear Islamic dress on the UAE national day. This is silly and unnecessarily cost for parents. I think it is great for schools and students to want to celebrate the national day of their host country, but it would be much more relevant if they wore their own national costume rather than someone else's - a better way for youngsters to learn the importance of nationalism. UAE national dress (both the kandoora for men and the abaya for women) is NOT "Islamic dress". Muslim men in Indonesia don't wear kandoora and Muslim women in Morocco don't wear abaya. It is the traditional, national dress of the UAE even before it actually became one country. Since National Day is a day to celebrate the UAE and *not* other countries, it makes perfect sense to wear it as part of the celebrations. But it's not like schools will force you to fork out for a tailor-made kandoora for your kids, they can also just wear the colours of the flag for example or paint the flag on their cheeks... Nothing wrong with that at all. <em>edited by ChuckyDucky on 16/11/2012</em>
463
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EW EXPLORER
Latest post on 16 November 2012 - 20:00
I spoke to an Emirati last year during the National Day week, he said that we have no idea how happy the locals feel when they see expats wanting to celebrate their National Day with them and sporting the colours/flags etc. It's nothing to do with religion, it's just our way of giving back a little to our host country, joining in with our Local neighbours and celebrating being part of a multitude of cultures and countries that can come together and say thank you & mabrook to the UAE. Enjoy it. :)
Anonymous (not verified)
0
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EW NEWBIE
Latest post on 16 November 2012 - 19:29
I don't understand why some schools ask their students to wear Islamic dress on the UAE national day. This is silly and unnecessarily cost for parents. I think it is great for schools and students to want to celebrate the national day of their host country, but it would be much more relevant if they wore their own national costume rather than someone else's - a better way for youngsters to learn the importance of nationalism.
463
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EW EXPLORER
Latest post on 16 November 2012 - 10:14
Should do, otherwise Union Co-op, Satwa, Lulu etc. :)
 
 

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