Bedouin$97295$ - traducción al holandés
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Bedouin$97295$ - traducción al holandés

ETHNIC GROUP
Negev bedouins; Negev Bedouins; Israeli-Bedouin; Bedouin Israeli; Bedouin-Israeli; Bedouin In Israel
  • al-Sayyid]]
  • al-Sayyid]]
  • Bedouin male on camel
  • 1908 map of the Bedouin tribes
  • Bedouins' forced transfer during the last decade
  • Goats grazing in the township of Tel Sheva
  • [[Hura]] school and community center
  • A medical clinic in [[Hura]]
  • [[Ismail Khaldi]], Israeli vice consul
  • Arad]], [[Israel]]
  • [[Rahat]], the largest Bedouin city in the Negev
  • rababa]], 2009
  • [[Rahat]] park
  • Literacy classes for Bedouin women, Lehavim
  • Bedouin tent near [[Rahat]], 1950s
  • Tal Al-Sba' inhabited since 1100 BCE
  • [[Rahat]] 2015
  • One of eight (July 2012) [[Rahat]] schools
  • One of medical clinics in [[Rahat]]
  • A private house being built in South Rahat
  • Tel Arad]] inhabited since 4000 BCE
  • Omer]])
  • African slave belonging to [[Tiyaha bedouin]], 1847
  • [[Umm Batin]] high school in the Negev

Bedouin      
adj. bedoeïen (behoort tot een zwerfstam in de woestijn)
Bedouin tribe         
GROUP OF ARAB NOMADS WHO HAVE HISTORICALLY INHABITED THE ARABIAN AND SYRIAN DESERTS
Bedouins; Beduin; Jaloudi; Bedu; Bendouin; Bedouin people; Bedouinism; Bedouin tribe; Beduin tribes; Bedouins of Saudi Arabia; Israeli Bedouins; Israeli Bedouin; Bedouin in Israel; Bedoiun; Bedawin; Bedouin tribes; Bedouins in Israel; The Baduín; Bedaween; History of the Bedouin
Bedoeinen stam
ship of the desert         
  • 120px
  • Commercial camel market headcount in 2003
  • Republic Day Parade]], New Delhi (2004)
  • Magdhaba]]'', Egypt, 23 December 1916, by [[Harold Septimus Power]] (1925)
  • A camel's thick coat is one of its many adaptations that aid it in desert-like conditions.<!---Don't move this image up or it causes a break in the text on wide screens--->
  • Skull of an F1 hybrid camel, [[Museum of Osteology]], Oklahoma
  • A camel calf nursing on [[camel milk]]
  • A man on a camel, [[Tang dynasty]]
  • Domesticated camel calves lying in sternal recumbency, a position that aids heat loss
  • Bulgarian military]] during the [[First Balkan War]], 1912
  • pulao]], from Pakistan
  • 120px
  • Somalia]], which has the world's largest camel population<ref name="Bernstein"/>
  • Camels in the [[Guelta d'Archei]], in northeastern [[Chad]]
  • Palestine]] (now in [[Israel]]) - 1870s drawing
  • Somali]] camel meat and rice dish
  • Woman breastfeeding on a camel, [[Tang dynasty]]
  • A camel carrying supplies, [[Tang dynasty]]
  • 120px
GENUS OF MAMMALS
Camels; Camelus; Tylopopod; Two-Humped Camel; Camelids, new world; Heavy Camel; Camel's milk; Camel meat; Bedouin camel; Dulla (organ); Doula (anatomy); The ship of the desert; Ship of the desert; Rakuda; Camel driver; Cameleer; Cameleers; Evolution of camels; Camels in religion; Domestication of the camel; Camel herding; Camel breeding; Cultural depictions of camels; List of camel parasites; List of camel diseases
kameel, schip van de woestijn

Definición

Bedouin
(Bedouins, or Bedouin)
1.
A Bedouin is a member of a particular Arab tribe.
N-COUNT
2.
Bedouin means relating to the Bedouin people.
...Bedouin carpets.
ADJ

Wikipedia

Negev Bedouin

The Negev Bedouin (Arabic: بدو النقب, Badū an-Naqab; Hebrew: הבדואים בנגב, HaBedu'im BaNegev) are traditionally pastoral nomadic Arab tribes (Bedouin), who until the later part of the 19th century would wander between Saudi Arabia in the east and the Sinai Peninsula in the west. Today they live in the Negev region of Israel. The Bedouin tribes adhere to Islam.

From 1858 during Ottoman rule, the Negev Bedouin underwent a process of sedentarization which accelerated after the founding of Israel. In the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, most resettled in neighbouring countries. With time, some started returning to Israel and about 11,000 were recognized by Israel as its citizens by 1954. Between 1968 and 1989, Israel built seven townships in the northeast Negev for this population, including Rahat, Hura, Tel as-Sabi, Ar'arat an-Naqab, Lakiya, Kuseife and Shaqib al-Salam.

Others settled outside these townships in what is called the unrecognized villages. In 2003, in an attempt to settle the land disputes in the Negev, the Israeli government offered to retroactively recognize eleven villages (Abu Qrenat, Umm Batin, al-Sayyid, Bir Hadaj, Drijat, Mulada, Makhul, Qasr al-Sir, Kukhleh, Abu Talul and Tirabin al-Sana), but also increased enforcement against "illegal construction". Bedouin land owners refused to accept the offer and the land disputes still stood. The majority of the unrecognized villages were therefore slated for bulldozing as laid out in the Prawer Plan. According to human rights organizations, the Prawer Plan discriminated against the Bedouin population of the Negev and violated the community's historic land rights. In December 2013, the plan was rescinded.

The Bedouin population in the Negev numbers 200,000–210,000. Just over half of them live in the seven government-built Bedouin-only towns; the remaining 90,000 live in 46 villages – 35 of which are still unrecognized and 11 of which were officially recognized in 2003.