Tips On Writing Arab Characters

tips on writing arab characters

first let’s cover the main mistake people make: what is an arab?

an arab is generally any person whose lineage comes from an arabic-speaking country. some examples:  Algeria, Bahrain, Comoros, Djibouti, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, the United Arab Emirates and Yemen.

now that you know what your character is (if you were aiming for east asian/south asian this is your cue to leave and educate yourself!) let’s talk about some important factors of an arab character.

decide what country they are from: this is ridiculously important! each arab country has a unique history and their cultures vary DRASTICALLY! it is extremely offensive to take bits and pieces of different cultures from various arab countries and stuff them all into one character. so first choose from where exactly your character hails. note: if you are writing in a fantasy world, this still applies! look into your specific country of choice and work around that.

not all arabs are muslims: while islam has greatly influenced arab culture, muslims and arabs are not synonymous. islam is a religion, arab is a lineage. if you choose to make your character muslim, be mindful of that religion, and if not, do not give the character islamic attributes (ie: hijabs, islamic names)

on naming your character:

first names: once again, be mindful of the character’s religion here. many names that have come to be associated with arabs are in fact islamic in origin (mohammed, abdullah, aabid…) look for arabic names and check the meaning and origin to be sure (here and here are some good websites that give definition and origin). arabic names generally do not have nicknames. yes even ‘mo’ for ‘mohammed’ or ‘al’ for ‘ali’ are all a foreigner’s look on arabic names. they don’t work. don’t use them.

middle names: arabs generally do not have middle names (which is to say, they aren’t assigned any at birth) instead, the child’s father’s name is their second name. so ahmed, son of salim would be ‘ahmed salim’ rather than be given an entirely new name.

last names: the last name of any arab is their father’s last name. generally, a married woman keeps her own last name rather than change it to her husband’s, and the children inherit their father’s name. 

fashion: once again this differs entirely based on what country you’ve chosen but also please mind the year! if your novel is set in the equivalent of the 1800s traditional big turbans have been out of fashion for centuries!! more modern clothing can include checkered turbans that are worn by men and draped on the head, set in place by igal. but again, this depends on the country of choice. kuffiyehs are more symbolically worn in countries like palestine, syria and jordan. here and here are more in-depth descriptions. 

the arabic language: arabic differs drastically from english in regards to grammar so using a translator site isn’t going to cut it. the main reason for this is that there each arabic country has its own dialect, and while some are similar, they all have obvious differences. a translator will give you the official arabic, which isn’t used in day-to-day speech. my advice is to have an arab speaker read through your lines before publishing. 

stereotypes: for a bit of background, it was an arab (Al-Haitham) that became one of the first founders of modern optics by creating the first camera. an arab (Ibn Firnas) who first attempted flight. arabs invented the numbers currently used all around the world (yes 0-9 were created by an arab named al-Khwarizmi!) so let me tell you it is extremely disrespectful, hurtful, and downright wrong when arabs are presented as uncivilized, uneducated, and violent in books and media. keep this in mind while writing your character.

more than sand and camels: while many arabs hail from the desert and indeed a good many travels were taken via camel, that does not mean your arab character is required to know this. not all arabic countries are deserts. not all arabs own camels. if you must give them a form of travel, an often overlooked talent of arabs was horse-riding, and some of the best breeds of horse are arabian, so look into that instead!

misogynism and homophobia: this is a harmful arabic stereotype bred from the misunderstanding of islamic values. hijab/niqab (head and face covers) are the chosen form of dress for muslim women (though once again not all arabs are muslims!) along with many other values held by muslim men and women, there are cultural influences some arabs hold that are mistranslated by western countries. i might make a separate post about this alone, but just be mindful about this as you are writing your character. don’t make the girl oppressed and in need of saving. don’t make the guy sexist and arrogant.

war is not culture, it’s circumstance: the middle east has generally come to be associated with war and pain, a circumstance of which no one is happy about. this does not mean that your character should desire violence, wish to inflict pain, come from an abusive family, desire war, come from a background of war. these are all offensive and just another painful reminder of how the west sees arabs. if your character fits into any of those categories, now is the time to fix that.

if anything remains unclear, shoot me an ask! 

More Posts from Justanothergirlsblog and Others

4 years ago

WRITING WITCHES

People began talking about witchcraft and witches around the time of the Old Testament, and were more mainstream when churches began believing in it. Witches were/are commonly depicted as evil females who do the devil’s work in the west and some parts of Asia, but nowadays, some people see witches as good as well.

Your view of witches is entirely up to you. They could be any gender, (or non-gendered), good, or evil. It depends on how you want your story to go, but witches perform witchcraft, the use of magic, so magic is an important factor in here.

Witches is such a large area because different countries have different versions of them, and different authors have their own version too, so I’ll be including very general information here.

Type of witches (via Horoscope.com on Pinterest)

Cosmic witch

Astrology based

Horoscopes

Divination witch

Predicting the future

Tarot cards

Palm reading

Tasseography

Kitchen witch

Does housework

Homemade offerings

Can conjure spells

Green witch

Herbs and plants

Folk magic (faeries and elves)

Earth based

Sea witch

Water based (oceans, lakes)

Lunar magic

Weather magic

Common witchcraft activities

Potion making

Spell conjuring

Future predictions/prophecy making

Supernatural beings conjuring

Ceremonies

Candle colour meanings (for divination witch)

White: peace, purity

Brown: home protection, stability

Black: negativity, binding, protection

Pink: romantic love, basically love

Red: strength, courage, charisma

Green: natura, healing, growth

Orange: success, ambition

Yellow: intelligence, hope

Gold: wealth, luck

Silver: intuition, the moon

Purple: influence, wisdom

Blue: communication, calm, forgiveness

Ingredients for a kitchen witch

Courage: pepper, basil, chives

Fertility: cinnamon, mint, coriander

Happiness: cinnamon, feverfew, mint

Health: allspice, cinnamon, Angelica

Love: vanilla, cinnamon, coriander

Luck: allspice, cemfrey, nutmeg

Protection: Angelica, basil, cinnamon

So, about spells and ceremonies: I can’t find any certain spells because again, they’re all very specific to whatever type of witches you’re writing about, and heck, you might even come up with your own. But the spells you use can be in rhymes, latin, backward talk, or words you make up! From what I’ve read, ceremonies are very important to witches and can be done in celebration of a new witch joining a coven, (Witches can be independent or in a coven, basically a group of witches.) or performing spells to conjure something.

If you’re writing about witches in the Middle Ages, know that they were feared and hated. Women who didn’t look like other “proper” women or were doing some suspicious would often be accused of witchcraft, and be punished, aka burned in fire, because people believed that was the only way you could kill them. Anyone who worked with the “witch” would also be punished, though not necessarily by fire.

At the end of the day, you can make your own rules, play around with things! I’m not sure if there’s a general rule of things all witches can and can’t do, like the “Law of Witches” (put it in the comments if there is!) but you could make it up as well!

4 years ago

“I am a day dreamer and a night thinker.”

— Unknown 

4 years ago

“Where we love is home - home that our feet may leave, but not our hearts.”

— Oliver Wendell Holmes 

4 years ago

“Start writing, no matter what. The water does not flow until the faucet is turned on.”

— Louis L'Amour (via quotemadness)

4 years ago

“The idea is to write it so that people hear it and it slides through the brain and goes straight to the heart.”

— Maya Angelou

4 years ago

Writing Tip #190

Your characters should always have an agenda in every scene. Their agenda can range from something simple like wanting to get to work on time to something larger like wanting to save their mother from the underworld. Make sure you know what each character’s agenda is in every scene. Set two characters agenda’s in opposition to prompt action, move the plot forward, and set up some great opportunities for dialogue.

4 years ago

I was getting pretty fed up with links and generators with very general and overused weapons and superpowers and what have you for characters so:

Here is a page for premodern weapons, broken down into a ton of subcategories, with the weapon’s region of origin. 

Here is a page of medieval weapons.

Here is a page of just about every conceived superpower.

Here is a page for legendary creatures and their regions of origin.

Here are some gemstones.

Here is a bunch of Greek legends, including monsters, gods, nymphs, heroes, and so on. 

Here is a website with a ton of (legally attained, don’t worry) information about the black market.

Here is a website with information about forensic science and cases of death. Discretion advised. 

Here is every religion in the world. 

Here is every language in the world.

Here are methods of torture. Discretion advised.

Here are descriptions of the various methods used for the death penalty. Discretion advised.

Here are poisonous plants.

Here are plants in general.

Feel free to add more to this!

4 years ago

The best advice really is to just write. Write badly - purple prose, stilted conversations, rambling descriptions. Don’t delete it, pass go, take your $200, save all your garbage in a big folder. Look at how much you’ve made - it doesn’t matter if it isn’t perfect, isn’t polished, it was practice. Every time you write you learn a little more, and find another piece of your voice.

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justanothergirlsblog - =A weird girl=
=A weird girl=

I'm just a weird girl who likes to read about history, mythology and feminism.

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