Authors of Dubai is my Home Marie-Jeanne Acquaviva and Olivia Froudkine wanted to reveal a different side of the city to the world. Photo: Olivia Froudkine
Authors of Dubai is my Home Marie-Jeanne Acquaviva and Olivia Froudkine wanted to reveal a different side of the city to the world. Photo: Olivia Froudkine
Authors of Dubai is my Home Marie-Jeanne Acquaviva and Olivia Froudkine wanted to reveal a different side of the city to the world. Photo: Olivia Froudkine
Authors of Dubai is my Home Marie-Jeanne Acquaviva and Olivia Froudkine wanted to reveal a different side of the city to the world. Photo: Olivia Froudkine

New book features the stories of people who call Dubai home


Maan Jalal
  • English
  • Arabic

Everybody in Dubai has a story, and it’s not always what you think. This is what Marie-Jeanne Acquaviva and Olivia Froudkine began to realise after they each moved to the emirate more than a decade ago.

“You're hit by the fact that, wow, this is absolutely not what I expected,” Acquaviva, a writer and editor, tells The National. “This is so different and so interesting, and so not what I’ve seen from abroad.

Froudkine, a photographer, adds: “If you read anything about Dubai in English newspapers, American newspaper, European newspapers or magazines, you're just like, this person came for five days and left.”

Both were frustrated by how Dubai, the place they call home, had been positioned and is still viewed in many parts of the world. So, they wrote a book documenting ordinary people, aiming to share their stories, break stereotypes and celebrate the emirate for what it really is.

Dubai is my Home features 40 residents and their connection to the city. Photo: Olivia Froudkine
Dubai is my Home features 40 residents and their connection to the city. Photo: Olivia Froudkine

“The idea was to say this is our city, it's yours, it's mine – people actually really live here,” Froudkine adds. “Sure, some people might have a more exciting life because of their job, but it's not the core of the city – it’s more than just that.”

The result was Dubai is My Home, a book with the stories of 40 Dubai residents who are given the space to describe their connections, roots and experiences.

Acquaviva and Froudkine were part of this year’s Emirates Airline Festival of Literature’s LitFest Launch Pad, which provides debut authors from the UAE the opportunity to introduce their work to readers. It was a chance for the authors to tell more people about their project and to share the stories of the people they chose to feature.

“We wanted to show that the normality of Dubai,” Acquaviva says. “Everybody who comes here comes with bravery, courage and the will to start something.”

Written in each resident’s voice, as dictated and edited by Acquaviva and photographed by Froudkine, Dubai is My Home is designed to embed the stories of the people who live there within the city itself.

Each person featured is photographed in a location in Dubai of their choosing, one in which they have a special connection to. At the bottom of the portrait page is a QR code that, once scanned, reveals the location to readers. The book also includes a colour-coded map that reveals the varying locations of the shoots.

Rahim Walizada, from Afghanistan, lives in the Creek. He sells carpets and fabrics and hails from three generations of textile workers. Photo: Olivia Froudkine
Rahim Walizada, from Afghanistan, lives in the Creek. He sells carpets and fabrics and hails from three generations of textile workers. Photo: Olivia Froudkine

Acquaviva and Froudkine say this was another way for readers who are familiar with Dubai (or not) to experience the city through the eyes of its residents and what makes it their home.

“We chose the title Dubai is My Home because when you speak to anyone who's never been here, it’s the last thing they’ll assume,” Acquaviva says.

“For most people who don’t live here, they think Dubai is never home – it's just a city, you come, you make your money, spend your money and leave. It's never portrayed as a city where you actually grow roots and a life.”

The book features a varied spectrum of people from all experiences, backgrounds, and stories. There's Ali Saqr Sultan Al Suwadi, an Emirati who comes from a family of pearl divers who can trace their lineage back more than 500 years, or Linda Krockenberger from Germany who fell in love with the desert and camel culture.

There is Sydelle Bhala, an Indian ballerina born and raised in Dubai; Benjamin Founes from France, who spent the past four years of high school in four schools in two countries but couldn’t stay away from the emirate; and Iranian-Austrian Yasmin Sinai, whose connection to the city is moving and powerful.

“It was not a matter of how long you lived here, it was just somebody willing and able to tell their story with the city,” Acquaviva says. “Why did you come, why did you stay? What's your link? What's your root here? And that's it.”

Sydelle Bhala, from India, is a ballerina who was born and raised in Dubai. Photo: Olivia Froudkine
Sydelle Bhala, from India, is a ballerina who was born and raised in Dubai. Photo: Olivia Froudkine

Dubai is My Home features locals and residents from the region and across the world. There is a pilot, four religious leaders, a perfumiest, a skateboarder, an artist and more. There are stories of struggle, grief and loss but also stories of growing up, finding love and understanding your purpose, all of them connected by Dubai.

“The portraits of the older ladies are quite powerful in their own way,” Froudkine says. “They are into sport, cooking, books, they are strong. And that is another thing – when you're very naive and you come from the West, you don't expect [to see] that here. Either from local woman or residents, and this is another way of destroying this type of narrative.”

All the people Acquaviva and Froudkine featured in the book surprised them with their personal stories and reaffirmed their belief that Dubai is an incredibly diverse and multicultural city.

“For me, the really key point about Dubai is that you don't have to blend in, you don't have to change who you are,” Acquaviva says.

“Little by little, you realise that what is very specific about Dubai is that it gives you that space to stay who you are, when you arrived, but to also grow and stay.”

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Water waste

In the UAE’s arid climate, small shrubs, bushes and flower beds usually require about six litres of water per square metre, daily. That increases to 12 litres per square metre a day for small trees, and 300 litres for palm trees.

Horticulturists suggest the best time for watering is before 8am or after 6pm, when water won't be dried up by the sun.

A global report published by the Water Resources Institute in August, ranked the UAE 10th out of 164 nations where water supplies are most stretched.

The Emirates is the world’s third largest per capita water consumer after the US and Canada.

Key facilities
  • Olympic-size swimming pool with a split bulkhead for multi-use configurations, including water polo and 50m/25m training lanes
  • Premier League-standard football pitch
  • 400m Olympic running track
  • NBA-spec basketball court with auditorium
  • 600-seat auditorium
  • Spaces for historical and cultural exploration
  • An elevated football field that doubles as a helipad
  • Specialist robotics and science laboratories
  • AR and VR-enabled learning centres
  • Disruption Lab and Research Centre for developing entrepreneurial skills
In numbers: China in Dubai

The number of Chinese people living in Dubai: An estimated 200,000

Number of Chinese people in International City: Almost 50,000

Daily visitors to Dragon Mart in 2018/19: 120,000

Daily visitors to Dragon Mart in 2010: 20,000

Percentage increase in visitors in eight years: 500 per cent

Challenge Cup result:

1. UAE 3 faults
2. Ireland 9 faults
3. Brazil 11 faults
4. Spain 15 faults
5. Great Britain 17 faults
6. New Zealand 20 faults
7. Italy 26 faults

Tearful appearance

Chancellor Rachel Reeves set markets on edge as she appeared visibly distraught in parliament on Wednesday. 

Legislative setbacks for the government have blown a new hole in the budgetary calculations at a time when the deficit is stubbornly large and the economy is struggling to grow. 

She appeared with Keir Starmer on Thursday and the pair embraced, but he had failed to give her his backing as she cried a day earlier.

A spokesman said her upset demeanour was due to a personal matter.

While you're here
The burning issue

The internal combustion engine is facing a watershed moment – major manufacturer Volvo is to stop producing petroleum-powered vehicles by 2021 and countries in Europe, including the UK, have vowed to ban their sale before 2040. The National takes a look at the story of one of the most successful technologies of the last 100 years and how it has impacted life in the UAE.

Part three: an affection for classic cars lives on

Read part two: how climate change drove the race for an alternative 

Read part one: how cars came to the UAE

Day 4, Dubai Test: At a glance

Moment of the day Lahiru Gamage appeared to have been hard done by when he had his dismissal of Sami Aslam chalked off for a no-ball. Replays suggested he had not overstepped. No matter. Two balls later, the exact same combination – Gamage the bowler and Kusal Mendis at second slip – combined again to send Aslam back.

Stat of the day Haris Sohail took three wickets for one run in the only over he bowled, to end the Sri Lanka second innings in a hurry. That was as many as he had managed in total in his 10-year, 58-match first-class career to date. It was also the first time a bowler had taken three wickets having bowled just one over in an innings in Tests.

The verdict Just 119 more and with five wickets remaining seems like a perfectly attainable target for Pakistan. Factor in the fact the pitch is worn, is turning prodigiously, and that Sri Lanka’s seam bowlers have also been finding the strip to their liking, it is apparent the task is still a tough one. Still, though, thanks to Asad Shafiq and Sarfraz Ahmed, it is possible.

Updated: February 12, 2024, 3:51 AM`