Prior to the building of
the BP refinery, the Little Aden peninsula, or
Jebel Ihsan as it is also known, had two main
centres of population. These were the fishing
villages of Bir Fuqum and Bureikha. Bir Fuqum
still exists, but in order to make room for the
present Ghadir housing estate, the villagers of
Bureikha were moved to a new settlement which
was built for them at Al Khaisa. Although there
is evidence of human occupation of Little Aden
dating back to the Chalcolithic period, (C. 4500
to 3000 B.C.). it was not until the early
nineteenth century that the forefathers of the
present villagers began to establish their
communities. At this time the land was owned by
the 'Aqrabi tribe who had broken away from the
Lahej Sultanate in 1770 and, under their leader
Sheikh Mahdi, established an independent state
with their centre at Bir Ahmed.

In 1834 Captain Haines of
the Indian Navy (who was to capture Aden some
five years later), visited the area whilst
conducting a survey of the south coast of
Arabia. Of Bir Fuqum he says, ''On the western
shore of the bay is the tomb of Sheikh Samsarah
surrounded by a few fishermen's huts. His
remarks about the Bandar Sheikh and Ghadir areas
include, ''The white tomb of Sheikh Khadir (Ghadir)
is about 1100 yards from the extreme point of
Ras Abu Kiyamah, near this spot the 'Aqrabis
deposit coffee, cotton and a few other articles
of merchandise, in readiness for the small
trading boats lying in Bandar Sheikh and Ghor
Khadir. The only ports belonging to the Aqrabi
tribe's. As Haines does not mention the village
of Bureikha we might assume that it did not
exist at the time, or was so small as to be
insignificant.
Strangely enough, the first
people to settle in Bir Fuqum were not fishermen
by tradition, but tribesmen from the hinterland
who came down from the Wadi Ma'adin near the
present Yemen frontier. They were all of one
tribal group. the Masaferah and first settled in
Bandar Sheikh at a place then known as Taqaiz;
but after quarrels with the 'Aqrabi tribesmen
they moved around the coast a little and
established themselves at Bir Fuqum where they
have remained ever since.
The tribesmen who were
grazing their flocks on the peninsula at this
time were a sub-group of the 'Aqrabi known as
the Maqwari and their grazing lands extended
through Silent Valley and around the area where
the BP Refinery now stands. There was far more
vegetation in Little Aden in those days than
there is today. Indeed, some of the older
members of the Maqwari can still remember
chasing gazelle through the bushes in Silent
Valley. With the establishment of the two
village communities, the shrubs and trees in the
valley were cut down to provide fuel for the
settlers, and the area was gradually denuded of
all major growth.
With the decrease in
vegetation, the Maqwari moved away to Rubaq, on
the road to Aden, but the present tribal leader,
Sheikh Saleh bin Salem Dabash, Darweesh Al Aqwar,
still grazes his camels upon their old lands. He
also cultivates a patch of land near to the
British Military Cemetery in Silent Valley
known to the Maqwari, as AI-Mihraga. The
first inhabitants of Bureika came from the
Hadhramaut, they were the Suba'i and the
Shahari who came from Shihr, to the east of
Mukalla. Other early settlers were the Hinaidi,
the Gibaili and the Rasidi. With the exception
of the latter, all these families are strongly
represented in the community today. In the early
days of settlement the villagers were under the
protection, or ra'iyya of the 'Aqrabi Sheikh who
demanded taxes from them. The protection
afforded in return for these taxes seems to
have been non - existent, for the villagers were
constantly pestered and even attacked by
wandering 'Aqrabi tribesmen. In 1850 a British
seaman was murdered at Bir Ahmed and relations
between the British in Aden and the 'Aqrabi
tribe broke down. This necessitated a blockade
of the Little Aden area to prevent the 'Aqrabi
running supplies to Bir Ahmed from the coastal
landing places on the peninsula. The blockade
was lifted in 1857 and although relations with
the British were again established, things were
never too happy until the British purchase
of the Little Aden peninsula in 1869 for
which the Aqrabi sheik was paid 30.000 dollars.
This followed general complaints from the
villagers in Little Aden about the heavy taxes
imposed upon them by the 'Aqrabi'. With the
later purchase of the shore between Little Aden
and Khormaksar in 1888 for a further 2000
dollars, the two villages were able to settle
down and were from then on administered from
Aden.
One of the major problems
facing the settlers was water. There were three
main wells in the district; Bir Fuqum drew its
supplies from Bir Hariqah. a little way up the
valley from the village. Bureika had the Bir
Nasir well near to Al Khaisa and there was a
well in Silent Valley known as Bir Selma. The
quantity and quality of water presumable from
the wells varied with the rainfall, but there
were never sufficient supplies for the growing
villages. Whilst the area was still under the 'Aqrabi,
water had to be purchased from Bir Ahmed or the
'Aqrabi coastal village of
Hiswa. The water was conveyed to Little Aden
by camel train or by dhow. Following the British
purchase, the villagers of Bureika bought their
own dhow and began to transport the water
themselves from Khormaksar. Soon after the turn
of the century. the headman (Aqil) of Bureika
asked the government to construct two water
reservoirs: in the mountain behind the village.
Modeled on the famous
Taweelah tanks in Aden, opinions vary as to
whether these were of completely new
construction, or the repair of an ancient system
dating back to the same period as the Aden
tanks, One old man. Abdullah Saleh Debash, says
that there were no tank there prior to the
present ones being built. whilst the Mansab of
the Wali al Ghadir is equally certain that
Government repaired and renewed an existing
system. Once in use, the reservoirs were able to
catch the rain water and this was used solely
for drinking purposes. A police post was built
on the path from the village to the tanks and
two policemen were stationed there to ensure
that people received only the amount of water
allocated to them by the Aqil.
When the monsoon prevented
the village dhow from landing water at Bureika,
the vessel would lie In the Khor Bir Ahmed,
near to the present BP OiI Harbour and the women
and children would be employed to carry the
family ration in goat skin bags back to the
village. Water at this time used to vary in
price from two to three annas for four gallons,
(about 2d. to 3d.). During the years just prior
to the Second World War a contractor was engaged
by Government to build a concrete tank within
the village and water was then supplied by a
motor tanker traveling to and from Sheikh
Othman. When this service was brought into
being, the villagers were able to sell their
dhow. The Maqwari who as
we have seen, still graze their camels around
Silent Valley, call the valley Beyn al Jebelain
(between the two mountains). They have names for
all the mountains around these being Jebel
Hunood. Jebel Halagah. Jebel Muhaaymar, Jebel
Muzalkam and Jebel Rumaanah Jebel Hunood, or the
Mountain of the Indians gets its name from the
Indian troops who were stationed upon it
during the First World War, and were supplied
with milk and eggs by the Maqwari. The First
World War is known locally as Harb al Basha, the
War of the Pasha, after the Turkish general Said
Pasha who came down from Yemen in 1915 and
captured Lahej and Sheikh Othman. According to
the local people, the Turks did not occupy the
Little Aden peninsular during that war as stated
by Sir Tom
Hickinbothom in his book ''ADEN''.
The Second World Was ls
known locally as the Harb Al-Talyani, or the
Italian War. Early in 1940 the British built a
fort on top of Abu Kiyamah, with a flight of
stone steps leading up to it. This was to
provide a look out post and commanded a good
view of the coast. With the Italian entry into
the war an official was sent around the villages
to advise the people on what to do in case of an
air raid. Through an interpreter he told them to
leave the villages and go to the hills if enemy
aircraft came. One evening as the people of
Bureika were setting out in the moonlight, an
Italian aircraft flew low over the village. and
around the fort. Caught in the searchlights, it
dropped its bombs, six of which fell near to the
tomb of the Wali al Ghadir and a seventh landed
in the sand on the other side of the hill. This
last one failed to explode. The villagers,
remembering what they had been told, fled from
Bureika, many of them going to the far end of
Silent Valley.
As they had not been told
by the official how long to stay away. they
camped in the valley for ten days before
returning to their homes.
Since the last war the
inhabitants of Little Aden have seen many
changes. The building of BP's oil refinery and
housing estates made the first major impact upon
their lives, and more recently a large military
cantonment has been established near to Bir
Fuqum. Many of the villagers have left their
fishing and taken up employ with either the
refinery or the military and the villages have
expanded as people from the hinterland have
settled there. This has altered their lives and
standard of living enormously and even those who
have remained fishermen have seen changes with
the introduction of the powered fishing boat and
the nylon net.
Also they have motor
transport to convey their catches to market
where once they used to walk as far as to Lahej,
some twenty-five miles away to sell their fish.
In spite of all these things however, the
village life still retains much of its early
simplicity and the people hold strongly to the
beliefs and customs of their ancestors.