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		| The cultural 
											museum of 
											Ababda 
											nomads tribe |  
		| Beyt Ababda, “Ababda House” is the cultural heritage center of the 
		Ababda nomads is nestled in the foothills at Wadi El  Gemal
		 
											National Park. 
		The 
		Ababda are nomads living in the
		 Red Sea
		 Mountains
											in south-east  
											Egypt. 
		Originally descendents of Arab tribes, this group of nomads
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		| the 
		Red Sea 
		
		
Mountains in south-east Egypt. 
		Originally descendents of Arab tribes, this group of nomads show strong 
		connections with the overarching Beja culture in 
											Egypt,
Sudan, Somalia and Ethiopia. The local economy is 
		largely based on herding camels, goats and sheep, although increasingly 
		the Ababda find employment in fishing, as truck drivers and, 
		increasingly, in tourism.
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		|  | The main 
		goals of this project are to provide alternative livelihoods for the 
		Ababda, help protect their desert lifestyle where possible, and 
		illustrate the fragile and age-old balance between the desert 
		environment and subsistence economy of the local nomads. The collection 
		in this museum has been compiled by a group of Ababda and archaeologists 
		working from 1994-2001 at the ancient  
		harbor of  
		Berenice,
		
100 km
											South of
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		| Wadi Gemal. The design is in 
		keeping with the park's architectural theme which embody the region’s 
		identity utilizing aspects of vernacular and historical architecture 
		such as passive cooling. and the use of sustainable organic materials in 
		construction . |  |  
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