Middle Eastern
Arabs,
Kurds, and
Yazidis wear this headpiece. According to
Anastas al-Karmali,
Johannes Cotovicus mentioned a 16th-century
Jewish keffiyeh.
Iraqi Turkmen wear it and call it Jamadani, while
Omanis call it a mussar. No matter its name, it is available in multiple colours and styles with many different methods of tying it, depending on regional origin and the nature of occasion. Omanis do not use the agal, instead tying it over the
kuma for formal occasions. men wearing keffiyehs man in Keffiyeh During his sojourn with the
Marsh Arabs of Iraq,
Gavin Young noted that the local
sayyids—"venerated men accepted [...] as descendants of the Prophet
Muhammad and
Ali ibn Abi Talib"—wore dark green keffiyeh in contrast to the black-and-white checkered examples typical of the area's inhabitants.
Jordanian shemagh Another type of keffiyeh is the shemagh, which is a scarf that is red-and-white, checkered and has
tassels. The bigger the tassels, the more important the person. This red-and-white keffiyeh is associated with Jordan and is its national symbol. The shemagh is worn mostly in Jordan and by Bedouin communities. It is made from cotton. The Jordanian shemagh and the Palestinian keffiyeh are different in regard to color and geographical meanings.
Palestinian keffiyeh wearing his iconic fishnet pattern keffiyeh in 2001 Prior to the 1930s, Arab villagers and peasants wore the white keffiyeh and
agal (rope) while city residents and the educated elite wore the
Ottoman tarbush (fez). During the
1936–1939 Arab revolt in Palestine, Arab rebel commanders ordered all Arabs to don the keffiyeh. In 1938,
British Mandatory High Commissioner in Palestine,
Harold MacMichael, reported to the Foreign Office: "This ‘order’ has been obeyed with surprising docility and it is not an exaggeration to say that in a month eight out of every ten
tarbushes in the country had been replaced by the [keffiyeh and] ‘agal’." Following the end of the revolt, most residents either reverted to wearing the tarbush or elected to go hatless. The black and white chequered keffiyeh dates to the 1950s when
Glubb Pasha, a British officer, wanted to distinguish his Palestinian soldiers (black and white keffiyeh) from his Jordanian forces (red and white keffiyeh). The black and white keffiyeh’s prominence increased during the 1960s with the beginning of the Palestinian resistance movement and its adoption by Palestinian leader
Yasser Arafat. From the mid-20th century onward, the Palestinian keffiyeh became increasingly associated with Palestinian national identity, a process shaped by broader political developments and symbolic usage, including its prominence in the public image of Yasser Arafat. The Palestinian keffiyeh functions primarily as a politicized symbol of Palestinian national identity and solidarity. It is widely used in protests and political imagery regarding the conflict, both locally, and internationally.
Other shemagh variations Other regional shemagh variations are the Egyptian Sinai shemagh and the Saudi shemagh (also known as a ghutrah). ==Other cultural symbolisms==