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Muslim men perform Friday prayers in an area close to their workplace on the first working Friday in Dubai
Muslim men perform Friday prayers in an area close to their workplaces on the first working Friday in Dubai. Photograph: Karim Sahib/AFP/Getty Images
Muslim men perform Friday prayers in an area close to their workplaces on the first working Friday in Dubai. Photograph: Karim Sahib/AFP/Getty Images

‘It just feels so wrong’: UAE works on Friday for first time

This article is more than 2 years old

People juggle work and Friday prayer as country switches to Saturday-Sunday weekend

Employees and schoolchildren juggled work and studies with weekly Muslim prayers on the first ever working Friday in the United Arab Emirates, as the Gulf country formally switched to a Saturday-Sunday weekend.

Some grumbled at the change and businesses were split, with many moving to the western-style weekend but other private firms sticking with Fridays and Saturdays, as in other Gulf states.

The weekly day of prayer has always been a free day in the UAE, which had previously observed a Thursday-Friday weekend until 2006.

Mosques appeared busy as worshippers carrying prayer mats arrived as usual, before many of them later headed back to the office.

“I’d rather take [Friday] off,” said the 22-year-old Briton Rachel King, who works in the hospitality industry and has been living in Dubai for six months. “That is what we all know and love – having a Friday off and going to certain places that are open and we could do things. But now it is going to be Saturday.”

The UAE made the surprise announcement about the weekend switch for the public sector in December as it grappled with rising competition in international business from other Gulf countries, particularly Saudi Arabia.

Government bodies and schools will operate four and a half-days a week, closing at 12 noon on Fridays for a fixed prayer time of 1.15 pm. The Muslim prayer schedule usually depends on the position of the sun.

Out of 195 businesses polled by the human resources consultancy Mercer, only 23% were preparing to follow the four-and-a-half-day week, but more than half would switch to Saturday-Sunday weekends.

“Luckily I have the same days off as my kids, but that’s not the case for my husband,” said Fati, who works in an international distribution company, asking not to give her full name. “He works for a multinational that hasn’t changed its schedule for the moment. I hope they will do it quickly, otherwise our family life will be ruined.”

Nearly a third of companies were worried about the impact of being out of sync with other countries in the region, the Mercer poll found.

“We work a lot with Egypt and Saudi Arabia,” said Rana, an employee of an events company who said some of her teams would have to work on Sundays.

Dubai’s financial district was unusually quiet on Friday with large numbers working remotely, especially at a time of rising Covid levels when many children are also doing online schooling.

“Today is the first working Friday, it feels a bit weird,” said Ahmad Bilbisi, 34, a banking employee. “It makes sense to me, at least for the banking industry. We are now working on the same day as everyone else in the world.”

The new arrangement was a major talking point on social media, with one Twitter user complaining: “It just feels so wrong.”

“My body and mind have fully acclimatised to having Fridays off. I think today is going to be a long hard struggle,” they added.

Sharjah, an emirate neighbouring Dubai, has found a simple solution: mandating Friday, Saturday and Sunday as a three-day weekend.

More on this story

More on this story

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  • Can workers cram five days worth of work into four days? Mothers already do

  • The Guardian view on a four-day week: policies needed to make it a reality

  • Thousands of UK workers begin world’s biggest trial of four-day week

  • Out of office? How working from home has divided Britain

  • Canon’s UK arm to become latest company to trial four-day week

  • UAE cuts working week to four-and-a-half days and moves weekend

  • How the pandemic transformed the world of work in 2021

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