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12th March 22, 10:03 AM
#11
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12th March 22, 10:56 AM
#12
 Originally Posted by Kylahullu
I do not know about Ramadan or Egypt but in October 2018 I made a two weeks trip to Jordan wearing a kilt all the time. We visited several ancient sites including Petra and stayed a couple of days in Amman.
I was a bit hesitant to do so but then asked advice from our expert guide to the ancient sites, an elderly professor who had been there for years doing excavations and research on burnt papyruses in Petra. He thought it would be OK to wear the kilt. He thought that the Jordanians have long connections to the British including the Scotts, so there should not be any harm. He was right. I did not feel any insecurities even when walking without the group.
A couple of pictures from Jordania to have some colour in the post:
There were some bagpipers playing.
And no, I do not have any pictures of me in the kilt there. So you just have to have my word or find someone of that group who certainly has a picture of the kilt in Jordan. 
I here what you say, but! BUT----------- and I say this with great respect to all, the average Jordanian may or may not understand the Scots wearing the kilt ------------but an American/ or a person fromFinland/or France/wherever other than the UK. ? That is what your passport will say presumably, if push comes to shove. Think on chaps, if I were you.
Last edited by Jock Scot; 12th March 22 at 11:13 AM.
" Rules are for the guidance of wise men and the adherence of idle minds and minor tyrants". Field Marshal Lord Slim.
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12th March 22, 11:28 AM
#13
 Originally Posted by Jock Scot
I here what you say, but! BUT----------- and I say this with great respect to all, the average Jordanian may or may not understand the Scots wearing the kilt ------------but an American/ or a person fromFinland/or France/wherever other than the UK. ? That is what your passport will say presumably, if push comes to shove. Think on chaps, if I were you. 
I may add (actually I had this in the text, but stumbled with the pictures and had to rewrite it...)
We were a group of Finnish people. "Our professor" was known to many locals at the sites we visited and well respected. This may or may not make any difference.
About the passport: Some years earlier I was the sole passenger in an Egyptian long-distance couch on Sinai (not kilted then). There were pretty many check-points where they checked my passport, sometimes just asking the driver who I am. On one occasion the official misheard the driver saying me an American. All smiles disappeared... well, the tension helped immediately and everyone smiled widely again when they saw my Finnish passport.
Well, if you travel with an American passport in any Arab country, I would be very careful.
If people did not sometimes do silly things, nothing intelligent would ever get done.
--- Ludwig Wittgenstein (26 April 1889 – 29 April 1951)
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The Following 4 Users say 'Aye' to Kylahullu For This Useful Post:
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12th March 22, 01:43 PM
#14
 Originally Posted by Kylahullu
I was a bit hesitant to do so but then asked advice from our expert guide to the ancient sites, an elderly professor who had been there for years doing excavations and research on burnt papyruses in Petra. He thought it would be OK to wear the kilt. He thought that the Jordanians have long connections to the British including the Scotts (emphasis mine - JCS), so there should not be any harm. He was right. I did not feel any insecurities even when walking without the group.
Probably not just the Scotts, but other Scottish clans serving in the British military as well. (A bit tongue-in-cheek from a member of Clan Scott).
John
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