The Dubai Museum is a must-see attraction for all visitors from all over the world to Dubai. It is packed with tour groups and, of course, many Chinese. The admission ticket is 3 dirhams per person, equivalent to 5 yuan. In terms of local consumption level, it is also symbolic. The castle where the museum is located, built in 1798, is the oldest building in Dubai. It is not large in size. There is no majestic momentum of the National Museum. Only a huge fishing boat tells us that Dubai is not a long history. In fact, Dubai has been a small fishing village for thousands of years. Only Bedouins have lived a simple and even bitter life. The family arrangement of the courtyard chiefs can be described by the words "shabby" or even inferior to that of the village chiefs in rural China. Yes, it's quite different from Dubai, which is shining in our eyes. But this is the past of Dubai. Only through a strong contrast can we understand how hard it is to come by with its splendor. The life of the Bedouins in the main underground exhibition hall of the Dubai Museum is still more vivid and fragrant than that of the chieftain's "palace". The busy men in the small shops, the working women, the children attending classes, and the pearl-fishing workers lead us back to the simple life before Dubai discovered oil. Local children in Dubai, at least I have seen, are rarely dressed in traditional clothes, but white men and black women are still dressed in the same way as those in museums.