Uzbekistan Festival Tour - Samarkand Tours Operator – 998998520077





Uzbekistan Festival Tour
The Silk and Spices Festival tour to Bukhara is a great opportunity to see
folklore performances, Uzbek traditions, traditional clothing from all over the
country, concerts, and much more all in one trip. This tour also includes
visits to all of the major sights in Samarkand, Bukhara and Tashkent.
Treat yourself to this festival tour and visit
the world of “A Thousand and One Nights”: bright performances, tall minarets,
and blue domes. Take advantage of the Silk & Spices Festival to buy
handmade silk at a good price, learn how craftsmen pass their trades down
through generations, and stroll through the fragrant streets lined with spices.
Learn more about the festival here.

The Uzbek culture has much in common with the culture of other
Muslim countries, but nevertheless it has its own features. Having booked a
tour to Uzbekistan in our company you will have a fascinating opportunity to
feel on your personal experience all original beauty and a rich cultural heritage
of the Uzbek people.
A great number of rites and customs accompany the Uzbek family
life. Weddings are considered to be the most important event in one's life.
Preparations for this special occasion begin from the birth.
Uzbeks love to gather in big groups and entertain the whole village
(kishlak) or mahallya (community in cities) on family occasions. Mass people's
festivities are widely celebrated. They are followed by various ceremonies,
festive bazaars at which musicians, dancers, wrestlers perform. Uzbeks are very
friendly and hospitable people. It is said: "If one does not have
delicious food for a guest, one should have sweet words for him". Uzbeks
are supportive of each other. The ancient custom of Khashar is a unique form of
mutual assistance. If a fellow-villager finds himself in difficulty, all the
neighbours gather to help him. Mutual assistance reveals itself also while
preparing for wedding and circumcision parties, house building, and funeral
ceremonies. Uzbeks traditionally have respect for older people.
Meals begin with small dishes of nuts and raisins, progressing
through soups, salads, and meat dishes and ending with palov, a
rice-and-meat dish synonymous with Uzbek cuisine throughout the former Soviet
Union; it is the only dish often cooked by men. Other common dishes, though not
strictly Uzbek, include monti, steamed dumplings of lamb meat and
fat, onions, and pumpkin, and kabob, grilled ground meat. Uzbeks favor mutton;
even the nonreligious eschew pig meat.

Uzbeks celebrate whenever possible, and parties usually consist of a large meal
ending with palov. The food is accompanied by copious amounts of vodka, cognac,
wine, and beer. Elaborate toasts, given by guests in order of their status,
precede each round of shots. After, glasses are diligently refilled by a man
assigned the task. A special soup of milk and seven grains is eaten on Navruz.
During the month of Ramadan, observant Muslims fast from sunrise until sunset.
Plus code:
86CX+GP Tashkent, Uzbekistan

Address:
Samarkand Tours Operator
 Yunusabad 19-35-87
Tashkent ,100114,
Uzbekistan
998998520077


Video on youtube:
https://youtu.be/uYH2Rjnr1ds

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Uzbekistan Family Tour - Samarkand Tours Operator – 998998520077