• Endurance swimmer Shehab Allam is prepared to go through the pain barrier to complete his latest challenge. All pictures by Reem Mohammed / The National
    Endurance swimmer Shehab Allam is prepared to go through the pain barrier to complete his latest challenge. All pictures by Reem Mohammed / The National
  • The 25km route from Dubai Creek to Dubai Canal is expected to take at least six hours to complete
    The 25km route from Dubai Creek to Dubai Canal is expected to take at least six hours to complete
  • Shehab Allam is at ease using the fibreglass monofin, which he says allows its user to swim like a mermaid
    Shehab Allam is at ease using the fibreglass monofin, which he says allows its user to swim like a mermaid
  • Shehab Allam has been training hard and seeking inspiration from films for his energy-sapping mission
    Shehab Allam has been training hard and seeking inspiration from films for his energy-sapping mission
  • The Egyptian swimmer has competed in events all over the globe
    The Egyptian swimmer has competed in events all over the globe
  • Shehab Allam is undaunted as he prepares to go through a rollercoaster of emotions in the waters of Dubai
    Shehab Allam is undaunted as he prepares to go through a rollercoaster of emotions in the waters of Dubai

Dubai's 'merman' ready to go the distance for 25km swimming challenge


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Shortly before dawn on Friday, Shehab Allam will secure his feet into a fiberglass monofin and plunge into the Dubai Creek.

From Al Seef, he will swim for 25 kilometres. He will pass the abras of the creek and the historic merchant areas of Al Fahidi and Shindagha, splash around Port Rashid and glide through the waters alongside Jumeirah beach and up the Dubai canal.

Then he will emerge, six or seven hours later, under the bridge by Jumeirah Beach road.

For Mr Allam, it is the challenge of a lifetime.

“It’s about talent,” said Mr Allam, who, at age 30, has been finswimming for 18 years.

Over 25 km, I'm going to experience everything

“The monofin doesn’t suit every swimmer. Not every swimmer can do the monofin.”

Indeed, it is a niche sport. Monofins look like a mermaid’s tail.

A monofin swimmer keep their legs and arms locked and undulates the body from the shoulders to the hips to propel themselves forward.

Even small movements can generate great power.

“You swim like a mermaid,” said Mr Allam. “So, it requires a very strong lower back, a very strong core and very strong legs. It’s mostly core and lower body legs and endurance.”

Mr Allam grew up in Alexandria, Egypt, where his mother trained him and his brother in all manner of sports, from running and swimming to shooting.

But when he got a monofin at age 12, he discovered his calling.

“We bought one to try, to see how it feels and yes, that sport was mine,” said Mr Allam.

“It was the best type of swimming for me. Because with the monofin you feel the power, you feel the speed, and you feel like you’re not just like a human trying to find a strokes or swimming, no, it’s like you’re part of marine life.

“I tried to swim with dolphins once and it was like we were all together, all the same.”

The monofin was invented in the 1940s but was almost unknown in Egypt when Mr Allam was growing up.

The monofin can help to generate great power, according to Shehab Allam. Reem Mohammed / The National
The monofin can help to generate great power, according to Shehab Allam. Reem Mohammed / The National

He went one to compete at global events, which have taken him from freshwater lakes in Columbia to icy canals in St Petersburg, Russia.

“Actually it doesn’t matter. We never even worry or think about the water we will swim in, how deep or how dark it is, we just go swim and go,” said Mr Allam.

“In Columbia, it was a really big lake and this water was coming from a waterfall, so it was a green water, fresh, not salty. But you know, when you start to compete, you don’t even think about the temperature or whether the water is salty or fresh.

"When you do long distance swims, after the first kilometre you start to feel a pain in your leg from the fin and when the pain comes, you really forget everything else. The water is the last think you think about.”

The Egyptian swimmer began training for Friday’s challenge two months ago, adding an extra three to four hours of open-water swimming to his regular fitness routine.

“Over 25 km, I’m going to experience everything,” said Mr Allam. “I’m going to experience surrender, I’m going to experience pain, I’m going to experience hunger and I’ll have to go through the feelings and get over it.”

It took about a month to organise a string of permissions from Dubai authorities.

Open water swimming requires an additional focus on navigation and attention to ocean currents.

A support boat and kayak will be alongside him at all times.

The swim is sponsored by Enhance Fitness, where Mr Allam works as a personal trainer and swimming coach.

He is looking forward to the challenge in his adopted home of Dubai, where friends can come and support him from the shore.

With months of preparation under his belt, the day before the challenge was dedicated to mental preparation.

“I’m just motivating myself with some nice movies, like Alexander the Great,” said Mr Allam on Thursday. “These were people who had determination.”

The Monofin Challenge begins at 6am on Friday, October 16 by Al Seef and will end under the Dubai Water Canal bridge on Jumeirah Beach Road around 1pm.

The five pillars of Islam

1. Fasting 

2. Prayer 

3. Hajj 

4. Shahada 

5. Zakat 

Paltan

Producer: JP Films, Zee Studios
Director: JP Dutta
Cast: Jackie Shroff, Sonu Sood, Arjun Rampal, Siddhanth Kapoor, Luv Sinha and Harshvardhan Rane
Rating: 2/5

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