AlUla’s fruitful summer harvest marks community celebration
AlUla’s fruitful summer harvest marks community celebration/node/2608936/saudi-arabia
AlUla’s fruitful summer harvest marks community celebration
Khayrat AlUla celebrates the region’s agricultural heritage. (SPA)
Short Url
https://arab.news/pewa2
Updated 21 July 2025
Arab News
AlUla’s fruitful summer harvest marks community celebration
Annual Khayrat AlUla festival to showcase centuries-old agricultural heritage
Updated 21 July 2025
Arab News
RIYADH: The Royal Commission of AlUla on Monday announced the start of the much-anticipated Summer Fruits of AlUla Season.
The first event in the annual Khayrat AlUla harvest celebrations runs from July 22 to 28 at Al-Manshiyah Farmers Market.
Khayrat AlUla celebrates the region’s agricultural heritage. (SPA)
It highlights the produce of local farmers and productive families, and includes events for the display of dates, citrus, pomegranates and honey.
The initiative supports the commission’s goals of driving economic growth through community engagement and development projects tied to AlUla’s harvest cycles.
NUMBER
125k
AlUla’s mango farms cover 125,000 hectares and yield over 1,125 tonnes, including the sanarah and zubda varieties.
AlUla is home to more than 5,000 farms and more than 50,000 trees. Its mango farms cover 125,000 hectares and yield over 1,125 tonnes, including the sanarah and zubda varieties.
The region also produces over 3,141 tonnes of figs, grapes, and pomegranates across more than 348 hectares.
Khayrat AlUla is held annually to celebrate the region’s centuries-old agricultural heritage, known for its high quality, distinctive produce.
The event reflects a deep-rooted culture of farming, passed down through generations, balanced with modern sustainability practices that safeguard natural resources.
The commission places strong emphasis on agriculture as a pillar of local economic development, which includes a boost for the tourism industry.
‘Continuum’ brings together installations, audiovisual pieces, VR works and AI-generated art in Riyadh. (Supplied)
Updated 14 September 2025
Nada Alturki
Diriyah Art Futures celebrates inaugural cohort with ‘Continuum’
Residency’s 11 artists show works that pry into technology’s role in shaping memory, culture
Updated 14 September 2025
Nada Alturki
RIYADH: Diriyah Art Institute’s inaugural exhibition “Continuum” opened on Saturday, presenting works by 11 international artists who form the first cohort of the Diriyah Art Futures residency.
Curated by Irini Papadimitriou, the show brings together installations, audiovisual pieces, VR works and AI-generated art that explore themes of memory, identity, displacement, migration, environmental concerns and our relationship with technology.
‘Clastic Resonance’ by UK-based artist William J. Brooks. (Supplied)
“‘Continuum’ is an umbrella title that we’ve decided to adopt for the program, and the exhibition is a celebration of the work that everyone has been creating and developing over a year at DAF,” Papadimitriou said at the opening.
Among the works is UK-based artist William J. Brooks’ “Clastic Resonance,” a sound installation built with Riyadh sandstone boulders.
HIGHLIGHTS
• The artists’ works collectively highlight the global and regional conversations shaping the future of art in a digital age.
• Jordanian artist Aya Abu Ghazaleh’s ‘It Grows Within,’ reflects on forced displacement through an immersive installation centered around a tree trunk built from wooden clothespins.
Low-frequency recordings of the mechanized rhythms of urban development, captured during the city’s ongoing physical and cultural transformation, are transmitted as vibrations perceptible through direct touch.
‘Archiving Retention’ by Tunisian artist Dhia Dhibi. (Supplied)
The piece reflects on impermanence and the sonic memory of place, drawing on the rhythms of the city’s rapid transformation.
“We’re in a specific moment in time in Riyadh, and Saudi in general, where there’s a tremendous amount of construction projects occurring. I was particularly interested in the transient sonic output that comes from this,” Brooks told Arab News.
‘Tiyrist - Threads of Exile’ by French Algerian artist Samia Dzair. (Supplied)
As visitors touch the rocks, they feel subsonic vibrations that ebb and flow, resembling the rhythm of breathing. Brooks uses the piece to question how construction sounds affect the surrounding environment and how an artist might respond to them.
“When I first came here, I became really aware of the ecology in Riyadh and the call to prayer, because I’m not familiar with that. I became super conscious of the sounds occurring and the sheer volume of the city,” he added.
‘Majra’ by Egyptian artist Salma Ali. (Supplied)
Another striking work is Jordanian artist Aya Abu Ghazaleh’s “It Grows Within,” which reflects on forced displacement through an immersive installation centered around a tree trunk built from wooden clothespins.
The object, both ordinary and symbolic, represents the belongings left behind when uprooted.
Korean artist Junsoo Kim's ‘3^30’. (Supplied)
The piece takes a circular form, spiraling around an invisible clothesline that holds traces of rust and embroidery. The design creates an enclosed loop that visitors cannot escape.
She said: “It’s a trap, actually. You can never leave; the circularity. It’s not typically the way you see clothes being hung, but now it’s become more of a circular (experience) ... You never sit in a corner, you just keep rotating.
“It’s like someone is still looking for home and never stopping.”
The installation incorporates sounds collected from the area, including Dabkeh chants, the call to prayer, and alarms, layering archival noise into the experience of loss and repetition.
Tunisian artist Dhia Dhibi’s “Archiving Retention” interrogates the fragile relationship between digital traces, historical memory, and online archives. Reflecting on the flood of images of war shared over the past year, he asked: “What images are there to preserve afterwards? Or in other words, does it really matter to preserve any digital content online?”
His exploration took him back to 2010, when internet access in Tunisia first became more widely available.
“It actually kind of induced or helped the revolution to happen, because people were used to certain mass media images and then all of a sudden they were exposed to images or videos of protests that were unprecedented. For me, it’s my sort of archeology of media, in a way,” he told Arab News.
The work builds on three elements: videos, posts, and sounds. Most central is a large 29-level pyramid-like piece, symbolizing the 29 days of the uprising, made of stills taken from videos that were posted during each day.
Developed in collaboration with Le Fresnoy Studio National des Arts Contemporains in France, the Emerging New Media Artists Programme provides participants with professional equipment, a production budget, and a wide range of multidisciplinary learning opportunities.
The first cohort includes artists from , Egypt, Algeria, Jordan, Tunisia, Morocco, Bahrain, Republic of Korea, the United Kingdom, and South Africa.
Their works collectively highlight the global and regional conversations shaping the future of art in a digital age.
The ministry said the vaccine is now available by booking an appointment through the Sehhaty app, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Sunday
Updated 14 September 2025
Arab News
RIYADH: ’s Ministry of Health said seasonal influenza can cause serious complications, including pneumonia, bronchitis, ear infections, blood poisoning, and death.
Symptoms of seasonal influenza include shivering, sweating, fever above 38 degrees Celsius, muscle pain, headache, sore throat, persistent cough, dehydration, and a runny nose.
The ministry said the vaccine is now available by booking an appointment through the Sehhaty app, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Sunday.
According to the ministry, the vaccine reduces the severity of infection, lowers the need for intensive care, and decreases mortality from seasonal influenza.
The most vulnerable groups include people with chronic diseases, those on immunosuppressive medications, adults over 50, children six months to 5 years old, pregnant women, individuals with obesity, and healthcare workers.
Last year, 96 percent of patients admitted to intensive care had not received the vaccine, highlighting its crucial role in protection and prevention, the SPA reported.
’s top female photographers took center stage in Jeddah this week at an exhibition.
Updated 14 September 2025
Arab News
5 women photographers honored at Jeddah exhibition
Exhibition included an array of pieces capturing everything from the holy sites of Makkah to stunning landscapes and ancient traditions
Updated 14 September 2025
Arab News
JEDDAH: ’s top female photographers took center stage in Jeddah this week at an exhibition to showcase how their work has helped shape the Kingdom’s artistic landscape.
Organized by the n Society for Culture and Arts, the show celebrated Amal Alameer, Hanaa Turkistani, Suzan Eskander, Susan Baaghil and Najla Angawi, whose work over the past two decades has documented the nation’s heritage, culture and daily life, the Saudi Press Agency reported.
Held at the society’s headquarters in Jeddah, the exhibition included an array of pieces capturing everything from the holy sites of Makkah to stunning landscapes and ancient traditions.
Each of the photographers was presented with flowers and a commemorative plaque in recognition of their contributions to the Kingdom’s cultural and visual archive.
The exhibition space was designed to showcase their distinct artistic styles and reflect the diversity of their experiences and creative journeys.
Their work also tells the story of a society in transformation, balancing modern development with deep cultural roots.
Photography enthusiasts, students and community members attended the evening, where they had the opportunity to engage with the artists directly.
Listening to their stories and achievements offered new insight into how Saudi women continue to enrich the arts, preserve heritage and inspire new generations through the power of photography.
According to Prof. Fatimah Al-Zahrani, the developed technology is capable of removing 98% of pollutants.
Updated 14 September 2025
Arab News
New water purification technology that uses fruit peels earns patent
According to the professor, the developed technology is capable of removing 98% of pollutants and has economic and sustainable benefits
Updated 14 September 2025
Arab News
RIYADH: A research team from Abha’s King Khalid University has obtained a patent for an advanced method that uses peels of prickly pears for water purification.
Head of the research team from the university’s chemistry department, Prof. Fatimah Al-Zahrani, said that the idea behind the study was to make use of agricultural waste by converting it into an active material that can be used for treating industrial and chemical pollutants.
According to the professor, the developed technology is capable of removing 98 percent of pollutants and has economic and sustainable benefits as it allows the peels to be reused several times without notable loss of efficiency.
The distinguishing factor is an innovative mechanism that exposes the peels to ultrasonic waves and alcohol-based solutions to enhance porosity and absorption capacity in different environments.
Prickly pears are a plant native to the Kingdom and are especially abundant in the Baha region, with 26 farms producing between 40 and 70 tonnes annually.
Farmers have diversified their production to include prickly pear juice, ice cream, soap and other products.
Researchers and agricultural planners are also studying the plant’s health benefits, noting its vitamins, minerals, fiber and potential in skincare.
Fahd Al-Zahrani, director general of the Baha branch of the ministry of environment, water and agriculture, has previously hinted at the development of an integrated “prickly pear city,” in partnership with the region’s Prickly Pear Association.
Prof. Al-Zahrani said that the team was able to secure the patent from the Saudi Authority for Intellectual Property thanks to a collaboration with Prof. Badriyah Al-Shehri from the College of Science, and Prof. Reda El-Sheshtawy from the department of chemistry.
The study reveals that powder from prickly pear peels was flagged as a possible cationic dye absorbent based on thermodynamic and kinetic data. Cationic dyes are positively charged synthetic dyes commonly used in textiles, paper, plastic and cosmetics.
Their strong bonds to negatively charged particles such as organic matter and sediments make them stubborn to remove.
Cationic dyes can be toxic to aquatic life and damaging to cell membranes. Many are carcinogenic or mutagenic, risking human health, and they also reduce water quality in aquatic ecosystems by blocking sunlight penetration.
Al-Zahrani said that in addition to contributing to water treatment processes, this energy-efficient technology also sets an example for recycling agricultural waste into high-value environmental solutions applicable for use in industrial and community settings.
Gulf Research Center hosts Saudi-German roundtable in Riyadh
The event was attended by a group of Saudi-German relations experts
Updated 14 September 2025
Arab News
RIYADH: The Gulf Research Center organized a roundtable discussion, entitled “Saudi-German Relations,” which was attended by Ambassador Dr. Geza Andreas von Geyr, State Secretary of the Federal Foreign Office of the Federal Republic of Germany, along with his accompanying delegation and a group of experts interested in Saudi-German relations.
The roundtable took place at the GRC office in Riyadh on Sunday.