‘Om Talal’ gives Saudi students in US a taste of home during coronavirus Ramadan

Based in California, Saudi cook Mona Al-Assiri and her team supply iftar and sahoor meals for Saudi students studying in the area. (Screengrab)
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Updated 05 May 2020
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‘Om Talal’ gives Saudi students in US a taste of home during coronavirus Ramadan

  • Based in California, Saudi cook Mona Al-Assiri and her team supply iftar and sahoor
  • But staff have to take extra precautions delivering the Ramadan meals

LOS ANGELES: For the past four years, Mona Al-Assiri has been cooking Arabic food for Saudi students in California. 

She started her business to support her family after the death of her husband and it quickly became popular. 

Despite the coronavirus pandemic, this Ramadan she and her fellow chefs have continued preparing the meals they are famed for.

Al-Assiri, who is known affectionately by her staff and customers as Om Talal, told Arab News how they are adjusting to supplying meals during the COVID-19 lockdown.

“We cook for iftar and sahoor as well,” Al-Assiri said. “The latter dishes differ from the first like mash and grouts, sambousek and soup because the food for iftar is different from that of sahoor, which is mostly rice and chicken or rice and meat.”

Al-Assiri, 50, moved from Saudi Arabia to the US in 2013. Her kitchen is in Anaheim, part of Greater Los Angeles, and she sells the food to Saudi students studying at a number of different schools and colleges in the region.

As the business has grown, Al-Assiri has had her cooking praised by government officials, celebrities and even princes. But while her spirit is still strong, her business is facing a slowdown in orders.




Based in California, Saudi cook Mona Al-Assiri and her team supply iftar and sahoor meals for Saudi students studying in the area. (Screengrab)

“Because of coronavirus this year we are delivering fewer meals - between 35 and 40,” Al-Assiri said. “During Ramadan in years before 2020, we didn’t have enough time to meet all the requests.”

She said her staff were taking extra precautions to avoid the spread of COVID-19 during their deliveries. 

“Of course we need to be cautious fearing for our safety and the safety of the students when we send them our food,” she said. “When we go to the market we always wear gloves and masks and have sanitizers, and stay about a meter and a half away from others.”

Fans of her kitchen have said Al-Assiri’s cooking is a taste of home, a reminder of the dishes their mums used to make. 

With muslims forced to observe Ramadan in isolation, meals like these are a way to remain connected to their community.

“My message to those fasting is that this is a month of worship and fasting and getting closer to God,” said Al-Assiri. “We need to be away from envy and hate without forgetting family kinship. During coronavirus we cannot visit each other, but we can ask about each other through the phone.”


How Saudi Arabia’s five Founding Day symbols tell a 299-year story

Updated 56 min 22 sec ago
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How Saudi Arabia’s five Founding Day symbols tell a 299-year story

  • The flag, the palm, the Arabian horse, the souq and the falcon are symbols that connect Saudi Arabia to its roots
  • Researcher Ismail Abdullah Hejles explains how the Kingdom’s symbols anchor identity, heritage and continuity

RIYADH: As Saudi Arabia prepares to mark its 299th anniversary this Founding Day — commemorating the establishment of the First Saudi State by Imam Muhammed bin Saud in 1727 CE — the moment invites reflection not only on history, but on the symbols that distill that history into enduring meaning.

Beyond ceremony and celebration, the Kingdom’s official Founding Day emblems tell a deeper story: of survival in a harsh landscape, of state-building against the odds, and of values carried forward across nearly three centuries. Together, they form a visual language that binds past to present and projects confidence into the future.

The five Founding Day symbols — the green flag, the palm tree, the Arabian horse, the souq, and the falcon — do not serve a purely celebratory function, Ismail Abdullah Hejles, a Saudi researcher in traditional architecture, told Arab News. Rather, they carry an intellectual and cultural role that connects society to its roots.

“Nations that understand their symbols and identity understand themselves and are better equipped to continue their journey with confidence and balance,” he said.

The Saudi flag. (SPA)

The Saudi flag, a representation of unity and sovereignty, embodies the values upon which the state was founded and reflects the continuity of the nation, linking its past to its present. The current design was adopted in 1937, refining historical banners from the first and second Saudi states.

The Shahada, the Islamic declaration of faith, symbolizes the Kingdom’s foundation on Islamic values, while justice and safety are echoed through the sword, which represents the unification of the Kingdom during the reign of the late King Abdulaziz Al-Saud.

The flag’s green color is traditionally associated with Islam, reflecting continuity and faith as central pillars of the Saudi state.

Additionally, the palm tree and the crossed swords — now synonymous with Saudi Arabia — officially appeared in the Kingdom’s emblem around 1950 following unification. Together, they express strength, justice, and the protection of unity.

The Saudi emblem

“The choice was not arbitrary,” Hejles said. “It brought together strength (the sword) and life and sustainability (the palm). It reflects a careful balance of firmness and generosity.”

The palm tree’s symbolic presence, however, predates the modern state, stretching back to the ancient civilizations of the Arabian Peninsula.

“In the simple oases, the palm tree was life, and the swords were dignity. The palm offered shade and sustenance, the swords protected the land and the name. Between the shade of the palm and the edge of the sword, the story of a nation takes place.”

The palm tree served numerous functions essential to the sustainability of civilizations. Its dates were a nutritious food; its fronds were used for roofing; its trunk built walls; its fiber made ropes; and it provided fuel and shade for communities.

In places such as Qatif and Al-Ahsa, the palm tree formed a complete life system with almost no waste. (SPA)

In places such as Qatif and Al-Ahsa, the palm formed a complete life system with almost no waste. It was not merely an agricultural symbol, but a genuine model of sustainability long before the term itself was coined, Hejles said.

Mentioned in the Qur’an more than 20 times, always associated with generosity and abundance, the palm formed the backbone of the agricultural economy in eastern Arabia.

“The souq (traditional market) was not merely a place of trade but a space for social interaction, knowledge exchange, and solidarity,” Hejles said. Through it, economic activity flourished and relationships between communities were strengthened.

A civilizational concept that emerged centuries before Islam, the souq arose from a simple human need: exchange. (Supplied)

“Nomads and desert dwellers possessed surplus goods and sought what they lacked through barter.”

A civilizational concept that emerged centuries before Islam, the souq arose from a simple human need: exchange. That exchange generated social mobility and fostered a culture of openness, which later contributed to the rise of cities.

A civilizational concept that emerged centuries before Islam, the souq arose from a simple human need: exchange. (Supplied)
A civilizational concept that emerged centuries before Islam, the souq arose from a simple human need: exchange. (Supplied)

In the pre-Islamic era, seasonal markets such as Souq ‘Ukaz, Souq Majanna, and Souq Dhu Al-Majaz were not only commercial hubs, but also literary forums, political arenas, and spaces for reconciliation and arbitration.

Once Islam was adopted, Souq Al-Madinah was established on principles prohibiting monopoly, forbidding fraud, and ensuring justice.

In the Saudi state, the souq evolved from traditional mud-and-wood covered bazaars into modern shopping centers and large commercial complexes. “Yet, the concept remained the same: a place of encounter before it is a place of sale,” Hejles said.

The Arabian horse, another Founding Day symbol, is associated with authenticity and courage. It accompanied the early stages of state-building, travel, and defense, becoming a symbol of strength and pride in Arab heritage.

Caption

The Arabs’ oldest companion, the Arabian horse is one of the oldest and purest breeds in the world. It was bred on the Arabian Peninsula for extreme endurance, speed, and agility.

Thanks to their lung capacity, endurance, and strong feet and bones, these horses could cover long distances in harsh desert conditions and survive on minimal resources, sometimes fed only dates and camel’s milk.

To protect them against theft and harsh weather, they were sometimes brought inside family tents, which led to the development of intense bonds with their owners. Arabian horses are known to be fearless and loyal, capable of protecting their masters in battle.

They also possessed a “war-sense,” allowing them to act intelligently in combat, known as well to have a high spirit in battle.

In Saudi Arabia, Arabian horses were vital in travel, trade, and warfare. Today, they symbolize nobility, pride, courage, and honor — reflecting and continuing the Kingdom’s equestrian legacy.

And finally, vigilance, insight, and high ambition are represented by the falcon. “It is tied to the practice of falconry, which requires patience and skill, and today symbolizes the continuity of heritage and elevated aspirations,” Hejles said.

Falconry was not merely a hobby, but a hunting tool in a harsh desert environment — a companion to the Bedouin and a symbol of strength, precision, and patience. The long training required to master falconry fostered discipline and strong leadership in its practitioners.

Over time, the falcon became associated with prestige and courage, linked to Bedouin identity and nobility, and embedded in poetry and storytelling.

A heritage passed through generations, falconry is now inscribed on UNESCO’s Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, with Saudi Arabia and other participating countries, reinforcing its global cultural significance.

“These symbols were not chosen for their visual appeal,” Hejles said. “They were chosen because they were tested across centuries of lived experience.”

Representing more than their individual images, they are collectively an expression of the Saudi citizen’s relationship with land, environment, dignity, and continuity.