Nothing lost in translation: Two more Pakistani serials to enthrall Saudi Arabia

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Dr. Lubna Farah speaks to Arab News in Islamabad on July 14, 2020, about her experience of dubbing Pakistani TV drama "Dhoop Kinare" for UAE and Saudi Arabian audiences. (AN Photo)
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Arabic translator of Pakistani dramas, Dr. Lubna Farah, is seen at work at her studio in Islamabad on July 14, 2020. (AN Photo)
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Arabic translator of Pakistani dramas, Dr. Lubna Farah, is seen at work at her studio in Islamabad on July 14, 2020. (AN Photo)
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Arabic translator of Pakistani dramas, Dr. Lubna Farah, is seen at work at her studio in Islamabad on July 14, 2020. (AN Photo)
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Updated 21 July 2020
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Nothing lost in translation: Two more Pakistani serials to enthrall Saudi Arabia

  • PTV’s translation and dubbing expert speaks to Arab News about her experience working on three dramas as part of a cultural exchange program with Riyadh

ISLAMABAD: After the successful completion of the Arabic dubbing of “Dhoop Kinare” as part of a cultural exchange program between Islamabad and Riyadh, translation work and dubbing of two other classics is about to start “very soon,” Dr. Lubna Farah, an Arabic and Urdu translation expert who is supervising the project, said this week.

Last year, Pakistan’s then information minister, Fawad Chaudhry, announced during a visit to the Saudi capital that Islamabad would soon export its television series to the Kingdom. Three serials have since been selected for dubbing, namely “Dhoop Kinare,” “Tanhaiyan” and “Aahat.”

“After good reviews of ‘Dhoop Kinare,’ I am looking forward to translating and dubbing two more PTV classic dramas, ‘Tanhaiyan’ and ‘Aahat,’” Farah told Arab News.

Speaking about her experience, she said she had translated all episodes in simple spoken Arabic, adding that the most challenging part was finding suitable dubbing actors.

“There were 35 characters in the drama ‘Dhoop Kinare,’ including three children, and finding these many dubbing artists consumed a lot of time,” she said. “As Pakistan has a very limited community of Arabic speaking people, I auditioned my students, friends and even relatives who can speak Arabic.”

She said she could not find anyone to dub the role of the messy and loud Fazeelat Bibi character, and thus ended up dubbing it herself.

Farah said state-run Pakistan Television (PTV) asked her to translate the dramas into Arabic given her more than 25 years of experience in the field of translation, adding that she had translated from Arabic to English and Urdu for many heads of state from Pakistan and the Arab world who had visited the country, and that she had also sat in on many diplomatic meetings in the past.

Farah said her most memorable translation work, however, was during the visit of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman to Pakistan in February last year.

“It was a great honor for me to work as a translator for Mohammad bin Salman and his delegation,” she said. “They appreciated my translation so much, and one of the ministers from the Saudi delegation asked me whether I am really Pakistani and not Arab as I spoke (in a) Saudi dialect during translation.”


Pope Leo warns of ‘shrinking’ freedom of expression in Western countries

Updated 09 January 2026
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Pope Leo warns of ‘shrinking’ freedom of expression in Western countries

  • Pope Leo warns of ‘shrinking’ freedom of expression in Western countries

VATICAN CITY: Pope Leo warned on Friday that ​freedom of expression is “rapidly shrinking” in Western countries, and urged the right to conscientious objection for people who ‌refuse military ‌service ‌or ⁠for ​doctors who ‌refuse to perform abortions or euthanasia.
“It is painful to see how, especially in the West, ⁠the space for genuine ‌freedom of expression ‍is ‍rapidly shrinking,” the pope ‍said in an address to diplomats accredited to the Vatican.
“A ​new Orwellian-style language is developing which, ⁠in an attempt to be increasingly inclusive, ends up excluding those who do not conform to the ideologies that are fueling it,” said Leo, the first ‌US pope.