Magic beans: Kingdom launches ‘Year of Saudi Coffee’

Coffee has long been an intrinsic part of Saudi culture, representing values such as generosity and hospitality, and regularly features in songs, poems and paintings. (File/Shutterstock)
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Updated 03 February 2022
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Magic beans: Kingdom launches ‘Year of Saudi Coffee’

  • Public encouraged to share ideas on how to mark cultural event

JEDDAH: The government has designated 2022 as the “Year of Saudi Coffee” and is seeking ideas from the public on how to mark the occasion.

Coffee has long been an intrinsic part of Saudi culture, representing values such as generosity and hospitality, and regularly features in songs, poems and paintings.

Now, the Ministry of Culture has decided to recognize that relationship with a yearlong celebration of the ubiquitous bean as a cultural and national symbol.

Prince Badr Al-Saud, the minister of culture and governor of the Royal Commission for AlUla, took to Twitter to whip up support for the idea across the Kingdom.

“We are awaiting your creative ideas in the #2022YearofSaudiCoffee initiative,” he said.

“Your distinctive ideas will be implemented with the support of the initiative.”

According to the ministry’s website, the goals of the initiative are to celebrate coffee as a cultural product of Saudi Arabia and accentuate the connection between coffee and the national identity.

It will also showcase the Kingdom’s Khawlani coffee beans, highlighting the traditional ways of growing and preparing them, and the many ways the drink can be enjoyed.


KSrelief sets emergency camp for Gazans displaced by severe weather

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KSrelief sets emergency camp for Gazans displaced by severe weather

RIYADH: The King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief) has set up a new emergency camp in the central Gaza Strip, providing shelter to hundreds of families forced from their homes in recent weeks. 

More than 250 tents have been installed to meet immediate needs, the Saudi Press Agency reported. 

The camp was established after severe weather destroyed large numbers of temporary shelters across the area. 

Aid workers say powerful storms and flooding have swept through central Gaza, flattening hundreds of tents and deepening an already severe humanitarian crisis.

Families who have taken shelter in the camp said the new tents have eased some of the immediate strain of displacement. After weeks of exposure to rain and cold, many said the shelters have offered basic protection and a degree of comfort as winter conditions continue.

The camp is part of broader Saudi led efforts to respond to urgent humanitarian needs in Gaza.