Jeddah Season creates 74,000 jobs for Saudi youths

Jeddah Season has created thousands of jobs for Saudi citizens. (SPA)
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Updated 22 June 2022
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Jeddah Season creates 74,000 jobs for Saudi youths

  • New workers supporting more than 36 shows, events held for the first time in the Kingdom

JEDDAH: The Jeddah Season has created more than 74,000 jobs for Saudi citizens, according to a leading entertainment executive.

Nawaf Qumosani, director general of Jeddah Season 2022, made the announcement while praising the future of the entertainment industry in the Kingdom.

He said the event contributed to enhancing the vision of the industry, improving quality of life in the community, attracting investments and achieving economic returns, in addition to building significant global partnerships.

Qumosani’s comments came during a meeting with media representatives at the Jeddah Media Center, where he said that the season’s second edition had increased job opportunities for young people and created an effective economic and cultural movement within Saudi society.

He added that the most important features of Jeddah Season are sustainability, inclusion and diversity, which has been achieved through the presentation of more than 2,800 days of activities, shows, experiences, games, exhibitions, theater performances and concerts.

More than 36 shows and events were held for the first time in the Kingdom, and at least six of those events were the first of their kind in the world, he added.

Qumosani noted that 80 percent of the season’s jobs were taken by Saudi youths, adding that the season contributed to promoting the localization of more than 14 professions to increase opportunities for Saudi men and women to join the labor market, in accordance with the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 reform plans.


History lives in stone in AlUla’s ancient city of Dadan

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History lives in stone in AlUla’s ancient city of Dadan

ALULA: The ancient city of Dadan is “one of the most significant historical discoveries in AlUla governorate and a key landmark reflecting the depth of human history in northwest Arabia,” according to an article published by the Saudi Press Agency on Saturday.

Dadan served as the capital of the Kingdom of Dadan and later of the Kingdom of Lihyan, from the late ninth century to the early first century B.C., the report stated.

Among the site’s most striking features are tombs carved into red rock cliff faces. Some are distinguished by rectangular facades crowned with lion carvings, a symbol often associated with power. “These structures reflect a sophisticated level of artistic and architectural skill, highlighting the advanced craftsmanship of the region’s ancient inhabitants,” the SPA wrote.

Constructed primarily from local stone, the city developed into an important hub for agriculture and trade. Its strategic position along the Incense Route — one of the most vital trade routes in the ancient world — enabled Dadan to flourish economically while facilitating cultural exchange.

Merchants, travelers and envoys passing through the city contributed to the circulation of goods and ideas across the Arabian Peninsula and beyond.

Archeological excavations at Dadan are ongoing, with teams of specialists conducting “systematic research in successive scientific phases to uncover additional structures, inscriptions and artifacts that may further clarify the city’s historical role and daily life,” according to the SPA.

AlUla’s recorded history spans more than 7,000 years of human presence. Discoveries at Dadan — including inscriptions and written records — continue to reshape understanding of the region’s social, economic and political development, “reinforcing AlUla’s status as an open-air archive of ancient civilization,” the SPA concluded.