Saudia’s youngest sous chef charts her rapid culinary rise

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Donya Modir believes that food always has been — and always will be — a way to capture a nation’s identity. She is the youngest sous chef to work at Saudia. (Supplied)
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Donya Modir believes that food always has been — and always will be — a way to capture a nation’s identity. She is the youngest sous chef to work at Saudia. (Supplied)
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Donya Modir pose for a group photo with officials and colleagues. (Supplied)
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Donya Modir believes that food always has been — and always will be — a way to capture a nation’s identity. She is the youngest sous chef to work at Saudia. (Supplied)
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Donya Modir pose for a group photo with colleagues. (Supplied)
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Donya Modir believes that food always has been — and always will be — a way to capture a nation’s identity. She is the youngest sous chef to work at Saudia. (Supplied)
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Donya Modir believes that food always has been — and always will be — a way to capture a nation’s identity. She is the youngest sous chef to work at Saudia. (Supplied)
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Donya Modir believes that food always has been — and always will be — a way to capture a nation’s identity. She is the youngest sous chef to work at Saudia. (Supplied)
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Donya Modir believes that food always has been — and always will be — a way to capture a nation’s identity. She is the youngest sous chef to work at Saudia. (Supplied)
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Donya Modir believes that food always has been — and always will be — a way to capture a nation’s identity. She is the youngest sous chef to work at Saudia. (Supplied)
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Donya Modir believes that food always has been — and always will be — a way to capture a nation’s identity. She is the youngest sous chef to work at Saudia. (Supplied)
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Donya Modir believes that food always has been — and always will be — a way to capture a nation’s identity. She is the youngest sous chef to work at Saudia. (Supplied)
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Donya Modir believes that food always has been — and always will be — a way to capture a nation’s identity. She is the youngest sous chef to work at Saudia. (Supplied)
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Updated 23 August 2022
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Saudia’s youngest sous chef charts her rapid culinary rise

  • Donya Modir’s stunning success story inspired the Tourism Ministry to select her as one of its ambassadors

RIYADH: When Donya Modir was growing up, she nurtured an appetite and a curiosity for food. This interest grew until she graduated from the Culinary Arts Academy in Switzerland and was chosen as one of the ambassadors of the Kingdom’s Tourism Ministry.

“Cooking was my hobby and I used to cook for my family and repeat the same dish until I perfected it, so when I heard that there was a culinary art scholarship, I made the decision to grab the chance and go for it,” Modir told Arab News.

Enrolling under the tourism scholarship program, Modir studied at the academy’s Le Bouveret campus in Switzerland and received a Swiss higher education diploma in two years.

“I was lucky to be chosen to be on the scholarship and appointed to one of the elite culinary institutes in the culinary world.”

It was an intense program. She had a daily schedule of 12 hours of intense studies in the culinary world — both theoretical and practical — in addition to general hospitality management and other assessments. Despite all the challenges, she managed to be an honors student and was selected as the Open Days Ambassador for Culinary for two full terms.

HIGHLIGHT

The received her position at Saudia aged just 22, making her the youngest sous chef at the organization. Her meteoric efforts were noticed by the Ministry of Tourism, choosing her as a success story under the title ‘tourism makers,’ making her one of the ministry’s ambassadors.

But halfway through the pandemic, Switzerland’s lockdown kicked in. While most of the students went back home, Modir insisted on staying in the country and seized the time she had to finish so she wouldn’t fall behind in her studying schedule.

Once Modir finished the academic program, an internship was vital to her graduate development.

“For 10 months, I started applying my knowledge and passion to one of the most well established Swiss hospitality companies: The Living Circle.”  

The Living Circle is a collection of elite accommodations and eateries operated by devoted hosts in unrival stunning settings.

She also worked in many restaurants, starting with Alex Lake Zürich Hotel, The Boat House Restaurant, Widder Hotel, August Boucherie Restaurant, and a two Michelin star restaurant headed by Chef Stefan Heilaman.

“During that time, I was promoted twice. This added so much confidence and made me the person I am today.”

Coming back to the Kingdom, she immediately started working at Myazū Jeddah Restaurant: First as a chef, then as floor assistant manager.

“Four months later, I was interviewed by Saudia Airlines Catering Company and was given the position of sous chef. Such a position in our world is really hard to get, especially when you are still at such a young age,” she said.

She received her position at Saudia aged just 22, making her the youngest sous chef at the organization. Her meteoric efforts were noticed by the Ministry of Tourism, choosing her as a success story under the title “tourism makers,” making her one of the ministry’s ambassadors.

In this position, Modir has advised the younger generation to enroll in tourism scholarships, noting that the Kingdom’s tourism sector is enjoying revolutionary upgrades.

“I was just a young Saudi student who was willing to achieve something in a field that was very promising for the future of tourism, and throughout my education and apprenticeship, I became equipped with genuine knowledge, more confident, more responsible and a reliable team member,” Modir said, adding: “That is exactly the aim of our Kingdom in sending us abroad, (it) is to empower us with such an education, so we can be ready to give back to this nation.”

She continued: “The Kingdom is aiming to excel in many aspects by empowering such sectors, including the food and beverage industry. It is now that we have started to forum our cultural identity and represent our hospitality through our cuisine and meet global standards.”

Modir believes that food always has been — and always will be — a way to capture a nation’s identity.

“With the Kingdom opening up to tourism, I believe it is mandatory as a culinary student to elaborate on our food more in the industry. It is simply fascinating how it brings people together.”

The world’s biggest tourism training program from the Ministry of Tourism is investing SR375 million ($100 million) to train 100,000 young Saudis at 10 top global institutions, preparing for a bright future in tourism.

 


Rooted in memory: How Rola Daftardar turns Saudi heritage into living art

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Rooted in memory: How Rola Daftardar turns Saudi heritage into living art

  • Ma Maison by Rola curates, produces home accessories
  • Aim to reflect Kingdom as ‘authentic, layered and artistic’

RIYADH: For Rola Daftardar, creativity is not simply about design — it is about memory, emotion and belonging.

Saudi by birth, originally from Madinah and raised in Jeddah, Daftardar carries a layered identity shaped further by her Lebanese mother. That blend of cultures, she says, taught her early on to see beauty in contrast and turn it into strength.

“My identity has always been a mix,” she said during a recent interview. “It taught me how to appreciate detail, emotion and storytelling through objects.”

From childhood, she was drawn to art and pieces with soul — objects that feel lived with rather than merely displayed. She went on to study arts, history and media, developing a philosophy that creativity is not only aesthetic but deeply emotional.

“Design is a way of sharing parts of myself,” she explained. “It’s storytelling through material, color and scent.”

Four years ago, that philosophy became Ma Maison by Rola — a brand that began as a personal creative outlet and gradually grew, season by season, into a carefully curated world of home accessories and tablescaping pieces.

Each year, she approaches her collections as chapters. “Every season has its own breath,” she said. “Every year carries a new intention.”

Her work comes most alive during Ramadan and national occasions, when gatherings take center stage and homes become spaces of shared ritual. Between winter and summer, ideas quietly bloom. But this year’s message feels especially personal.

Daftardar’s latest collection is deeply rooted in Saudi heritage, inspired by cities including Jeddah, Riyadh, AlUla and Taif — places she sees as emotional landscapes as much as geographic ones.

“With Saudi Arabia opening to the world, I felt a responsibility to present my country as I see it — authentic, layered and artistic,” she said.

Candles became the starting point of that story. More than fragrance, they are tributes to memory. Musk reflects the warmth of Jeddah, rose captures the calm elegance of Taif, and oud represents the depth and strength of Riyadh.

Hand-painted details and carefully chosen colors complete the sensory narrative.

The idea for her foldable side tables emerged during a walk along Jeddah’s corniche. Watching families gather spontaneously by the sea reminded her of the informal spaces that connect people — a feeling she also associates with historic Al-Balad.

“I wanted to create something simple and functional that carries that spirit of gathering,” she said.

The concept expanded to Diriyah — old and new — and to AlUla, where history and futurism coexist.

Yet it is tablescaping that remains closest to her heart. “I never choose pieces randomly,” she said. “I imagine the people around the table, the dishes being served, the conversations happening.”

For Daftardar, every bowl, riser and glass element forms part of a complete narrative. Every table tells a story.

Her ultimate aim is clear: to reflect Saudi Arabia as she feels it — warm, generous and deeply rooted. A place where modernity meets origin, and tradition evolves without losing its soul.

That is where Ma Maison by Rola lives — in the space between memory and modernity — and it is a story she is proud to tell.