Aljoharah Alrasheed discusses her AlUla Design Award-winning piece

Teeb, AlUla Terrains Dates Serving Set, Arts AlUla, 2023. (Supplied)
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Updated 27 October 2023
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Aljoharah Alrasheed discusses her AlUla Design Award-winning piece

DUBAI: Aljoharah Alrasheed, head of design at Saudi brand Teeb, discusses the company’s AlUla Design Award-winning piece –  ‘AlUla Terrains: Dates Serving Set,’ created in response to a brief that asked for ‘cultural retail’ objects inspired by “the heritage, landscape and artistic legacies of AlUla.” 




Aljoharah Alrasheed is the head of design at Saudi brand Teeb. (Supplied)

We participated in the previous AlUla Design Award and we were really excited to do it again this time. Every aspect of AlUla is really inspiring, especially the natural landscape surrounding it. This time, we were really inspired by the harrat, which were formed by volcanic lava a long time ago.  

We wanted to do something related to the culture; to the heritage of Saudi Arabia, bearing in mind that the product should have both aesthetic beauty and a function. That is the challenge we had, and we nailed it.  

As a product, we wanted to portray the hospitality aspect of Saudi culture. What’s common in, I’d bet, every Saudi house is that the first thing you serve visitors is Saudi coffee accompanied by dates. Dates are really something we cherish in Saudi Arabia. We consider them like gold in our country. And anyone who visits AlUla, any monument or any historical location, once you step out of the car, someone will approach you with a plate of dates and a cup of Saudi coffee. 

This date set is a piece of art you can put on the shelf in your living room, yet it’s very functional. It’s stacked very minimally, but every layer has a function. The top part is where you put the seeds from the dates, the second part is where you dip the dates in tahini, and the last compartment is for serving the dates.  

At our company, Teeb, we have a certain process; every product we create is always around a story — whether local or international. We believe the gift starts with a story. What is it about? Is it a thing I’d go tell someone about? We research, we dig deep for every piece we make. And they all have a hand-crafted quality to them. In this case, it’s a stone carver. We found a great carver; he does it purely by hand. We worked closely with him until we got this amazing clean cut piece that looks like a volcano.  

We can truly say this is made in Saudi: it uses Saudi mediums — basalt and white stone — and it was designed in Saudi by a Saudi designer.  


Mini op-ed: We need a ‘potluck’ culture of reading

Updated 10 March 2026
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Mini op-ed: We need a ‘potluck’ culture of reading

DUBAI: The number of times we hear, “My kids don’t read,” “I don’t have the time,” or “Do people even read anymore?” is alarming.

With newspapers declared dead and YouTube summaries or ChatGPT reviews becoming the main course of words, I often wonder: have those asking these questions considered the role they play?

Each of us — school representatives, librarians, parents, educators, children, and even occasional readers — must ask whether we are helping create a culture where reaching for a book feels as natural as reaching for a smartphone.

Even the smallest effort counts. I think of a reading culture as a potluck where everyone brings something small, and together it becomes a wholesome meal. If you do not know where to begin, look around.

Purva Grover is an author, poet, playwright, stage director, TEDx speaker, and creative entrepreneur. (Supplied)

The UAE is rich in public libraries including in Sharjah and Dubai, such as the Mohammed Bin Rashid Library, which is proof that access is not the issue. 

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia is embedding reading into its national identity under Vision 2030 through digital libraries, major book fairs, and daily school reading.

Not a reader? Events such as the Emirates Airline Festival of Literature or the Sharjah International Book Fair offer easy entry points for conversation, community and curiosity.

They are built on cultural blocks that subtly encourage even non-readers into reading spaces. You could even start a reading club. I run one in Dubai called The Reading Village and have seen its quiet magic.

Culture is built by saying yes. And no to pirated PDFs on WhatsApp, as well as unchecked screen habits.

Tiny habits can help build an environment where reading becomes as much a part of our lives as scrolling on Netflix to decide what to binge-watch next.

Purva Grover is an author, poet, playwright, stage director, TEDx speaker, and creative entrepreneur. She is the founder of The Reading Village, a Dubai-based community.