Ithra’s Eid celebration promises to ‘bloom with joy’

While all activities at Ithra’s Eid are free, select events require you to purchase a ticket to enter. (Supplied)
Short Url
Updated 06 April 2024
Follow

Ithra’s Eid celebration promises to ‘bloom with joy’

  • The Children’s Museum provides ample chances for the youngsters to have fun while learning

DHAHRAN: Eid Al-Fitr festivities at the King Abdulaziz Center for World Culture, Ithra, will have a spring theme this year with the tagline “blooms with joy.” From April 11-13, the center will be filled with fun and educational activities for the whole family.

Eid at Ithra will be open from 4 p.m. until 11:30 p.m. on all its designated Eid days.

Chocolate lovers can create their own tasty creations at the heart of Ithra, in the Plaza area, from opening time until 11 p.m. There will be a station set up with milk and white chocolate where participants will be able to add any — or all — toppings provided to make their own chocolate bar.




While all activities at Ithra’s Eid are free, select events require you to purchase a ticket to enter. (Supplied)

The Plaza will also be the scene for live music throughout the three nights.

Up the famous escalator, in the exhibition area in the library, will be plenty of Eid-centric storytelling. “In Ithra's Eid we will share the joy through stories, meet new characters, gain values, and answer questions,” Ithra said in a statement. The library will also host an interactive game — or a few.

SPEEDREAD

Eid at Ithra will be open from 4 p.m. until 11:30 p.m. on all its designated Eid days.

Outside in the Lush Garden, an interactive maze will be set up that will challenge visitors to solve quests along the way.

At the Energy Exhibit, experts will perform live experiments in an attempt to answer interesting questions, such as: Does science factor into Eid decorations? Do bubbles have chemical reactions? What makes light glow?




While all activities at Ithra’s Eid are free, select events require you to purchase a ticket to enter. (Supplied)

Each day at 4:30 p.m., three short films will be shown at the cinema: “Saleeg” features a stubborn grandmother who accidentally boils a pot of rice too long in the kitchen and is forced to seek assistance from strangers; “Radimah” is about jasmine — the aromatic plant with deep roots in the Jazan region; while “Alrufea” is a documentary about a community of the same name.  

At 8 p.m. each day, Ithra’s own “Valley Road,” a fantastical film that tells a Saudi-centric story, will be shown at the cinema. The films will be in Arabic with English subtitles.

While all activities at Ithra’s Eid are free, select events require you to purchase a ticket to enter.

The Children’s Museum provides ample chances for the youngsters to have fun while learning. The Eid Around the World program promises to reveal global and local Eid traditions and rituals.

The Energy Exhibit will offer a live family play titled: “The Village of Happiness.”

Each night of Eid, the Ithra Theater will host two live performances of “Hikayat Farah with Chorolla.” The first hour-long show starts at 6:30 p.m. and the other at 8:30 p.m.  

Tickets can be bought directly at Ithra on the day of the event, with a discount for Ithra members.

 


Saudi mine-clearance project in Yemen destroys 4,235 explosive devices in a day

Updated 22 January 2026
Follow

Saudi mine-clearance project in Yemen destroys 4,235 explosive devices in a day

  • Project Masam aims to rid Yemen of all mines to help ensure the highest standards of safety and security for the Yemeni people

LONDON: Saudi Arabia’s Project Masam cleared 4,235 mines, unexploded ordnance and other explosive devices in a single day from Bab Al-Mandab region in southwestern Yemen, as part of its mission to protect civilians.

Osama Al-Gosaibi, the project’s director general, said it aims to rid Yemen of all mines to help ensure the highest standards of safety and security for the Yemeni people.

On Wednesday, the project’s teams destroyed 33 anti-tank mines, 31 anti-personnel mines, 86 miscellaneous shells, 2,750 assorted rounds, 1,291 breakers and valves used in devices, 12 grenades, two Katyusha rockets, a missile, 15 shell arrows, and 14 other explosive devices.

Masam’s teams are tasked with clearing villages, roads and areas around schools to facilitate the safe movement of civilians and delivery of humanitarian aid.

The project trains local people to become demining engineers, provides them with modern equipment to do the job, and also offers support to Yemenis injured by explosive devices.