Saudi ambassador sends message of peace as Expo Osaka nears

Saudi Ambassador to Japan Dr. Ghazi Faisal Binzagr at the Saudi Pavilion Expo 2025 Osaka, Kansai. (ANJ)
Short Url
Updated 10 April 2025
Follow

Saudi ambassador sends message of peace as Expo Osaka nears

TOKYO: The Osaka-Kansai Expo opens on April 13 and Saudi Ambassador to Japan Dr. Ghazi Faisal Binzagr says the event “sends a message about the importance of standing together for connections, prosperity and innovation at a time when the world faces many challenges.” 

Ambassador Binzagr was in Osaka on Wednesday at the Saudi Arabia Pavilion and took the opportunity to emphasize the close relationship the Kingdom has with Japan.

In addition, he said that Saudi Arabia was undergoing an important national “transformation” and this “carries many of the very values that are part of what Expo stands for: Sustainable economic growth and prosperity for the world. 

Ambassador Binzagr said that Saudi Arabia shared many similar values with Japan — the two countries are celebrating 70 years of diplomatic relations this year — and noted that the next Expo would be held in Riyadh. 

The Saudi Arabia Pavilion, he said, represented innovation and creating opportunities for the next generation, as well as “values that are important in the realization that peace and prosperity happens when we all commit to it.” 

He added: “Our pavilion highlights such a spirit and we’ve tried very hard to bring Saudi Arabia to Japan through this pavilion so that a visitor that walks through it will get a glimpse of our heritage, which we are honored by, and will see the dynamism taking place in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia today as well as a glimpse of our future and where we’re heading. 

“This future includes exciting projects such as Al-Qadiyah and NEOM, but the pavilion also showcases down-to-earth aspects of Saudi culture such as our coffee and dates ...  hospitality that has been part of traditions for centuries.”  

The pavilion will present more than 700 significant events that will capture different elements and aspects of Saudi Arabia with themes such as art, music, nature and business. 

Anticipating the excitement of hosting the next Expo in Riyadh in 2030, Ambassador Binzagr said: “It’s always an honor to receive the torch from Japan and take it forward.

“As ambassador to Saudi Arabia, I feel there’s such deep alignment, not just in key values, but in the importance of embracing the challenge, of being simultaneously proud of your heritage, and yet also relevant for today and eager to be shapers of the future.

“That’s a balance that we share with Japan. And when we take the torch from Japan, we feel we take that journey forward. Today, you visit us in our home in Japan. Tomorrow, we hope you visit us in your home in Saudi Arabia,” he said.

 


Young photographer highlights Qatif’s natural springs

Updated 10 December 2025
Follow

Young photographer highlights Qatif’s natural springs

RIYADH: Young photographer Redha Al-Hammad is documenting the fading natural springs of Qatif, a landscape shaped by water for thousands of years, before their stories disappear.

His new project, “O Breaker of the Louz,” captures the cultural memory surrounding the springs that once sustained one of the oldest settlements in the Arabian Peninsula.

Alhammad, a 20-year-old visual artist from Qatif and student at the American University of Sharjah, developed the project to preserve his hometown’s identity and share its untold narratives.

Qatif’s springs once fueled its agricultural prosperity, nourished date-palm droves, supported early communities, and served as fathering spaces for trade, social life and storytelling. Today, only one spring — Ayn Al-Labbani — still flows.

With limited written research available, Al-Hammad relied on oral histories from relatives and community elders.

“The good thing about being from a small city is that everyone knows everyone,” he told Arab News. “The stories that we hear … that our parents and our older family members tell us … a lot of the time they can kind of … get drowned out.”

One of his key sources was Abdulrasul Al-Gheryafi, an English teacher and local historian who grew up swimming in the springs and has long studied their disappearance. His firsthand accounts shaped the project and provided the folktale that inspired its title.

Al-Hammad began photographing at Ayn Al-Labbani, where locals still gather. He initially “had no idea” what the work would become until Al-Gheryafi shared the tale of a knight who encountered a mysterious voice while at a spring. The project became centered on the idea that springs are more than water sources; they are magical spaces embedded with communal memory and identity.

Al-Hammad wrote a poem based on the story to accompany the images and express what photography alone could not.

What started out as field notes for his research naturally formed as poetic lines, which luckily earned the seal of approval from poet, friend and collaborator Dalia Mustafa.

“Seeing her develop as a writer as well, that helped me come to terms with what poetry could be within the context of photographic work,” he said.

The project blends documentary photography with lyrical elements, a technique Al-Hammad first explored in “Mahanet” (“Did you not yearn for me?”), created with Mustafa during the Jameel Arts Centre Youth Assembly.

Told through low-contrast, dreamlike images, “Mahanet” maps memories, grief and changing landscapes in Qatif.

“I kind of recreated this experience that I had with my dad whenever I would go back home and he would drive me around,” Al-Hammad said, recounting how his father would explain how a sea once existed where there is now a residential area, or which streets were once fields of palm trees.

His second project, “L3eeb” (“Player”), developed under the Kingdom Photography Award, examines the role of football in transforming overlooked spaces into communal “third spaces” for Saudi youth.

Al-Hammad was mentored by photographer, visual artist and photo book publisher Roi Saade, whose guidance he describes as invaluable: “It fit perfectly, the pairing, because he works in kind of the same realm of narrative-based work. And he was with me every step of the way.

“The Kingdom Photography Award program is very important for people like me who are at the early stages of their artistic journey and have something to say, would definitely benefit from having a platform and … the kind of guidance and mentorship that the professionals around me provided.”

All Al-Hammad’s work centers on his hometown, Qatif. Initially, his photography was personal, helping him reconnect with home after years abroad. Over time, he expanded his focus to share Qatif’s culture and heritage with wider audiences, emphasizing the region has as rich and vibrant a voice as other parts of the Kingdom. 

Al-Hammad and Mustafa plan to turn “Mahanet” into a book next year, continuing their collaboration. 

Citing Saudi Arabia’s rich cultural diversity, Al-Hammad hopes similar opportunities expand to other artistic mediums. Through his work, he seeks to inspire others to document their communities, preserve local heritage and contribute to a broader understanding of the Kingdom’s identity.