Muslim Panto returns to UK with ‘Snow Brown and Her Seven Chachay’

The Muslim Panto will return to stages across the UK during the coming festive season with a new touring production titled “Snow Brown and Her Seven Chachay” (uncles), which playfully reimagines the classic fairy tale story of Snow White. (Supplied)
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Updated 10 November 2025
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Muslim Panto returns to UK with ‘Snow Brown and Her Seven Chachay’

  • The show is created by and stars comedian and actor Abdullah Afzal, best known for his role as Amjad Malik in BBC sitcom ‘Citizen Khan’
  • The proceeds from performances across the country will help support humanitarian efforts in Palestine

LONDON: The Muslim Panto will return to stages across the UK during the coming festive season with a new touring production titled “Snow Brown and Her Seven Chachay” (uncles), which playfully reimagines the classic fairy tale story of Snow White.

The show, the proceeds of which will help support humanitarian efforts in Palestine, has been created by comedian and actor Abdullah Afzal, best known for his role as Amjad Malik in the BBC sitcom “Citizen Khan” from 2012-2016. He wrote, produced and will star in the panto, which he describes as offering “giggles, halal comedy and a fresh twist” on the traditional story.

Featuring a cast drawn entirely from ethnic minority backgrounds in North West England, including actors with origins in Yemen and Morocco, the production continues the Muslim Panto’s mission to make traditional British pantomime more inclusive and relatable.

Though pantomime has long been a staple of festive-season entertainment across the UK, the Muslim Panto has helped introduce the art form to many South Asian and Muslim audiences since its debut in 2017. Afzal was involved from the start before taking a more leading creative role as it grew.

Previous hits include “Cinder’aliyah” and “Beauty and the Balaah,” and the shows have been praised for blending slapstick humor and social commentary with cultural representation, creating a space where Muslim families can see their own experiences reflected on stage.

“This is more than just a panto, it’s a chance to come together, laugh together and give back together,” Afzal said. “We can’t wait to share ‘Snow Brown and Her Seven Chachay’ with audiences nationwide.”

Performances begin in late November and continue until January at venues across the UK. Visit muslimpantotickets.com for more details.


Italian cooking and its rituals get UN designation as world heritage

Updated 10 December 2025
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Italian cooking and its rituals get UN designation as world heritage

  • UNESCO added the rituals surrounding Italian food preparation and consumption to its list of the world’s traditional practices and expressions

ROME: Italian food is known and loved around the world for its fresh ingredients and palate-pleasing tastes, but on Wednesday, the UN’s cultural agency gave foodies another reason to celebrate their pizza, pasta and tiramisu by listing Italian cooking as part of the world’s “intangible” cultural heritage.
UNESCO added the rituals surrounding Italian food preparation and consumption to its list of the world’s traditional practices and expressions. It’s a designation celebrated alongside the more well-known UNESCO list of world heritage sites, on which Italy is well represented with locations like the Rome’s Colosseum and the ancient city of Pompeii.
The citation didn’t mention specific dishes, recipes or regional specialties, but highlighted the cultural importance Italians place on the rituals of cooking and eating: the Sunday family lunch, the tradition of grandmothers teaching grandchildren how to fold tortellini dough just so, even the act of coming together to share a meal.
“Cooking is a gesture of love, a way in which we tell something about ourselves to others and how we take care of others,” said Pier Luigi Petrillo, a member of the Italian UNESCO campaign and professor of comparative law at Rome’s La Sapienza University.
“This tradition of being at the table, of stopping for a while at lunch, a bit longer at dinner, and even longer for big occasions, it’s not very common around the world,” he said.
Premier Giorgia Meloni celebrated the designation, which she said honored Italians and their national identity.
“Because for us Italians, cuisine is not just food or a collection of recipes. It is much more: it is culture, tradition, work, wealth,” she said in a statement.
It’s by no means the first time a country’s cuisine has been recognized as a cultural expression: In 2010, UNESCO listed the “gastrnomic meal of the French” as part of the world’s intangible heritage, highlighting the French custom of celebrating important moments with food.
Other national cuisines and cultural practices surrounding them have also been added in recent years: the “cider culture” of Spain’s Asturian region, the Ceebu Jen culinary tradition of Senegal, the traditional way of making cheese in Minas Gerais, Brazil.
UNESCO meets every year to consider adding new cultural practices or expressions onto its lists of so-called “intangible heritage.” There are three types: One is a representative list, another is a list of practices that are in “urgent” need of safeguarding and the third is a list of good safeguarding practices.
This year, the committee meeting in New Delhi considered 53 nominations for the representative list, which already had 788 items. Other nominees included the Swiss yodelling, the handloom weaving technique used to make Bangladesh’s Tangail sarees, and Chile’s family circuses.
In its submission, Italy emphasized the “sustainability and biocultural diversity” of its food. Its campaign noted how Italy’s simple cuisine valued seasonality, fresh produce and limiting waste, while its variety highlighted its regional culinary differences and influences from migrants and others.
“For me, Italian cuisine is the best, top of the range. Number one. Nothing comes close,” said Francesco Lenzi, a pasta maker at Rome’s Osteria da Fortunata restaurant, near the Piazza Navona. “There are people who say ‘No, spaghetti comes from China.’ Okay, fine, but here we have turned noodles into a global phenomenon. Today, wherever you go in the world, everyone knows the word spaghetti. Everyone knows pizza.”
Lenzi credited his passion to his grandmother, the “queen of this big house by the sea” in Camogli, a small village on the Ligurian coast where he grew up. “I remember that on Sundays she would make ravioli with a rolling pin.”
“This stayed with me for many years,” he said in the restaurant’s kitchen.
Mirella Pozzoli, a tourist visiting Rome’s Pantheon from the Lombardy region in northern Italy, said the mere act of dining together was special to Italians:
“Sitting at the table with family or friends is something that we Italians cherish and care about deeply. It’s a tradition of conviviality that you won’t find anywhere else in the world.”
Italy already has 13 other cultural items on the UNESCO intangible list, including Sicilian puppet theater, Cremona’s violin craftsmanship and the practice moving of livestock along seasonal migratory routes known as transhumance.
Italy appeared in two previous food-related listings: a 2013 citation for the “Mediterranean diet” that included Italy and half a dozen other countries, and the 2017 recognition of Naples’ pizza makers.
Petrillo, the Italian campaign member, said after 2017, the number of accredited schools to train Neapolitan pizza makers increased by more than 400 percent.
“After the UNESCO recognition, there were significant economic effects, both on tourism and and the sales of products and on education and training,” he said.