Ithra marks 10 years of iRead with awards, workshops

The King Abdulaziz Center for World Culture concluded the 10th Ithra Reading Program (iRead) competition on Saturday, celebrating a decade with the theme “Reading Leaves a Lasting Impression.” (Supplied)
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Updated 07 December 2025
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Ithra marks 10 years of iRead with awards, workshops

  • 2-day event brings together competition finalists from across Arab world  

DHAHRAN: The King Abdulaziz Center for World Culture concluded the 10th Ithra Reading Program (iRead) competition on Saturday, celebrating a decade with the theme “Reading Leaves a Lasting Impression.”

The two-day event brought together finalists from across the Arab world, alongside a full cultural program of panels, performances, and book signings. Amin Nasser, the president and CEO of Saudi Aramco, presented awards to this year’s winners. 

Libyan Nesreen Abolouifa was named Arab World Reader of the Year; Morocco’s Hiba Yayamout won Reader of the Year for Best Text; Algeria’s Sarah Ben Ammar secured Reader of the Year by Public Vote; and Saudi participant Lana Al-Ghamdi was named Promising Reader. Sahar Al-Jehani was honored as Reading Ambassador, and Jeel El Jazira Private School in Jeddah received the Reading School Award. 

The Debater of the Year Team Award went to Amin Shaaban from Tunisia, Younes Al-Issaoui from Morocco, and Ben Ammar from Algeria.

The ceremony was broadcast live for the first time on Thaqafeyah, Saudia Alaan and channels in Tunisia, Morocco and Libya.

Ithra Director Mussab Al-Saaran praised the program’s impact, noting that more than half the hosts and moderators were former participants. He said: “They are reading (role) models who bring skills in dialogue, debate and critical thinking.”

He also announced the launch of the Arab Reading Index to track trends across the region.

As part of the festivities, the iconic Ithra building, which was designed by Norwegian firm Snohetta, glowed purple.

Norwegian Jon Fosse, the winner of the 2023 Nobel Prize in Literature, appeared in a Nobel Minds session moderated by Tariq Khawaji, cultural consultant to Ithra. 

Panels and book signings featured writers including Hoda Barakat, Ahmed Al-Huqail and Ibrahim Nasrallah.

The festival also featured the “iRead Marathon Screen” and the “iRead Exhibition,” documenting the competition’s decade-long journey, as well as the Kutubiya pre-owned book exchange.

Moroccan writer Mohammed Ait Hanna led a reading workshop, while industry experts gave their services in a special “behind the book” feature. An editor, a book cover designer and a literary agent conducted sessions.

Ithra staged “On the Banks of an Old Promise” in honor of the late Ghazi Al-Gosaibi, with several artists bringing Al-Gosaibi’s world to life with readings and artworks inspired by his themes.

The iRead competition received three honors this year: the Cultural Communication Award, the Athar Award, and the Arab Federation for Libraries and Information Award.


SDAIA president says Saudi Arabia is building an integrated AI ecosystem

Updated 20 February 2026
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SDAIA president says Saudi Arabia is building an integrated AI ecosystem

RIYADH: Saudi Data and Artificial Intelligence Authority President Abdullah Al-Ghamdi says that Saudi Arabia is moving steadily to establish artificial intelligence as a trusted national capability, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Guided by the objectives of Saudi Vision 2030, Al-Ghamdi said the goal is to use AI to help develop government services, enhance competitiveness, build human capacity and improve quality of life through a comprehensive strategy based on three main pillars that unlock the potential of this technology and achieve sustainable developmental impact.

“The first pillar focuses on building human capacity and enhancing readiness to engage with AI technologies,” he said.

The second pillar is building an integrated national AI ecosystem that drives expansion and innovation by developing advanced digital infrastructure that enables various sectors to adopt AI applications efficiently, consistently and with effective governance, Al-Ghamdi said.

The third pillar, he said, is governance that ensures responsible and measurable AI through a national framework aligned with international standards.

This came during Al-Ghamdi’s speech at a high-level ministerial session held on Thursday on the sidelines of the AI Impact Summit 2026 in New Delhi.

He is heading the Saudi delegation, and the session saw broad participation from heads of state, decision-makers and technology leaders from around the world.

Al-Ghamdi also had a meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday evening, discussed AI cooperation and expressed his gratitude for hosting the summit and for the hospitality extended to the participants.