Riyadh Ardah: A martial dance celebrates Kingdom’s history, preserves its heritage

King Salman performs the Saudi Ardah with former US President Donald Trump at a welcome ceremony at the Murabba Palace in Riyadh. (AFP)
King Salman performs the Saudi Ardah with former US President Donald Trump at a welcome ceremony at the Murabba Palace in Riyadh. (AFP)
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Updated 23 September 2023
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Riyadh Ardah: A martial dance celebrates Kingdom’s history, preserves its heritage

Riyadh Ardah: A martial dance celebrates Kingdom’s history, preserves its heritage
  • Originally a martial dance, it was performed before significant battles and victories by tribes of the Arabian Peninsula
  • Nowadays the Ardah is performed during weddings, graduations, Saudi embassy events worldwide and Saudi National Day

JEDDAH: The Saudi Ardah, formerly known as the Najdi Ardah, holds global cultural importance. Originally a martial dance, it was performed before significant battles and victories by tribes of the Arabian Peninsula including the ruling family of Al-Saud.

The Ardah is a UNESCO-listed dance that combines traditional chanting, swordplay, and rhythmic drums. It was originally used to motivate warriors and embodies loyalty and pride in Saudi culture.




People perform the Saudi Ardah in Diriyah. (DGDA)

Sami Al-Shamrani, supervisor of the Heritage and Folklore Committee of the Culture and Arts Association in Jeddah and supervisor of the Arts and Heritage Club at King Abdulaziz University, said: “It’s a magnificent and exquisite form of performance art that melds dance, drumming, and poetic chants.

This art form is now an integral part of various significant events, both at the onset and conclusion of national gatherings, including concerts, national festivals, and royal ceremonies held to welcome dignitaries.”




People perform the Saudi Ardah. (Supplied)

The dance is performed on many occasions, such as weddings, graduations, various events organized by Saudi embassies worldwide and on the grand celebration of Saudi National Day.

The Ardah dance, known for its displays of strength, originated in the central region of Saudi Arabia, particularly in the Najd region. The tradition, passed down over generations, has been embraced by kings, princes and sheikhs.




People perform the Saudi Ardah. (Supplied)

According to Al-Shamrani, participants in the Ardah dance must wear the traditional Saudi dress, which includes the ghutra (headscarf) and agal (headband). They must also wear an ornamental gown called Saya or Dagla, while drummers wear Furmaliyah gowns. Attention is given to accessories like daggers, pistol holsters, and bullet belts.

Al-Shamrani said that due to deviations from the authentic essence of the Ardha dance, certain musical groups were denied permission to perform.




People perform the Saudi Ardah. (Supplied)

“A joint directive from the Royal Court and the King Abdulaziz Foundation for Research and Archives emphasized the importance of adhering to fundamental principles and established traditions. This includes preserving original elements, pillars, and poetic verses.

“Approval from the foundation is required for any creation of new verses. The Ardha dance is to be performed within its traditional elements, honoring this cherished and widely recognized dance,” he said.




King Salman performs the Saudi Ardah at the Janadriyah National Festival for Heritage and Culture in Riyadh. (SPA)

How many people participate?

Al-Shamrani said: “When the king and the crown prince are present, the assembly comprises over 150 to 200 performers, encompassing drummers and a poet responsible for conveying poetic verses to the performance segments.

“During celebrations and weddings, the performer count should not dip below 25 to 30 individuals, all (dressed) in their customary garments and paraphernalia,” he added. This includes musical instruments, drums, banners and swords, and apparel.




King Salman performs the Saudi Ardah at the Janadriyah National Festival for Heritage and Culture in Riyadh. (SPA)

How is the performance executed?

The Ardha is a collective endeavor, with participants arranged in rows, singing and performing together. The spectacle usually lasts 15 to 25 minutes, as described by Al-Shamrani.

He said: “During the Ardha, participants begin by shifting their shoulders toward their teammate’s shoulder. They then align their shoulders and lift their knees, followed by propelling their left shoulder over their teammate’s shoulder. This cycle of movements repeats throughout the performance, with the dancer maintaining the sequence.




King Salman performs the Saudi Ardah at the Janadriyah National Festival for Heritage and Culture in Riyadh. (Reuters)

“The poetic verses are passed from the first row to the opposing row, creating a poetic debate-like structure. This harmonizes with the vocal expressions and melodic rendition of the Ardah.”

Before the performance starts, the poet initiates a vocal call called muharrabah, accompanied by rhythmic beats. The rows converge, with the poet leading the chant and the drums setting the rhythm. The flag dancer starts the dance by spinning right, and the rows follow in sync.




King Salman performs the Saudi Ardah at the Janadriyah National Festival for Heritage and Culture in Riyadh. (SPA)

Al-Shamrani said: “Renowned poets, including Fahd bin Dahim, have penned poetic verses for Ardah. These poems, known for their wisdom and fervor, celebrate the Kingdom’s triumphs and have been passed down through generations.”

In Ardah, men use percussion instruments called Al-Tathleeth and strike them with bamboo rods. There is also a group of drummers who play larger drums called Al-Takhmeer, positioned behind them.




King Salman performs the Saudi Ardah at the Janadriyah National Festival for Heritage and Culture in Riyadh. (SPA)

The National Center for Saudi Ardah has guidelines in place for managing items like flags, drums, and other instruments.

The Saudi flag used in the dance routine should be at least 120 x 80 cm in size. It should be in good condition, not touching the ground or sagging. The flag bearer must be in parade uniform, carrying the flag on the left side but placing it on the right shoulder.




Former US President Donald Trump joins dancers with swords at a welcome ceremony at the Murabba Palace in Riyadh. (AFP)

In 2021, the Diriyah Gate Development Authority and the National Center for Saudi Ardah launched the Diriyah House of Ardah initiative. It aims to train young people in the art of Ardah with the help of skilled performers, contributing to the preservation and revival of the Kingdom’s cultural heritage.




Former President of France Francois Hollande performs the Saudi Ardah. (Supplied)


Backstreet Boys returning to Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi in October

Backstreet Boys returning to Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi in October
Updated 48 min 31 sec ago
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Backstreet Boys returning to Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi in October

Backstreet Boys returning to Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi in October
  • After a presale on Thursday, tickets go on sale to the general public on Friday at noon; prices start at 295 dirhams
  • The concert comes less than 18 months after their previous concert at the venue, which was part of their DNA World Tour

BEIRUT: Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi will welcome back American group the Backstreet Boys on Oct. 23, less than 18 months after their previous concert there in May last year.
Tickets for the 2023 gig, which was part of their DNA World Tour, sold out within six hours, making it one of the fastest-selling arena shows in the UAE.
Emirati newspaper The National reported on Wednesday that Nick Carter, Howie Dorough, AJ McLean and Brian Littrell will perform but fellow member Kevin Richardson will be absent because of scheduling issues.
Presale tickets will be available on the Live Nation website on Thursday before general sales begin at noon on Friday. Prices start at 295 dirhams ($80).
In our review of last year’s DNA World Tour concert, Arab News described it as a polished show with high production values that was flawless from start to finish. We said the vocals were pitch perfect, the harmonies deep, strong and vibrant, and the dance moves smoother than butter. Band members also took plenty of time between songs to talk to the audience and among themselves, and the chemistry between them was clearly still strong.
At one point, Carter, who stole the show with his incredible solo showcases, especially on “Shape of My Heart,” stopped the show and said: “I have to say something. Honest to God, coming from me, Abu Dhabi is probably the most beautiful place I’ve been to in the entire world. We love it here. I think I’m going to buy a house here.”
In January the group, which formed in 1993 in Florida and found fame with debut album “Backstreet Boys” in 1996, were on fire when they performed in Riyadh, headlining the Diriyah E-Prix after-race concerts. They enthralled the crowd with their infectious energy, signature harmonies, and a set list packed with timeless tracks.

The Yazidi nightmare
Ten years after the genocide, their torment continues
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Princess Rajwa of Jordan leaves hospital with newborn Princess Iman

Princess Rajwa of Jordan leaves hospital with newborn Princess Iman
Updated 07 August 2024
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Princess Rajwa of Jordan leaves hospital with newborn Princess Iman

Princess Rajwa of Jordan leaves hospital with newborn Princess Iman

DUBAI: Princess Rajwa of Jordan was discharged on Wednesday after giving birth to Princess Iman on Aug. 3.

Rajwa, who has Saudi origins, left the hospital accompanied by her husband, Crown Prince Hussein bin Abdullah, and their newborn daughter.

 

 

The family was greeted by the hospital staff and members of the public as they departed.

The princess wore a long, flowy dress featuring a blue and white floral pattern. The dress had a shirt-style design with a collared neckline and long sleeves, giving it a casual yet elegant appearance.

The waist is slightly cinched, which added structure to the otherwise relaxed fit of the dress. Rajwa paired the dress with white sneakers.

The Yazidi nightmare
Ten years after the genocide, their torment continues
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Jessica Kahawaty showcases luxury watchmaker in latest collaboration

Jessica Kahawaty showcases luxury watchmaker in latest collaboration
Updated 07 August 2024
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Jessica Kahawaty showcases luxury watchmaker in latest collaboration

Jessica Kahawaty showcases luxury watchmaker in latest collaboration
  • Current tie-up is with leading Swiss manufacturer
  • Australian Lebanese model works with top brands

DUBAI: Australian-Lebanese model and entrepreneur Jessica Kahawaty has added another brand campaign to her portfolio, this time with Breitling.

This week, she took to Instagram to share photos from her collaboration with the Swiss luxury watchmaker. In the series of images, she is seen wearing the brand’s Superocean Automatic 36 watch.

This product features a white dial with multicolored hour markers, including shades of yellow, orange, green, blue, red and purple. The case is crafted from stainless steel, while the unidirectional rotating bezel is accented with rose gold.

The watch includes rose gold hands with luminescent material, ensuring visibility in low-light conditions. The second hand is green, aligning with the green text on the dial. The timepiece is fitted with a white rubber strap designed for comfort and durability.

The Superocean Automatic 36 offers water resistance up to 300 meters, making it suitable for diving.

“If summer was a watch, it would be the Superocean Automatic 36. A smaller, colourful and sunnier dial,” Kahawaty captioned her Instagram post.

In the pictures, Kahawaty wore a sleeveless crop top featuring a vibrant floral print in bold colors, paired with a high-waisted, long white skirt. The skirt is detailed with two large fabric roses on the hip.

She accessorized her outfit with a wide-brimmed white hat and white open-toe sandals featuring a bow detail.

The model has featured in campaigns for numerous international brands, including Boss, Versace, CH Carolina Herrera, Gucci, Tod’s and Boucheron.

Her most recent collaboration was with the British luxury cosmetics label Charlotte Tilbury.

The model appeared in a video campaign promoting the brand’s Love Frequency perfume, which is described as a floral woody musk fragrance for women and men.

Earlier this year, she unveiled her latest project with Boss. In March, she shared polaroid-style pictures from the shoot with her Instagram followers and wrote: “Double B, Every Me. Because there’s more than one way to be a BOSS.”

 

 

That same month, Kahawaty also showcased her collaboration with Versace for Ramadan, just days after working on a similar campaign with the New York-based label CH Carolina Herrera.

The Yazidi nightmare
Ten years after the genocide, their torment continues
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Review: Debut novel of Palestinian writer explores exile, displacement through the female body

Review: Debut novel of Palestinian writer explores exile, displacement through the female body
Updated 07 August 2024
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Review: Debut novel of Palestinian writer explores exile, displacement through the female body

Review: Debut novel of Palestinian writer explores exile, displacement through the female body
  • Yasmin Zaher’s ‘The Coin’ delves into power imbalances, consumerism, elitist nature of fashion and wealth

JEDDAH: The 2024 novel “The Coin,” is the dizzying debut of Jerusalem-born Palestinian writer Yasmin Zaher, which hones in on the female body, and is written in a stream-of-consciousness narrative style.

Titled after a shekel coin the unnamed female protagonist believes she swallowed as a child, and is rusting and decomposing in her, the novel is essentially about an affluent yet displaced woman’s exploration — on her own terms —  of the pain and pleasures of life.

Zaher writes about the unraveling, or rather the becoming, of a Palestinian woman who moves to New York City with the hope of starting life afresh as a schoolteacher.

The coin is “resurrected” here, amid the dirt and poverty that plagues the American city, which the protagonist describes as: “How could the devil be the dream?” It seems to manifest as discomfort, linking the traumas of the past to her present.

The narrator befriends a homeless, yet elegant man whom she gets embroiled with in a Birkin scam. This is an exploration of the cosmopolitan city life’s obsession with consumerism and materialism, as well as the performative and elitist nature of fashion and wealth.

With a closet full of designer pieces, the woman’s refined taste in fashion is a ruse to help her navigate societal expectations against the call of her inner self. She asks herself: “I wondered what my true essence would be, if I were solitary, in nature, untamed and unconditioned?”

She is from Palestine, which she describes as “neither a country, nor the third world, it was its own thing.”

Moving to the Big Apple in pursuit of home and her ideal self, this triggers obsessive cleaning rituals because the city “embraced the dirt like it was an aesthetic.”

As a woman from a country under occupation, her own body becomes the site of power struggles, a site of cleansing rather than being ethnically cleansed out.

Her protagonist says “the women in my family placed lot of importance on being clean … perhaps because there was little else they could control in their lives.”

The narrative is mercurial in its depiction of her cleansing rituals that are juxtaposed with glimmers of violent and disturbing psychopathic thoughts, making her not just an intriguing protagonist to read, but an elusive one.

The Yazidi nightmare
Ten years after the genocide, their torment continues
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Indian channel pulls popular show ‘Barzakh’ from YouTube Pakistan after public outcry

Indian channel pulls popular show ‘Barzakh’ from YouTube Pakistan after public outcry
Updated 06 August 2024
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Indian channel pulls popular show ‘Barzakh’ from YouTube Pakistan after public outcry

Indian channel pulls popular show ‘Barzakh’ from YouTube Pakistan after public outcry
  • ‘Barzakh’ stirred a controversy in Pakistan when some viewers said they considered its themes ‘provocative’ and anti-Islam
  • The show stars Fawad Khan, Sanam Saeed, Khushhal Khan, Sajid Hasan, Salman Shahid, Nighat Choudhry and Uzma Beg

ISLAMABAD: Indian entertainment channel ‘Zindagi’ announced on Tuesday that it would be removing its popular series, ‘Barzakh,’ from YouTube Pakistan amid a public outcry over the content of the fantasy drama series.
The show stars Fawad Khan, Sanam Saeed, Khushhal Khan, Sajid Hasan, Salman Shahid, Nighat Choudhry and Uzma Beg. It premiered on July 19.
Directed by Asim Abbasi, the drama stirred a controversy in Pakistan when many viewers said they considered its themes “bold,” “provocative” and against Islamic values. 
“In light of the current public sentiment in Pakistan, we have made the decision to voluntarily withdraw Barzakh from YouTube Pakistan, effective August 9, 2024,” Zindagi said in an Instagram post.
“This decision underscores our dedication to honoring our audiences without causing alienation.”
The channel extended its gratitude to its global audience for their support for Barzakh, a show it said was “created to bring people together everywhere.”
The final episode of the fantasy drama is scheduled to air at 8pm on Tuesday. People in Pakistan can watch the show on YouTube until August 9.
The story of the show centers around a reclusive 76-year-old man who invites his estranged family to his remote valley resort for an unusual event – his wedding to the ghost of his first love, prompting reflections on life’s mysteries, the afterlife and the enduring power of love. The series tackles themes of mental health, postpartum depression, generational trauma and gender inclusivity. It also explores the role of folklore in human experience. The controversy began when two of the male leads in the series nearly share an intimate moment.