Arab News

When the chips are down

Carrom playing, an age-old pasttime, is helping families in Saudi Arabia keep the lockdown blues at bay

- Aseel Bashraheel Jeddah Ruba Obaid Jeddah

When the global coronaviru­s pandemic hit, people in some countries ignored it, while others sang from their balconies at the time of lockdown.

In Saudi Arabia, residents trooped to toy stores to buy an all-butforgott­en traditiona­l board game, carrom, which quickly sold out across the Kingdom.

Carrom is a wooden table-top board game that bears many similariti­es to pool. Different standards and rules exist in different parts of the world.

The board, square in shape, is often placed on four wooden legs, with each player occupying one side of the square.

Demand for carrom boards rocketed as lockdowns and curfews aimed at halting the spread of the coronaviru­s forced Saudis to look for ways to keep boredom at bay. For many families, there is no better way to stay entertaine­d than by playing carrom, a board game that both old and young enjoy. Carrom is popular in many parts of the Gulf region, especially in the coastal areas of Saudi Arabia, where its appeal cuts across all age groups. Majid Al-Dosari, an engineer working from home in Jeddah, considers himself lucky to have bought a carrom board just days before the item sold out.

“I got into it a few weeks ago after playing games with my future in-laws, and I wanted to get one for my family,” he told Arab News.

“We usually meet up for lunch, but now we play carrom together throughout the day. It’s coffee and tea and carrom with my brother, his wife and my sister.”

When Jeddah was placed under curfew, Al-Dosari placed his order through the Haraj website. The seller delivered the item to his house two days later for SR90 ($24). “Prices of carrom boards tripled afterwards, going for as much as SR300-400. They sold out very quickly,” Al-Dosari said.

In many stores in Jeddah, including shops in the city’s downtown area, the board game is now out of stock. Customers now are searching the websites of online retailers that claim to import the best carrom boards from India for delivery in Saudi Arabia.

Carrom is most commonly played during Ramadan nights as people stay up with family members or friends, waiting for the early morning call to prayer.

At the beginning of a game, small circular wooden disks, called carrom men or coins, are massed in a circle at the center of the board. The arrangemen­t is considered complete when nine black coins and nine white pieces are positioned in Y formation, surrounded by black coins and the red “queen” in the center. A puck, known as “striker,” is then used to flick carrom men and the queen into pockets located at the board’s four edges.

Carrom has a variety of names, including carrum, carum, karum, kairam and finger billiards.

While some trace carrom’s origins to Portugal, it is in India that the local version of the pastime is hugely popular, with young people gathering in cafes to socialize and unwind by playing a game.

Carrom lore suggests that the game first reached Saudi Arabia via the Hijaz region through traders from India. Over the decades, it became an important part of social life in the Kingdom, featuring in family events, all-female or all-male meetings, and even in gatherings of children. Saudi artist Najat Mutahr has highlighte­d Hijaz’s links with carrom through an artwork showing grandparen­ts playing the board game with their grandson. Saad Al-Suwaiyan, a Saudi anthropolo­gist, has described carrom as one of the games played by Saudis for generation­s and whose appeal has no age limits.

Tribute has been paid in the 12th volume of Al-Suwaiyan’s series “Traditiona­l Culture of Saudi Arabia,” which is dedicated to popular games and their significan­ce in Arab and Saudi social life.

References to carrom are also to be found in Saudi literature. In her book “Carrom,” published in 2019 by Dar Molhimon, author Rehab Abu Zeid says the rules of the game help tackle issues such as patriarchy and paternalis­m, with the first stroke of a game unleashing chaos in the lives of the novel’s characters.

A carrom game is a competitio­n between two individual players or two teams of two players each.

Rival teams are assigned white or black coins, and each team tries to win by sinking all nine coins of their color in the pockets and securing the red-colored queen. The queen can only be pursued after at least one carrom man of the player’s color has been secured. It cannot be secured if its pocketing is not followed up by the sinking of a carrom man of the player’s color. If either condition is not met, the queen has to be placed back in the middle of the board.

Each black and white piece counts as one point, while the queen counts as five (three universall­y) points.

The scoring system varies from region to region, but in most parts of Saudi Arabia, the team that collects 21 points (25 universall­y) wins the game.

Even within the Kingdom, there are variations of the game. The most common, Money or Fuloos, pits two individual­s against each

A carrom game is a competitio­n between two individual players or two teams of two players each. Rival teams are assigned white or black coins before the game starts, and each team tries to win by sinking all nine coins of their color in the pockets and securing the red-colored queen. The queen can only be pursued after at least one carrom man of the player’s color has been secured. It cannot be secured if its pocketing is not followed up by the sinking of a carrom man of the player’s color.

If either condition is not met, the queen has to be placed back in the middle of the board. Each black and white piece counts as one point, while the queen counts as 5 (3 universall­y) points. The scoring system varies from region to region, but in most parts of Saudi Arabia, the team that collects 21 points (25 universall­y) wins the game.

FINDTHEAPP

Digital 3D versions of carrom are available on Google Play and Apple App Store.

other. Players can collect points, starting from five for a black piece, 10 for a white and 50 points for the queen. The player who collects the most points wins. The arrangemen­ts of the coins can vary, but the queen remains central.

Knowledge of the rules of the game are once again in demand in Saudi households.

“I grew up playing carrom with my mom and her family,” Nahid Noor, a 39-year-old teacher from Jeddah, told Arab News. “The competitio­n tended to be fierce. A tournament would often take place in the course of a gathering.”

Noor, a mother of two, said that over the years, her family lost the habit of carrom playing. The game was played only rarely — until the coronaviru­s lockdowns began.

She describes her family’s carrom board as battered and old, but invaluable. “I just can’t seem to find another one of such high quality. I think my mother bought it from a toy shop in Jeddah seven years ago,” she said. According to Noor, the board game has made family gatherings more enjoyable during a tense and difficult time.

Late nights are marked by family banter, laughter and, at times, shrieks of disappoint­ment from players when they miss a toss.

“We are all stuck at home now, with nothing to pass the time after everyone is done with their work and chores,” she told Arab News. “So, we are pulling out the old carrom board and starting to play the game again.”

 ?? Photo by Rashid (@irashedz) ?? For many Saudi families, there is no better way to stay entertaine­d during the time of coronaviru­s lockdowns than by playing a board game that both young and old enjoy.
Photo by Rashid (@irashedz) For many Saudi families, there is no better way to stay entertaine­d during the time of coronaviru­s lockdowns than by playing a board game that both young and old enjoy.

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