Arab News

On top of the world: Saudi woman conqueror of Everest seeks to inspire

-

SHARJAH: Adventurer Raha Moharrak, the first Saudi woman and youngest Arab to conquer Everest, urged women in the Saudi Arabia to “challenge themselves” as she arrived back in the region.

Her group of four, including a Qatari royal, a Palestinia­n and an Iranian, was greeted with cheers and garlands of flowers on arrival from Nepal late Sunday at Sharjah Internatio­nal Airport in the United Arab Emirates.

“It was unbelievab­le,” an emotional 25- year- old Moharrak, covered from head to toe in an abaya, told AFP.

“I’m the first but I really hope I’m not the last,” she said. “I hope it awakens the intention in ( Saudi) women to challenge themselves more.”

Moharrak reached the peak of Everest on May 19, in a first for Saudi Arabia, where women are not allowed to drive and where their sporting activities are limited.

She left her home in the Red Sea port of Jeddah on April 3 after a year and a half of rigorous training.

By reaching the highest point in the world, she said she has now achieved her ambition of climbing nine mountains, including in Europe, Tanzania, the South Pole and Argentina.

Speaking to AFP by telephone from Jeddah, her father Hassan said: “I’m very proud of her... It’s great what she managed to tell people here and everywhere.”

Moharrak, who had worked hard to convince her family to allow her to scale the 8,848meter mountain, is also the youngest Arab to reach the peak of Everest.

Her parents had “faced disagreeme­nts from family members and people in Saudi Arabia in general,” she told AFP.

“As a Saudi girl, it’s normal that I get negative feedback, but it was minimal and the good outweighed the bad,” she added.

Awaiting her arrival at Sharjah airport was the Saudi embassy’s cultural attache in the UAE, Abdul Mohsen Al-Harthi.

“This is a message from a woman who wants to say ‘I have reserved a place for myself among you men’,” said Harthi.

“The message is for men in Saudi saying that ‘I, a daughter of this country, have achieved top positions and am capable of doing whatever men can do’,” he said.

Saudi Arabia this month gave the green light for girls at private schools to take part in sport. The Kingdom sent two women athletes to the London Olympics last summer.

“I did nothing against my culture and religion,” said Moharrak, a slim and tall brunette. “You don’t have to go against society to achieve amazing things.”

Moharrak, like many other Saudi women, hopes that “we do drive one day,” but if this is difficult to bring about, “there are so many other more important things you can be great at.”

Her Palestinia­n co- climber Raed Zidan said he had left behind a political message on Everest.

“We spent a long time on the mountain... We met climbers from all over the world,” he told reporters. “I told them about the Palestinia­n cause, about our prisoners in the jails of the Israeli occupation.”

Zidan is only the second Palestinia­n to summit Everest after Suzanne Al-Houby completed the feat in 2011, becoming the first Arab woman to reach the top.

With Moharrak and Zidan was Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdullah Al-Thani — a young member of Qatar’s ruling family and the tiny emirate’s first to make the climb.

Their Iranian companion, Masoud Mohammad, suffered from frostbite in his foot which will take months to heal.

All four, graduates of the American University of Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates, climbed Everest to raise funds to help educate Nepalese children.

Thani said they have succeeded in raising “one million dollars.”

 ??  ?? From left, Iranian Masoud Mohammed, Qatari Sheikh Mohammed Bin Abdullah Al-Thani, Palestinia­n Raed Zidan and Saudi Raha Moharrak flash the victory sign on their arrival from Nepal at UAE’s Sharjah airport late Sunday. (AFP)
From left, Iranian Masoud Mohammed, Qatari Sheikh Mohammed Bin Abdullah Al-Thani, Palestinia­n Raed Zidan and Saudi Raha Moharrak flash the victory sign on their arrival from Nepal at UAE’s Sharjah airport late Sunday. (AFP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia