The Oklahoman

Saudi festival showcases mountains, flower crowns

- By Amr Nabil

AL-SO U DA H, Saudi Arabia — Atop a string of green mountains in Saudi Arabia, a month long festival drew a medley of yoga enthusiast­s, extreme adventure seekers, tourists and traditiona­l Saudi families—many wearing colorful flower crowns native to the region as the kingdom looks for ways to revamp its image and build up tourism.

The al-Soudah festival, which ran throughout the month of August, gave visitors a chance to experience a unique region in Saudi Arabia and take part in outdoor sports like hiking, mountain biking, paraglidin­g, horseback riding, zip lining and bungee jumping. Thousands also attended concerts by Middle Eastern superstars.

Scenes of women zip lining and young Saudis at concerts, while neverthele­ss in a remote village, are a stark departure from the ultra conservati­ve policies that for decades barred concerts and gender mixing, as well as shunned women's sports in the kingdom.

There forms are being pushed by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the king's powerful 34- yearold son. He is looking to rev amp the country' s economy to become more resilient in the face of lower oil prices. Boosting domestic spending and opening the country to foreign tourists are seen as ways to create more jobs for the millions of young Saudis who will be entering t he workforce and looking for jobs in the coming years.

The al- Soudah festival attracted between 12,000 and 15,000 visitors per day, said Husameddin alMadani, who oversaw the event. Most visitors to the festival were Saudi citizens, but it also drew foreign tourists.

Unlike Saudi Arabia' s major cities — which have limited outdoor spaces for sports, especially for women who must wear long flowing robes known as abayas in public — Saudi women in al-Soudah wore fitted jeans and sneakers under their rolled up abayas to hike up the mountain. Other Saudi women were seen zip lining between cliffs. In keeping with local custom, many kept their faces and hair covered.

The weather in August in the village of al-Soudah, located in the southwest A sir province, is a comfortabl­e 22 degrees Celsius (70 Fahrenheit) in August, unlike the capital, Riyadh, or the coastal city of Jiddah, where temperatur­es exceed 43 degrees Celsius (105 Fahrenheit) throughout the summer. In the winter, parts of the mountain range see snow.

Al- Soudah sits on part of the Sarawat Mountain range in the southwest of the Arabian Peninsula, some 3,000 meters (9,840 feet) above sea level. Its highlands are covered in the green of juniper trees. The area is also home to baboons, who were kept away from the festival with help from Human Wildlife Solutions based in Cape Town, South Africa.

 ?? [AMR NABIL/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Saudi tourists take in the view from a mountain Aug. 22 during the al-Soudah festival in Abha, southwest Saudi Arabia, Thursday.
[AMR NABIL/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Saudi tourists take in the view from a mountain Aug. 22 during the al-Soudah festival in Abha, southwest Saudi Arabia, Thursday.

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