Saudi brothers make waves in open-water swimming

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The Saudi brothers completed Manhattan’s 20 Bridges swim, a 48.5 km loop around the island, and one of three swims that constitute ‘the triple crown’ of open-water swimming. (Supplied)
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Updated 18 August 2024
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Saudi brothers make waves in open-water swimming

  • Abdulrahman and Ghaith Boksmati are the first Saudis to complete Manhattan’s 20 Bridges swim

RIYADH: Abdulrahman Boksmati and Ghaith Boksmati from Jeddah are the first Saudis to complete the 20 Bridges swim in Manhattan, New York.

The 48.5 km loop around the island is one of three swims that constitute “the triple crown” of open-water swimming. The title is bestowed on swimmers who complete the Catalina Channel, the English Channel, and the largest of the three, the Manhattan 20 Bridges.

Abdulrahman, who has been swimming with Ghaith for more than 13 years, completed the English Channel swim in 2021, making him only the fourth Saudi to do so — and bringing him one swim away from earning the title.




The Saudi brothers completed Manhattan’s 20 Bridges swim, a 48.5 km loop around the island, and one of three swims that constitute ‘the triple crown’ of open-water swimming. (Supplied)

Both brothers are engineers at Saudi Aramco: Abdulrahman, 26, has a degree in electrical and electronics engineering and has been working as a control engineer for three years, and Ghaith, 23, holds a degree in computer science and engineering and has been working as a networks engineer for a year.

“I have to attribute our start with swimming to our father, to our parents,” Abdulrahman told Arab News. “My father used to be a national team swimmer, and he got us (siblings) into swimming at an early age.”

While it started as a pastime, the brothers quickly picked up the sport professionally and started training with Al-Ittihad. They joined the Golden Swimmer team in middle and high school — founded by coach Abdullah Al-Jehani — participating in both local and international swimming competitions.

HIGHLIGHTS

• Abdulrahman Boksmati completed the English Channel swim in 2021, making him only the fourth Saudi to do so.

• The 'triple crown' title is bestowed on swimmers who complete the Catalina Channel, the English Channel, and the largest of the three, the Manhattan 20 Bridges.

Even though the hot Saudi climate should encourage more swimming facilities, the brothers said that growing up it was a struggle to find accessible and affordable 25-meter pools outside of schools, compounds and gyms — and this continues to be the case.

Abdulrahman said that local swimmers are often forced to seek out other clubs’ reservation times and join their sessions.




The brothers expressed their desire to continue the swimming tradition with their families in the future as well, citing its physical and psychological benefits. (Supplied)

It was during their years at university that the brothers were first introduced to open-water swimming through Red Top Swim, a UK team led by coach Tim Denyer.

Abdulrahman said that he was unhappy with the progress he had been making in swimming and during his last year at university decided that it was time for a challenge, which is how he came to swim the English Channel.

As the only prior experience that they had was in a pool — a controlled environment — one of the first lessons the Boksmati brothers learned was how dependent open-water swimming is on the conditions of the day. Swimming the English Channel, according to Abdulrahman, can “take anywhere between eight to 16 hours.”

It was very important to keep the spirits up, push each other to the finish.

Ghaith Boksmati, Saudi swimmer

Abdulrahman swam the English Channel 40 years after the last Saudi achieved this, in 1981.

While open-water swimming has not gained much traction in the Saudi swimming community, the brothers are hopeful that many more swimmers will want to attempt such challenges once word gets around, especially since age and speed are not a prerequisite.

“A lot of people I’ve seen do the English Channel would be anywhere from their mid-20s to their mid-60s. Anyone can do it if they train well enough for it,” Abdulrahman said.

The 20 Bridges swim, unlike the English Channel’s Atlantic Ocean setting, was in the middle of a bustling metropolitan city. And with city views came city troubles.

“It was the waviest water I’ve ever swam in,” Abdulrahman said, adding that the experience can make swimmers very dizzy and nauseous.

Ghaith said that because the swim took place on a Saturday, the amount of boat traffic was unusually high: “Whenever the boats pass by, it adds more waves to the mix … that slows us down.”

He explained that the combination of the waves, waft of gasoline from boats and unpleasant smells coming from some sections of the dirty water, as well as occasionally being hit by unknown foreign objects, made the eight hour and 36 minute swim a test of patience and mental endurance.

“At one point I thought maybe this is a bit too much … you’re not swimming in a pool, you’re swimming in an ecosystem,” Ghaith said.

Abdulrahman remembered the advice he was given by Denyer before the swim to get him through: “Just imagine this is your nine-to-five, eight-hour job today. Instead of control engineering, it’s swimming. No way around it.”

And most importantly, don’t look forward. “Looking toward the end defeats the purpose, it actually demotivates you,” he said. “You swim for 30 minutes and then you look up again and it’s the same view. It takes a toll on you mentally.”

However, at the end of the day, all the troubles were worth it for the experience. “Yes, there were many obstacles we didn’t account for,” Abdulrahman said, “but it was truly a pleasure, honestly, to witness Manhattan and New York from another lens, through the water.”

When asked about training for a swim like this, the brothers emphasized the importance of cold plunges to adjust the body to low temperatures.

In the months and weeks leading up to the 20 Bridges, Abdulrahman and Ghaith woke at 5am every day to practice before their workdays started, coordinating their pace as much as possible.

They also had to work around unforeseen circumstances after Ghaith suffered a collarbone fracture during a sprint triathlon two months prior to the swim and was benched for four weeks.

On a six-hour practice swim that they completed prior to the challenge to ensure their ability to handle long distances, the brothers tested the feeding schedule they would have on swim day. The feeds come in 30-minute intervals and include a mix of carbohydrate powders and fizz-free soda to keep the swimmers’ energy levels high.

They would also use this time during the swim to check in with one another. “That was very important to keep the spirits up, push each other to the finish,” Ghaith said.

When asked what drove them to keep pursuing the sport over the years, they highlighted both personal and communal motivators.

“I want to see what I can accomplish and how much I can push myself,” Ghaith said. “The problem faced by a lot of swimmers is that swimming can get boring … you’re in the water all the time, there’s no teamwork.”

Abdulrahman said that senior swimmers would hold him accountable during training by tracking his progress online and sending a “You’re going to drown in the Channel” message anytime he missed a session. Terrifying, yet effective.

“There’s a lot of inspiration from our peers,” Ghaith said. He added that the swimming community in Saudi Arabia did a good job of keeping track of one another across different clubs, achievements and phases in life, bonded by mutual admiration and the desire to constantly improve and better themselves.

In the quest for the triple crown, the brothers hope to make it a family affair by completing the English Channel as a relay swim along with their two other brothers and father later this year, an achievement that could cement the Boksmati family name as a powerhouse in the Saudi swimming community.

The brothers also expressed their desire to continue the swimming tradition with their families in the future as well, citing its physical and psychological benefits.

“It (swimming) instills a lot of good values when it comes to things like discipline, keeping your cool, being competitive, patience,” Abdulrahman said.

The brothers, along with athletes such as 16-year-old swimmer Zaid Al-Sarraj, the youngest member of the Saudi Olympic team this year, and taekwondo star Dunya Abu Taleb, the first Saudi female to qualify for the Olympics on merit without the need for a wildcard invitation, are inspiring a new generation to keep raising the bar for sport in the Kingdom.

 


Saudi foreign minister and Palestinian prime minister discuss efforts to end war in Gaza

Updated 30 July 2025
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Saudi foreign minister and Palestinian prime minister discuss efforts to end war in Gaza

  • They meet at UN HQ in New York during international conference on a 2-state solution to the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians, co-chaired by Saudi Arabia and France
  • PM Mohammed Mustafa commends the Kingdom for its consistent stance on the Palestinian issue, says conference was the result of Saudi diplomacy

LONDON: Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan and Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammed Mustafa held talks on Tuesday on coordination of diplomatic efforts to end Israel’s war in Gaza, and address the resultant starvation that is affecting nearly 2 million Palestinians in the territory.

They met at the UN’s headquarters in New York on the closing day of a two-day, high-level international conference on a two-state solution to the decades-long conflict between Israelis and Palestinians.

Mustafa commended the Kingdom for its consistent stance on the Palestinian issue, and its ongoing efforts to address the issue through the Arab Contact Group and the Global Alliance for the Implementation of the Two-State Solution, the Wafa News Agency reported.

The conference in New York was co-chaired by Saudi Arabia and France in an effort to gather support for the formal establishment of an internationally recognized Palestinian state, and advance efforts to achieve a two-state solution in which Israel and Palestine can live in peace, side by side.

On Tuesday, the UK government said it would officially recognize a Palestinian state during the UN General Assembly in September, unless Israel takes action to end the war in Gaza and halts its annexation policies in the West Bank. This followed a recent pledge by President Emmanuel Macron that France will recognize Palestinian statehood during the General Assembly.

Mustafa said that this week’s UN conference was the result of Saudi diplomacy, with the aim of achieving a peaceful settlement of the Palestinian issue. He stressed the need to take concrete steps, and establish a clear timeline, toward the implementation of a two-state solution.


Saudi FM meets with Iraqi, Portuguese counterparts on sidelines of Palestine conference at UN

Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan meets separately with his Iraqi and Portuguese counterparts.
Updated 29 July 2025
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Saudi FM meets with Iraqi, Portuguese counterparts on sidelines of Palestine conference at UN

RIYADH: Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan met with his Iraqi and Portuguese counterparts on the sidelines of the high level UN conference that Saudi Arabia co-chaired on Tuesday.

The ministers were in New York to attend the United Nations High-Level International Conference on “The Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine and the Implementation of the Two-State Solution” which called for an immediate end to the war in Gaza.

It also set out a detailed international roadmap toward the implementation of a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

During the separate meetings with Iraqi Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein and Portuguese Foreign Minister Paulo Rangel, Prince Faisal reviewed relations between the Kingdom and their respective countries, Saudi Press Agency reported.

The latest developments in the region and efforts being made in this regard were also discussed.


Saudi artist spotlights Asir’s rich cultural landscape in her artwork

Artist Arafat Al-Asimi said that she feels most at home with nature and traditional landscape drawings. (Supplied)
Updated 29 July 2025
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Saudi artist spotlights Asir’s rich cultural landscape in her artwork

  • Arafat Al-Asimi overcame challenges to prove herself as a female artist

MAKKAH: Saudi Arabia’s lush Asir mountains inspired the artistic vision of Arafat Al-Asimi. 

Highlighting her early artistic endeavors, Al-Asimi said that she enjoys using pastel colors to paint natural and heritage landscapes. The mountains, valleys, the color gradations of the forests and the region’s unique climate shaped her artistic imagination. 

Arafat Al-Asimi uses pastel colors to paint landscapes inspired by her native Asir. (Supplied)

Al-Asimi said that she feels most at home with nature and traditional landscape drawings, particularly those inspired by Asir, as they convey her deep sense of belonging and offer her psychological comfort and balance. 

She also shared her passion for incorporating Arabic calligraphy into her work, describing how it beautifully merges visual aesthetics with cultural identity. 

HIGHLIGHTS

• Arafat Al-Asimi’s artwork is inspired by Asir region’s environment.

• She developed her artistic talent through practice and experimenting with different materials.

• She said that family support in the early stages has had a significant impact on boosting her self-confidence.

With a background in geography, Al-Asimi said that her passion for art extended far beyond her studies. 

Artist Arafat Al-Asimi said that she feels most at home with nature and traditional landscape drawings. (Supplied)

She continued to develop her talent through self-practice, experimenting with different materials, engaging in artistic community activities, and attending exhibitions that contributed in developing her talent and shaping her artistic identity from an early age. 

The absence of an art major at her university was not an obstacle, but rather the engine for self-development, allowing her to cultivate a distinctive artistic style despite the lack of formal academic training in the field.

Arafat Al-Asimi uses pastel colors to paint landscapes inspired by her native Asir. (Supplied)

Speaking on challenges she faced at the beginning of her artistic career, Al-Asimi told Arab News that the most prominent of these were the lack of art specialization in university education, the lack of community and artistic support in the early stages of her career, and the difficulty of obtaining appropriate materials and tools. 

She also highlighted the challenge of proving herself as a female artist in a conservative environment, a struggle that required her to double her efforts to prove herself. However, she was able to overcome these challenges through persistence and continuous practice. 

Artist Arafat Al-Asimi said that she feels most at home with nature and traditional landscape drawings. (Supplied)

Al-Asimi highlighted her participation in numerous exhibitions both within the Kingdom and internationally, describing these experiences as enriching. 

The events not only expanded her artistic vision, but also provided valuable opportunities for cultural exchange, enriching her portfolio with new horizons.

She said that family support in the early stages has had a significant impact on boosting her self-confidence. Community encouragement, even through simple attendance or interaction, is an important motivator for an artist to continue, she added. 

Societal awareness of the value of fine art has been growing in recent years, providing Saudi female artists with broader opportunities to express themselves and demonstrate their abilities, she said. 

Expressing her ambitions, Al-Asimi said that she seeks to expand her presence in Saudi Arabia and Gulf art scene, and take part in major upcoming exhibitions locally and internationally to showcase her experience, inspired by the Asir environment. 

She also hopes to hold a solo exhibition documenting her artistic development and conduct art workshops for young girls to support local talent. 

 


Look up: Delta Aquariid meteor shower peaks over Saudi Arabia

The fast-moving meteors of the Delta Aquariid often produce bright trails and occasional fireballs. (SPA)
Updated 29 July 2025
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Look up: Delta Aquariid meteor shower peaks over Saudi Arabia

  • Majed Abu Zahra, head of the Jeddah Astronomical Society, said the best time to observe the meteor shower will be after 3 a.m. local time, when the radiant point in the constellation Aquarius climbs higher in the southern sky

RIYADH: Stargazers across Saudi Arabia and the wider region are in for a celestial treat in the early hours of Wednesday, July 30, as the annual Delta Aquariid meteor shower reaches its peak.

According to the Saudi Press Agency, weather and moon conditions are expected to offer ideal viewing, especially in areas away from city lights.

Majed Abu Zahra, head of the Jeddah Astronomical Society, said the best time to observe the meteor shower will be after 3 a.m. local time, when the radiant point in the constellation Aquarius climbs higher in the southern sky.

The early setting of the moon will also ensure darker skies for stargazing.

Observers can expect approximately 18 meteors per hour during peak activity, potentially reaching 25 under ideal conditions.

Abu Zahra noted that these fast-moving meteors often produce bright trails and occasional fireballs.

While visible in both hemispheres, the Delta Aquariids are best seen from the tropics and and southern lattitudes, where the radiant point sits higher above the horizon.

Abu Zahra noted that no special equipment is needed, just a clear, dark sky, as well as allowing 20 minutes for eyes to adapt to darkness and committing at least one full hour to observation for optimal results.

The Delta Aquariid shower occurs annually between July 12 and Aug. 23 as Earth passes through debris left by Comet 96P/Machholz.

Dust particles ignite upon entering the atmosphere at 41 kilometers per second, vaporizing at altitudes of 70-100 kilometers to create luminous streaks.

Although the peak occurs early on Wednesday, the meteor activity will continue into early August and gradually blend with the more intense Perseid meteor shower, which peaks mid-August.

 


AlUla’s summer fruit market extended until Saturday

Updated 29 July 2025
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AlUla’s summer fruit market extended until Saturday

  • The summer fruit season is one of the most prominent agricultural production seasons in AlUla, as its farms produce approximately 4,9000 tonnes of fruits annually through about 216,000 trees

RIYADH: The Royal Commission for AlUla on Monday announced the extension of the summer fruit market, held as part of the “Khairat AlUla” initiative, until next Saturday, Aug. 2.

The extension aims to provide an additional opportunity for farmers and local families to display and sell their products, driven by high demand during the season, the Saudi Press Agency reported. 

The season is held at the Al-Manshiyah Farmers Market, where farmers display a large variety of fruits, including mangoes, grapes, and figs.

The summer fruit season is one of the most prominent agricultural production seasons in AlUla, as its farms produce approximately 4,9000 tonnes of fruits annually through about 216,000 trees.

The season contributes to empowering farmers, opening marketing outlets for their products, in addition to developing sales markets and linking them to visitors, which enhances the sustainability of the agricultural sector in the governorate and consolidates its connection to the cultural and economic identity of AlUla.