Ithra’s Creative Solutions initiative enters metaverse with 3rd cycle

The King Abdulaziz Center for World Culture’s Creative Solutions initiative has been designed to boost Saudi Arabia’s creative economy by empowering digital content creation in immersive technologies. (Supplied)
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Updated 15 February 2023
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Ithra’s Creative Solutions initiative enters metaverse with 3rd cycle

  • 10 creative projects of 2nd cycle showcased at Ithra

DHAHRAN: The third edition of the King Abdulaziz Center for World Culture’s (Ithra) Creative Solutions initiative aims to enter the metaverse with its immersive digital technologies.

The year-long project has been designed to boost Saudi Arabia’s creative economy by empowering digital content creation in immersive technologies.

Each project is required to develop and deploy an immersive component by using virtual reality, augmented reality, extended reality, haptics, or immersive audio.

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It comes with a grant of SR375,000 ($100,000).

The Creative Solutions program is open to all citizens and residents of Saudi Arabia aged over 18.

Organizers hope the program will provide focused learning for innovators and creatives by redefining the way communities build on the creative and technology-based economy, with an emphasis on science, technology, engineering, art and architecture, and mathematics, the arts, and self-development.




On Feb. 1 Ithra presented its 2022 cycle demo day titled, ‘Accelerate Your Journey to Innovation’ which showcased the 10 finalist projects. (Supplied)

Proposal submissions for this year’s Creative Solutions cycle three cohort are open until April 13.

To sign up for round three and for more information on Ithra and its programs, visit ithra.com or the center’s social media channels.

Miznah Alzamil, head of creativity and innovation at Ithra, told Arab News: “What’s coming up is another great program, from the very beginning. We’ve seen the progress in terms of submitting and the quality of ideas from first year to second year.




On Feb. 1 Ithra presented its 2022 cycle demo day titled, ‘Accelerate Your Journey to Innovation’ which showcased the 10 finalist projects. (Supplied)

“Immersive technologies have transformed how we work, play, and communicate. We are proud of our program participants’ contributions and excited to unveil their innovative products.

NUMBER

$100k

The 3rd Creative Solutions initiative grant amounts to SR375,000 ($100,000).

“The top proposals that made it to prototype stage demonstrate the spirit of innovative thinking driving the creative economy forward and propelling us further into a future guided by the Kingdom’s talent. This truly is a global showcase of Saudi innovation,” she said.

Launched in 2021, the program, headquartered at Ithra’s landmark Dhahran building, registered an astonishing 2,062 projects.

The Creative Solutions team managed to narrow that number down to 30.




On Feb. 1 Ithra presented its 2022 cycle demo day titled, ‘Accelerate Your Journey to Innovation’ which showcased the 10 finalist projects. (Supplied)

In 2022, 845 projects were considered and only 15 were selected to move to the next round.

Last year’s group saw more than 400 hours of training compared to 254 the first time around. Both cycles had 14 masterclasses.

Alums of the program were selected from hundreds of proposals by an international panel of judges, led by Bafta- and Emmy-winning immersive storyteller Kim-Leigh Pontin of Marvel’s Eternals AR adventure, and Anne McKinnon, the co-founder and chief executive officer of metaverse platform Ristband.

HIGHLIGHTS

• Creative Solutions begins its 3rd cycle this year. Each project is required to develop and deploy an immersive component by using virtual reality, augmented reality, extended reality, haptics, or immersive audio.

• The Creative Solutions program is open to all citizens and residents of Saudi Arabia aged over 18. Proposal submissions for this year’s cohort are open until April 13. To sign up and for more information visit ithra.com.

All participants received a grant and personalized mentorship through an 18-week development phase, which included a technical track in collaboration with HOST Unity Center of Excellence and an entrepreneurship track in collaboration with The Bakery.

Many of the past winning projects included support from team members. Although the women-to-men ratio was almost equal at the beginning, many of the finalists in the last cycle were women.




On Feb. 1 Ithra presented its 2022 cycle demo day titled, ‘Accelerate Your Journey to Innovation’ which showcased the 10 finalist projects. (Supplied)

2022 demo day

On Feb. 1, Ithra presented its 2022 cycle demo day titled, “Accelerate Your Journey to Innovation.”

With headsets at the ready and enthusiastic volunteers on standby, the creators of the 10 projects presented and shared their work.

Popular podcaster Mo Islam was on hand to present each person to the small crowd made up of potential investors.

Immersive technologies have transformed how we work, play, and communicate. We are proud of our program participants’ contributions and excited to unveil their innovative products.

Miznah Alzamil, Head of creativity and innovation, Ithra

For 2022, 10 projects were ultimately chosen. With five projects catering to society and culture, it was the most populated and popular category.

Uhoud Al-Minhali’s “The Symphony of Life” project idea was to create a mixed-reality experience where the VR world is replicated in real life.

Nurse Abdullah Alosaimi’s VR game “Syringe and Pandemic” is a mix of ER, operating theater, and an ambulance, with an aim to attract the next generation of nurses to fill the gap in the healthcare industry.




On Feb. 1 Ithra presented its 2022 cycle demo day titled, ‘Accelerate Your Journey to Innovation’ which showcased the 10 finalist projects. (Supplied)

Raghad Albarqi created a VR experience to enhance the story of “Whisper Down the Lane,” a rotoscoped short film inspired by the children’s game, broken telephone, using depth, space, and sound.

Amal Alkinani was the creator of “Hinkah,” an extensive library of VR training experiences on soft skills and etiquette to help people tackle true-life realities.

Atheer Alharbi created “Hijaz Railway: A Witness of Time,” a VR story set in the 1900s in the Hijaz region.




On Feb. 1 Ithra presented its 2022 cycle demo day titled, ‘Accelerate Your Journey to Innovation’ which showcased the 10 finalist projects. (Supplied)

The two projects focused on business included “MemoARable” by Maryam Alfadhli, an AR gift card-giving experience; and Maram Alghamdi’s “Virtually There: A Saudi Tourist Experience” that uses full 3-D to experience AlUla to start with.

The art and entertainment realm found three projects.

Jumanah Saklou created “Sensing Beyond the Frame,” a VR experience that immerses the user in a living perception of synesthesia; traveling through the late Russian painter Wassily Kandinsky’s theories to experience art beyond the frame.

Mutaz Basharahil created “The Guest: Ethereal Guardian” which takes the user into a parallel universe to explore the magical powers in the multi-sensory fantasy adventure.

“Trace” by Fatima Alnammi is an interactive, collaborative, and narrative multi-user platform using VR and immersive audio.

Alnammi told Arab News: “A lot has contributed into this morphology, starting with the mentorship that I was receiving during this program — I was able to have an amazing mentor.”

She said the whole experience was life-altering and well worth the sacrifice over the last 18 months.

“This project means lots to me. Not only conceptually is this idea super exciting, but also getting to build it with two amazing teams. So, we got a team from Manchester from HOST, and we got a team also here from Saudi Arabia.

“It’s definitely a baby step toward a bigger picture. At the same time, this whole experience has been a huge learning curve, from many aspects. I got to bond a bit with the idea. I got to discover what ‘Trace’ is. I also got to know me through ‘Trace,’” she added.

Australian non-fungible token curator and co-founder of Morrow Collective, Jen Stelco, known in the NFT community as Stelcart, demonstrated the ease in which the technology used by the cohorts could be implemented.

While wearing a headset and looking like she was dancing to a silent disco, she physically moved around the space, virtually painting the building. On a large screen, viewers could see what she was seeing.

She told Arab News: “We just saw virtual reality, 3-D speed painting — which is a mouthful when you put it like that — but basically, I was standing in front of a room of people with a VR headset on and two handheld tools and I built in the Ithra tower and made it kind of jazzy with some landscaping and beautiful sunsets.”

She decided the camera should point at her painting using her viewpoint on the big screen to show people in real time how to make things larger or smaller and move around.

“It’s just the digitization of art and of life. Do you ever use MS Paint? That’s all that is except you are in your computer,” she said.

Stelco, who has helped with the previous cohorts, was hopeful about the future.

“Ithra seems to be a hub for nurturing young people and to give them the confidence and the skills and the tech requirements to move into this space.

“The VR metaverse and all of these entities will change everything. They’re all kind of a part of this big club. And it’s about taking that leap, and it can be scary from the outside to people who aren’t maybe that aware of how it all works and all of the terminology that gets thrown at people. But it’s really quite simple,” she added.

 


Saudi aid agency KSrelief delivers food to needy

Updated 11 June 2025
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Saudi aid agency KSrelief delivers food to needy

  • The distribution is a part of the 2025 emergency food and clothing aid project in Lebanon

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s aid agency KSrelief has distributed 360 food packages to vulnerable individuals in Lebanon’s cities of Tripoli and Jbeil, benefiting 1,800 people.

The distribution is a part of the 2025 emergency food and clothing aid project in Lebanon, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, the charity distributed 1,780 sacrificial animals in the Al-Madinah and Al-Wadi districts of Yemen’s Marib governorate on Sunday.

The initiative benefited 3,560 families under an Eid Al-Adha project in Yemen.


Newly appointed Saudi ambassador to Mexico presents his credentials

Updated 11 June 2025
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Newly appointed Saudi ambassador to Mexico presents his credentials

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s newly appointed ambassador to Mexico has presented his credentials to the North American state’s foreign ministry, the Saudi Press Agency reported.
Fahad bin Ali Al-Manawer handed over a copy of his credentials to Ambassador Jonathan Chait Auerbach, the director general of protocol at the ministry, at a reception held on Tuesday. 
The diplomats also reviewed relations between their nations at the meeting.
Al-Manawer took his oath of office in from to the Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in March, in a ceremony attended by the Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan.


Saudi FM attends Oslo Forum in Norway

Updated 10 June 2025
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Saudi FM attends Oslo Forum in Norway

  • Forum hosts global leaders and conflict mediators
  • Prince Faisal bin Farhan will meet foreign officials

RIYADH: Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan arrived in the Norwegian capital on Tuesday to take part in the Oslo Forum.

The annual event, organized by the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in collaboration with the Center for Humanitarian Dialogue in Switzerland, hosts global leaders and conflict mediators.

Prince Faisal will meet foreign officials to strengthen relations with the Kingdom and discuss various regional and international issues, the Saudi Press Agency reported.


What pilgrims are sharing online after their Hajj journey

Updated 10 June 2025
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What pilgrims are sharing online after their Hajj journey

  • Worshippers take to social media to share profound experiences with loved ones
  • Posting online becomes a way to process the weight of Hajj for many

RIYADH: For many pilgrims, the spiritual journey of Hajj does not end when they leave the holy sites. It continues — quietly, intentionally — in the days and weeks that follow.

Across Saudi Arabia, young pilgrims are using social media to process the weight of Hajj and share the experience with loved ones.

Noor Ahmad, 21, did not plan to post during her pilgrimage. But after she returned, the urge to share came naturally.

After returning from Hajj, I decided to share a few captured moments. But how can a photo truly capture the depth and majesty of the experience?

Noor Ahmad

“After returning from Hajj, I decided to share a few captured moments,” she said. “But how can a photo truly capture the depth and majesty of the experience?”

She described how people responded in varied ways. “Those who had gone before felt nostalgic and started sharing their own stories. Others — those who hadn’t been yet — expressed their longing. It became this moment of connection.”

For Noor, the decision to post was not about aesthetics. “It’s a monumental event. Maybe I could inspire someone who’s hesitant to go. Maybe they’ll see what I saw — and want to experience it for themselves.

“It was my way of saying thank you”

Shatha Al-Jadaan, 25, took a different approach to sharing, after taking a digital detox.

I enjoy sharing meaningful moments, and after seeing the tremendous effort put into Hajj on every level, I felt my post was a small, sincere gesture of appreciation.

Shatha Al-Jadaan

“During Hajj, I decided to partially fast from social media. I used only the essentials,” she said. “After I returned, I posted a thread to my close friends explaining where I’d been and shared some of the most meaningful moments.”

The response was full of prayers and warmth. “People were kind, supportive, and curious. But what mattered most to me was that I used the thread to say thank you — to the organizers, to the volunteers, and to Allah.”

She spoke about how she found value in using digital platforms to document something greater than herself.

“I enjoy sharing meaningful moments, and after seeing the tremendous effort put into Hajj on every level, I felt my post was a small, sincere gesture of appreciation.”

Salem Al-Khudair, 28, recorded a voice note to his family group chat while performing the rites.

“I just couldn’t find the words to write. So I recorded myself speaking right after standing in Arafat. I sent it to my family WhatsApp group. My mom was emotional. My dad said, ‘May God accept from you.’ That was enough.”

In an age of curated content, Hajj posts tend to stand out for their sincerity. Pilgrims often strip away the filters, metaphors and trend-driven formats, and just speak from the heart.

Noura Al-Dosari, 23, uploaded a private Instagram story highlight with no captions. “Just visuals. No filters. No hashtags,” she said. “It wasn’t for followers. It was for me. For reflection. A digital bookmark of who I became.”

Some write long captions, others simply post a photo of their ihram folded neatly back into a drawer.

But all of them carry a silent message: I went. I came back different.

Many pilgrims use their posts to recall moments of physical hardship that brought emotional breakthroughs — the heat, the long walks, the brief but powerful connections with strangers.

Others use it to highlight the seamless organization of the pilgrimage as a reminder of how far the experience has evolved.

Amani Al-Saad, 26, used X to share a short story about a volunteer who helped her carry her bag in Muzdalifah. “She didn’t speak much, but she smiled at me and said, ‘This is what we’re here for.’ That stuck with me. I wrote about it as a reminder to myself — that sometimes the smallest moments hold the most meaning.”

While digital connections are increasingly common, most pilgrims emphasize that the real processing happens offline — in quiet conversations with family, in their prayer rooms, or on long drives home.

“I didn’t post to perform,” said Al-Jadaan. “I posted to remember.”

 


National Water Co. ready for post-Hajj season

Updated 10 June 2025
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National Water Co. ready for post-Hajj season

  • The company added the plan included securing water storage and coordinating with water production and distribution systems

MADINAH: The National Water Co. has confirmed it is operationally ready for the post-Hajj season.

The company said it would distribute more than 630,000 cubic meters of potable water daily to pilgrims at the Prophet’s Mosque and throughout Madinah and said its readiness built on ongoing efforts to serve pilgrims and visitors.

The plan involves more than 1,200 employees, including technical, administrative and engineering staff, working to provide water and environmental services.

The company added the plan included securing water storage and coordinating with water production and distribution systems, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Water will be supplied daily during the post-Hajj season through continuous pumping to the central area and religious sites. Chemical and biological tests will be conducted to ensure compliance with water quality standards.

The company said its smart operation system continues to manage and monitor Madinah’s water network, overseeing water pressure and quality in pipelines and reservoirs.