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The young Saudis bridging language barriers during Hajj

The young Saudis bridging language barriers during Hajj
Young Saudi volunteers step in to translate and ease some of the challenges pilgrims face. (File photo)
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Updated 07 June 2025

The young Saudis bridging language barriers during Hajj

The young Saudis bridging language barriers during Hajj
  • Volunteer translators allow pilgrims to overcome challenges when communicating in a foreign language
  • Diversity of the global Muslim community reflected in the number of languages spoken during Hajj

RIYADH: Each year, millions of Muslims from all over the world arrive in Makkah for Hajj — united in faith, but sometimes divided by language.

From Turkish and Urdu to Swahili and Bahasa, the diversity of languages in the holy cities is vast. For many, overcoming language barriers while navigating the logistics of Hajj can be overwhelming.

That is where young Saudi volunteers step in to translate and ease some of the challenges pilgrims face.

“We speak different languages, but we’re all here for the same reason,” said Deema Ibrahim, 21.

Ibrahim’s experience volunteering as a translator began with a change of plans. “I initially joined a team for emergency medical services,” she said. “But when we arrived, we found that the ambulance units were already full. So we were redirected to work in the road guidance division.”

Her unit was based near a hotel that housed non-Arabic-speaking pilgrims. As one of the few bilingual members of her team, Ibrahim’s role became essential.

“I also assisted deaf and mute pilgrims through remote video calls,” she said. “That allowed me to support a wider group of people who would otherwise be left struggling.”

One of the most emotional moments she experienced was helping an elderly woman who had become separated from her family. “She didn’t remember much and couldn’t communicate clearly.

“We eventually found a card with her camp name, called them, and her daughters came running. They didn’t expect to find her again. It was a moment I’ll never forget.

“I did it for the reward — and for the duas.”

Saad Al-Harbi, 23, was encouraged by a friend to volunteer.

“He said, ‘You speak good English, you live in Makkah, and you’re available — why not help as a group guide and translator?’” he recalled.

Most of the questions from pilgrims were about directions. “They’d ask how to get to Arafat, or where to perform the stoning, or how to navigate from one site to another.”

But what stayed with him most was the gratitude. “On the last day of Hajj, almost everyone in our group came up to thank me. They told me my help made a difference. That meant everything.”

Maha Al-Ahmari, 24, who speaks fluent Turkish, assisted several elderly Turkish origin or Turkish-speaking pilgrims who were part of a group of North African pilgrims in Muzdalifah.

“Many of them were completely disoriented and couldn’t communicate with security or their own groups,” she said.

“Just being able to speak their language calmed them instantly. One woman kissed my hand in thanks — I’ll never forget that.”

The Kingdom’s efforts to enhance services for pilgrims include multilingual signage, smart apps with translation features, and trained staff in key areas. Still, human contact is at the heart of everything guides do — especially when emotions run high.

Ibrahim said that some of the most difficult cases involved older pilgrims who were confused, hard of hearing, or dealing with memory loss.

“The pressure increases during the days of Nafr,” she said. “People get lost easily. And when they can’t speak Arabic or English, the stress becomes dangerous.”

She credits the government’s organization — from surveillance centers to camp identification systems — for helping volunteers like her stay effective. “We had support, but the human side of it — calming someone, assuring them — that was on us.”

Faris Al-Turki, 28, who volunteered in Mina, said he used Google Translate in real time to assist a pilgrim from Central Asia. “It wasn’t perfect, but it helped. He was trying to find his medication and explain a health condition. We figured it out.”

For many volunteers, the act of translation is an act of worship. It’s a way to serve the guests of Allah — a role that holds deep spiritual meaning in Saudi culture.

“You’re not just translating words,” Al-Harbi said. “You’re translating emotion. You’re showing them that they’re not alone.”

Ibrahim agreed. “It was exhausting, physically and mentally, but it was the most fulfilling thing I’ve ever done. Despite our different languages, we were all in the same sacred space, for the same reason. That unity — you feel it.”

In the end, most volunteers do not seek recognition. They often work behind the scenes, in the heat, in the chaos, among strangers.

But for the pilgrims who meet them — the ones who are lost, confused, scared — their presence is unforgettable. A calm voice. A familiar phrase. A gesture of patience.

And when the pilgrims return home, they may not remember every building or landmark, but they will remember that young Saudi who stepped forward, understood their words, and made them feel seen.


Madinah authority restores historic holy sites

Madinah authority restores historic holy sites
Updated 11 sec ago

Madinah authority restores historic holy sites

Madinah authority restores historic holy sites
  • The work by the Madinah Region Development Authority includes ongoing restoration of the Battle of the Trench site and surrounding areas

RIYADH: Projects to preserve and restore important religious and historic sites in Madinah have brought a growing number of visitors to the area.

The work by the Madinah Region Development Authority includes ongoing restoration of the Battle of the Trench site and surrounding areas, where followers of the Prophet Muhammad dug a deep trench to fortify themselves against attack in 627 C.E.

A place that holds deep religious and historical significance for Muslims, the redevelopment includes restoring several mosques and other significant sites.

The authority is also redeveloping the Miqat of Dhu Al-Hulaifah, where the Prophet Muhammed entered the ritual state of Ihram before performing the Umrah pilgrimage. The initiative is focused on expanding the mosque’s facilities and improving services.

Over the past year, several Madinah landmarks have been enhanced with modern amenities and new guide services using digital technologies. Other upgrades include the installation of pedestrian facilities around the city’s central area and near the Prophet’s Mosque, such as electric vehicle access and a pedestrian path to Quba Mosque, and landscaping and public amenities.

The Rua Al-Madinah Project is a major development featuring an extensive tunnel network and numerous luxury hotels which will contribute to the target of increasing the holy city’s hospitality capacity to 30 million visitors by 2030.

The Al-Matal Project, another new initiative, features integrated tourist and recreational facilities built into the mountainside of the Al-Jamawat neighborhood.

The schemes will enrich the Madinah visitor experience, a key objective of Saudi Vision 2030.


Asir’s 2,400m-high Fog Walk attracts tourists seeking to beat the heat

Asir’s 2,400m-high Fog Walk attracts tourists seeking to beat the heat
Updated 25 July 2025

Asir’s 2,400m-high Fog Walk attracts tourists seeking to beat the heat

Asir’s 2,400m-high Fog Walk attracts tourists seeking to beat the heat
  • Asir earmarked for multibillion-dollar tourism investment
  • Region’s mountains, forests have become top attractions

RIYADH: The Fog Walk promenade, at more than 2,400 meters above sea level in Ƶ’s southern Asir region, has become a major attraction for those wanting to beat the heat this summer.

Located in the Al-Namas governorate, it is 7 km in length and has panoramic views of the Tihama plains coastal area, the Saudi Press Agency reported recently.

The region’s climate is typically foggy and mild in summer, with temperatures rarely going above 30 degrees Celsius, while other parts of the country are averaging above 40.

There are also towering mountains and dense forests for visitors to enjoy.

The promenade has wide paths, seating and rest areas, as well as food trucks, cafes and stalls selling handicrafts and traditional food from the region.

The annual Summer of Al-Namas festival includes folk art performances, sports competitions, an International Sculpture Forum, and a range of open cultural evenings.

Recent developments from the local authorities at the promenade include night lighting, improved green spaces and additional support services to promote the tourism industry.

The Asir Development Authority aims to attract 8 million tourists to the region by 2030. A SR1.3 billion ($346.5 billion) entertainment complex is being developed and slated for completion in 2025.

Its offerings will include arcade games, theme park rides, cinema, indoor golf course, bowling, and go-kart track.

As a part of Vision 2030, an additional SR6 billion will be invested into the region’s tourism industry. The Asir Development Authority is aiming to increase this to SR9 billion.


Chinese Embassy celebrates 98th anniversary of People’s Liberation Army

Chinese Embassy celebrates 98th anniversary of People’s Liberation Army
Updated 25 July 2025

Chinese Embassy celebrates 98th anniversary of People’s Liberation Army

Chinese Embassy celebrates 98th anniversary of People’s Liberation Army
  • Envoy hails 35 years of Sino-Saudi diplomatic ties, growing trade
  • China urges Gaza ceasefire and rejects ‘deportation’ of Palestinians

RIYADH: The Chinese Embassy in Ƶ hosted a reception on Thursday in Riyadh’s Cultural Palace to mark the 98th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Liberation Army.

“The Chinese and Saudi people have a friendship and connection of more than 2,000 years,” said Zhu Je, the armed defense attache at the embassy.

He added that the two nations celebrated this week the 35th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations, which began on July 21, 1990.

In his opening remarks, Zhu highlighted the growing relations between the two nations. “China has become Ƶ’s largest trading partner; Ƶ is China’s largest trading partner in the Middle East,” he said.

President Xi Jinping and Ƶ’s leaders have worked on developing a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership since 2022, Zhu said.

“In 2024, by instructions of the Saudi leaders, His Royal Highness Prince Khalid bin Salman visited China, Sino-Saudi military relationship was upgraded to strategic level.

“Chief of general staff, His Excellency Gen. Fayyadh Al-Ruwaili, led series of delegations to China, achieving solid results in multiple cooperation fields,” he said.

Zhu said the Chinese armed forces was created as a part of the country’s struggle for national unification and independence.

He said over the past 98 years, “led by the Chinese Communist Party and supported by the people, it has won more than 200 significant battles and defeated more than 10 million enemies.”

This had made a “great contribution to the independence, safety and development of the country, having become a strong force to deter aggression and threats.”

On the region, Zhu said China wants to play a constructive role in  promoting peace and stability. “China calls for (an) immediate and sustained ceasefire in Gaza, opposes the deportation of the Gaza people.

“China, together with Ƶ advocate that the Palestinian issue should be resolved comprehensively, justly and lastingly on the basis of the two-state solution,” he said.

There were several ambassadors and defense officials at the reception, including Chinese Ambassador Chang Hua, who hosted the event alongside Zhu.

Zhu added: “I would again express our sincere gratitude to the Saudi leaders and people, especially the Armed Forces, the Ministry of Interior, the National Guard and other security institutions.”


Saudi team win 4 medals at 2025 International Physics Olympiad

Saudi team win 4 medals at 2025 International Physics Olympiad
Updated 25 July 2025

Saudi team win 4 medals at 2025 International Physics Olympiad

Saudi team win 4 medals at 2025 International Physics Olympiad
  • Kingdom’s tally in annual contest now 7 silver and 23 bronze medals, 22 certificates of appreciation

PARIS: Ƶ’s National Physics Team won four medals at the 55th International Physics Olympiad in Paris which ran from July 17 to 25, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Friday.

Mazen Al-Shakhs won silver, while Hussein Al-Saleh, Mohammed Al-Arfaj, and Ali Al-Hassan each won bronze at the IPhO.

The latest medal haul has raised the Kingdom’s overall tally at this annual event to seven silver, 23 bronze, and 22 certificates of appreciation.

A total of 425 students from 85 countries competed in the contest this year.

Ƶ’s achievement was a result of intensive training for the students by the King Abdulaziz and His Companions Foundation for Giftedness and Creativity, or Mawhiba, the SPA reported.

Support was provided by the Ministry of Education, and sponsorship by Saudi Aramco.

The IPhO is an annual competition for high school students, with each national delegation allowed up to five student competitors plus two leaders.

Similar to other Olympiads, member countries take turns hosting the competition. It was first held in Warsaw, Poland, in 1967, and last year in Isfahan, Iran.

In 2026, the host will be Bucaramanga, Colombia.

In the event’s 58-year history, China has emerged as the most dominant, with Russia, South Korea, Taiwan and the US completing the top five.

 

 


How AI speech-to-text technology is tuning in to a digital Ƶ

How AI speech-to-text technology is tuning in to a digital Ƶ
Updated 25 July 2025

How AI speech-to-text technology is tuning in to a digital Ƶ

How AI speech-to-text technology is tuning in to a digital Ƶ
  • Speech recognition tools are becoming vital for real-time communication in multilingual, mobile-first societies
  • Gulf region’s high smartphone usage and digital transformation make it a key market for speech-enabled tech

DHAHRAN: In a world racing toward automation, Klemen Simonic believes the most natural interface is also the most enduring: the human voice.

As founder and CEO of Soniox — a cutting-edge speech-to-text platform — Simonic is betting that voice-powered technology will drive the next wave of digital innovation.

And in a country like Ƶ, where smartphones dominate daily life and a young population is hungry for digital solutions, the potential is hard to ignore.

Soniox, which Simonic launched five years ago, offers speech recognition, transcription and real-time multilingual translation in more than 60 languages.

Unlike many competitors, it delivers ultra-fast, token-level outputs in milliseconds — a critical advantage for live assistants, wearables, bots and smart speakers.

But Simonic’s journey toward building the company began long before the rise of generative AI. 

“I started in programming development right after high school, and I was invited to join the Jozef Stefan Institute in Slovenia, one of the best institutes in this part of Europe,” he told Arab News. 

“I was working there with Ph.D. students and postdocs on machine learning, natural language processing, dependency parsing, tokenization, tagging and entity extraction.”

Klemen Simonic (2nd right) and his Soniox team. (Supplied)

That early exposure led him to two internships at Stanford University in 2009 and 2011, where he worked alongside top researchers in AI. “I wanted to join Google to work on these cool things,” he said.

After an internship there in 2014, Simonic was courted by both Google and Facebook — ultimately joining the latter in 2015 to help build speech recognition systems now used across Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp.

Today, his company is focused entirely on voice AI, and its promise goes beyond convenience. 

With privacy and compliance built in — including SOC 2 Type II certification and HIPAA readiness — Soniox is already being used in hospitals, call centers and emergency rooms where clear, accurate transcription can be a life-saving tool.

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“We have many healthcare customers using our API in emergency rooms where real-time AI interpretation can bridge communication gaps that human translators sometimes cannot, especially with complex medical terminology,” said Simonic.

Ƶ represents a particularly compelling market for the company’s ambitions. With more than 90 percent smartphone penetration and a population where 70 percent of people are aged under 35, the Kingdom is fertile ground for voice-enabled technologies.

The widespread adoption of government-developed platforms like Tawakkalna during the COVID-19 pandemic only accelerated the Kingdom’s reliance on mobile-first services.

“Data and artificial intelligence contribute to achieving Ƶ’s Vision 2030; this is because, out of 96, 66 of the direct and indirect goals of the vision are related to data and AI,” according to the Saudi Data & AI Authority.

The Kingdom’s communications and IT sector is now worth more than $44 billion — 4.1 percent of gross domestic product — and expanding quickly with strategic investments in cloud computing, automation and smart infrastructure.

Although Soniox does not yet have a team on the ground in the region, the company sees significant interest from Saudi organizations exploring AI-powered transcription and customer service tools.

Simonic said there are pilot programs in countries like Portugal and interest from companies in Ƶ looking to improve call center and transcription services.

And while Arabic remains one of the more complex languages for voice AI, Simonic sees both the challenge and the opportunity. Many of Ƶ’s rural communities speak dialects rich in cultural nuance — languages that are often excluded from mainstream datasets.

This environment offers fertile ground for Soniox’s technology, which strives to “enable all languages, so everyone in the world can speak and be understood by AI.”

Simonic’s team, primarily based in Slovenia, is committed to expanding language support to make the technology more inclusive, even in markets where none of the developers speak the local tongue.

Soniox is also designed with flexibility in mind. Businesses can integrate its API without storing any audio or transcripts, ensuring tight data control. For individual users, features like encrypted transcripts and a summarizing tool enhance productivity — even for the tech-averse.

“My mom is not very tech-savvy, but she uses our app to build her grocery shopping list,” Simonic said. “That was not the original purpose, but it shows how technology can evolve in ways we didn’t expect.”

In July, Soniox launched a new comparison tool that allows developers and businesses to benchmark different speech AI providers using their own voice samples and real-world data.

It is another step toward transparency and broader adoption — especially in regions like the Gulf, where choosing the right solution can hinge on performance in diverse linguistic contexts.

“The tech morphs, but the human voice remains the most intimate and effective way we communicate,” Simonic said.

As Ƶ pushes forward with its digital transformation under Vision 2030, technologies like Soniox may find their voice amplified — not just as a tool for productivity, but also as a bridge between language, innovation and access in a rapidly changing world.