Women's sport in Saudi Arabia has been a controversial topic for many years due to the suppression of female participation in sport by conservative Islamic religious authorities. [1]
In 2013 Saudi Arabia’s first dedicated sports centre for girls was opened in Jeddah, offering training programs that include physical fitness, karate, yoga and weight loss as well as special activities for children. [2] That year it was also announced that Saudi Arabian girls are officially allowed to take part in sports in private schools, which they had not officially been allowed to do previously, though they had done so unofficially. [3] Sports activities are prohibited in public schools for girls. [4] In 2017, Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Education (MoE) allowed physical education in public schools. [5] This step was taken in line with Saudi Vision 2030 to boost healthy practices among different spectrums in Saudi Arabia. [5]
Until 2018 women were not permitted in sport stadiums, even as spectators. Segregated seating, allowing women to enter, has been developed in King Fahd Stadium, King Abdullah Sports City and Prince Mohamed bin Fahd Stadium. [6]
In the framework of Saudi Arabia's endeavour to promote women's sport, Princess Reema bint Bandar was appointed as the head of the Saudi Federation for Community Sports (SFCS) which made her the first Saudi woman to occupy such a position. [7]
In 2019, the first female Saudi sport commentator, Hailah Al-Farraj, was hired. [8] Farraj was selected to report on the GCC women's soccer competition. [8]
In 2019 Saudi Arabia hosted the first open format curling tournament ever held in Africa or the Middle East. The event took place at the Funland Bowling & Ice Skating Centre in Manama, Bahrain, on October 11–12, 2019. Hosted by the Kingdom Curling Association, the tournament was open to 12 teams of four or more players. Each team required a mixture of male and female athletes.
The Saudi 2012 Summer Olympics team included female athletes for the first time ever, [9] and they sent female athletes again in 2016. [4] The Saudi Paralympic team has not yet included any women. [10]
Saudi Arabia sending women to compete in the Olympics in 2012 was listed at number two in Cambridge News' top nine milestones for women in sports. [11] Sarah Attar, an American born dual US-Saudi citizen, participated in women's track finishing last in the competition, [12] while Wojdan Shaherkani was defeated in her Judo competition in under two minutes. Despite the losses, being the first women to represent their country in the Olympics is considered an overall success for the participants, and Attar received a standing ovation as she pursued the finish line from the audience in London. She reports seeing positive changes during her visits to Saudi Arabia as a result of her participation, with female students becoming more interested in sport. [13] Saudi scholar Ali al-Ahmed said that "their presence has allowed Saudi Arabia to escape criticism". [12]
Saudi Arabia sent four athletes to the Rio Olympics, with Attar competing in the marathon, Kariman Abuljadayel, a student at Northeastern University, [14] in the 100m, Joud Fahmy in judo, and Lubna Al-Omair in fencing. [13] All were selected through wild cards.
Attar finished second from last out of finishers in the marathon, [15] [12] Abuljadayel came seventh in her heat with a time of 14.02s [16] and al-Omair lost in the first round. Fahmy pulled out of the judo before competing, in an apparent effort to avoid fighting Israeli competitor Gili Cohen, although this was denied by the Saudi delegation. [17]
The Saudi Arabian Olympic Committee website did not name any of the women representing the Kingdom. [18]
In Jeddah in 2003 the first women’s basketball team in Saudi Arabia was formed by Lina Al-Maeena, [19] co-founder of the Jeddah United Sporting Company, the first sports organization that sought to include the development of female athletes in 2006. [20] Jeddah United provides an environment where males, females, children, and adults can all participate in sporting activities. Their goal is to embrace all Saudis to partake in physical activity through sports all around the country. As of December 2013 [update] the number of members enrolled was above 500. Jeddah United has also played a role in establishing similar organizations in Khobar (Khobar United) and in the capital city Riyadh (Riyadh United). [19] Their long term goal is to produce top class athletes that can compete on a professional level throughout the country, and on the world stage. [20]
Informal cricket has been played by girls in international schools for a number of years, [21] but the first official women's cricket match in Saudi Arabia was played in Jeddah in March 2020, with a mixture of Saudi nationals and expatriates from cricket-playing countries. [22]
Following the further liberalisation of women's sport, the Saudi Arabia women's national cricket team made its international debut at the 2022 GCC Women's Gulf Cup in Oman in March 2022. The squad reportedly had an average age of 15-16, with most players having only played the sport for a few months. The team suffered heavy defeats. [21]
The nonexistence of a women's national football team was a perennial issue between FIFA and the Saudi Arabia Football Federation. FIFA changed their rules in 2012 to allow players to wear a hijab during FIFA-sanctioned matches, but Saudi authorities declined to comment. [23] However, in 2018 the Saudi Arabia's Football Federation (SAFF) hired two women as members of its board which was considered[ by whom? ] a new step towards forming a women's national team in Saudi Arabia. [24]
In 2022, the Saudi Arabia women's national football team made their international debut, defeating Seychelles by a score of 2–0 in a friendly match located in Malé, Maldives. [25]
In 2013, a running community was born in the City of Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Jeddah Running Community (JRC) is the first mixed-gender running group in the kingdom. [26] Initiated by a group of expats and locals, the group regularly runs in the streets of Jeddah. The movement also expanded to three other cities; Riyadh (Riyadh Urban Runners), Khobar (Khobar Running Krew), and Madina (Madina Runners).
All four groups are combined under the YALLARUN organization. [27] With the support of the organization, they were able to have several races and competitions locally. [28] A branch from JRC became the Jeddah Running Community Women (JRCW) which is a group exclusively for women; the aim of the group is to start training beginners to be able to compete in 5 km races. The group was created to give a chance for women who want to participate but not in a mixed gender group. [29]
Since then more groups have formed, including Bliss Runners in Jeddah. [30] [31]
Due to Islamic and Saudi law that women must wear a long black dress called an Abaya while in public, all women of the running community run the streets with sports outfits covered by a black dress. [32] However, some women have begun wearing sports-friendly abayas which are gaining traction. [33]
In March 2018, the first female road race was held in Saudi Arabia with 1500 women taking part. [34]
The first Saudi female race driver is Reema Juffali. In 2019, Juffali represented Saudi Arabia in the F4 British Championship at Brands Hatch. [35]
The cultural setting of Saudi Arabia is greatly influenced by the Arab and Islamic culture. The society is in general deeply religious, conservative, traditional, and family-oriented. Many attitudes and traditions are centuries-old, derived from Arab civilization and Islamic heritage. However, its culture has also been affected by rapid change, as the country was transformed from an impoverished nomadic society into a rich commodity producer in just a few years in the 1970s. This change has also been affected by and the result of a number of factors including the communications revolution and external scholarships. The most recent ruler or king of Saudi is King Salman of Saudi Arabia.
Saudi Arabia has competed in twelve Summer Olympic Games. They first appeared in the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, West Germany. Saudi Arabia made their debut in the Winter Olympics in 2022.
Saudi Arabian Cricket Federation is the official governing body of the sport of cricket in Saudi Arabia. Its current headquarters is in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. It is Saudi Arabia's representative at the International Cricket Council, and has been a member of the Council since 2003. It is also a member of the Asian Cricket Council.
Sport in Saudi Arabia is an important part of Saudi Arabian culture and the country participates in many international sporting competitions along with multiple esport competitions. Football is a particularly popular sport and Saudi Arabia has won the Asian Cup on three occasions, while other sports such as cricket and basketball are also widely followed.
Saudi Olympic & Paralympic Committee is the National Olympic Committee and the National Paralympic Committee representing Saudi Arabia.
Reema bint Bandar Al Saud is the current Saudi Arabian ambassador to the United States, a position her father had also previously held. Appointed by King Salman bin Abdulaziz, she presented her credentials to Donald Trump on 8 July 2019 and took office as ambassador on 23 February 2019—becoming the first woman to serve in the role of ambassador in the country's history. She also holds the rank of minister. She has advocated for female empowerment and has worked to expand opportunities for Saudi women within the Kingdom.
Saudi Arabia competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, from 27 July to 12 August 2012. This was the nation's tenth appearance at the Olympics, except the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, because of its partial support to the United States boycott.
The national federation was created in 1956 and became a FIFA affiliate in 1956. However women's football is not included in the country's FIFA coordinated Goals! project. By 2011, inside the Saudi Arabia Football Federation, there has been an effort to create women's football programs at universities. Input had been sought on how to do this from other national federations including ones from the United States, Germany, Brazil and the United Kingdom.
Sarah Attar is a Saudi-American track and field athlete who competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics as one of the first two female Olympians representing Saudi Arabia. She also competed in the marathon at the 2016 Olympics.
Kamia Yousufi is an Afghan female sprinter. Her parents are originally from Kandahar.
The Ministry of Sport, formerly the General Sports Authority, is a government ministry responsible for sports in Saudi Arabia. The Ministry of Sport was previously known as the General Sports Authority and before that as the General Presidency of Youth Welfare (GPYW), which was created in 1974.
The following lists events in the year 2019 in Saudi Arabia.
Sameera Aziz is a Saudi media personality, social worker, radio host, and businesswoman. She is a Jeddah-based Saudi national. Her companies are Sameera Aziz Group and Sameera Aziz Entertainment, the latter of which was the first Saudi production house in India. Aziz is the first Saudi female director in Bollywood. Her events company holds a Guinness World Record for making world's largest human-picture mosaic in 2017.
Reema Juffali, also spelt either as Reema Al Juffali or Reema Al-Juffali, is a Saudi Arabian professional race car driver who competes in the International GT Open with her own team, Theeba Motorsport. She is the first-ever Saudi Arabian woman racing driver, the first Saudi woman to hold a racing license and also the first Saudi woman to win an international motor race. In November 2019, she became the country's first woman racing car driver to take part in an international racing competition in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
The 2018 SuperClásico Championship was a four-way international friendly soccer tournament that was held in Saudi Arabia, in which the Saudi Arabia national team competes with Iraq, Argentina and Brazil in friendly matches at Prince Faisal bin Fahd Stadium and King Saud University Stadium in Riyadh, and King Abdullah Stadium in Jeddah. It was planned to be the national team of Egypt as the Arab competitor along with Saudi Arabia national team, but after the Egyptian team apologized, the Iraq team was invited to participate in its place and hesitated to participate for its commitment to other matches, then announced its welcome to participate, and the FIFA officially included all the matches of this championship in his agenda for October 2018.
The Saudi Women's Premier League is the top flight of women's association football in Saudi Arabia.
Saudi Arabia competed at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, China, from 4 to 20 February 2022. This marked the country's Winter Olympics debut. Saudi Arabia's team consisted of one male alpine skier, Fayik Abdi.
Yara International School (YIS) (Arabic: مدرسة يارا العالمية), simply sometimes Yara (Arabic: يارا), is a K–12 gender-isolated English-medium community-based private foreign school in the ad-Dirah district of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, located next to Qasr al-Hokm Metro Station in the erstwhile precincts of the Female Student Study Center of Imam Mohammad Ibn Saud Islamic University. Established in 2003 by a group of businessmen, it primarily serves the local Indian diaspora and offers curriculum prescribed by the Central Board of Secondary Education. The school previously offered British curriculum alongside the Indian one from 2019 to 2023.
Al-Yasmin International School (AYIS) is a K–12 gender-isolated English-medium community-based foreign school in the al-Malazz neighborhood of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Established in 1999, the school offers Indian curriculum prescribed by the Central Board of Secondary Education and primarily serves the Indian diaspora.