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The case for protecting Saudi Arabia’s ancient art of Khawlani coffee production

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The case for protecting Saudi Arabia’s ancient art of Khawlani coffee production
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Updated 54 min 54 sec ago
REBECCA ANNE PROCTOR
MOHAMMED AL-KINANI
January 15, 202023:46
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  • Saudi Arabia is asking UNESCO to provide protection for the tradition of Khawlani coffee cultivation
  • Six out of 16 provinces in the region of Jazan practice the cultivation of Khawlani coffee beans
JAZAN: At the southernmost tip of Saudi Arabia, just a few kilometers from the Saudi-Yemeni border, is the verdant region of Jazan, blessed with its rocky mountain tops, green wadis, deep forests, hot springs and boundless fertile land. It is also home to the local Khawlani coffee bean.

Although the Arabica coffee bean is well known, most people don’t associate it with Saudi Arabia. While the actual origin of coffee is debatable, the ancient tribes of the Khawlan, in reference to their great ancestor Khawlan bin Amir, located between Jazan and Yemen, have practiced the skills and techniques of cultivating Khawlani coffee beans for over 300 years, with the tradition passed down from one generation to the next through non-formal educational methods, including practical training and observation.

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The region of Jazan contains 16 provinces, and six of them practice the cultivation of Khawlani coffee beans. For farmers here, making coffee is a highly respected vocation that gives cultural identity and status to the entire region.

Today, the Saudi Heritage Preservation Society is asking UNESCO to provide protection for the ancient art of Khawlani coffee making. The project, which began in 2019 in collaboration with farmers in Jazan, included documenting the cultivation process of Khawlani coffee beans.

“The number of farmers in Jazan is really high and they face a lot of problems and difficulties, including with water and working resources,” said Rehaf Gassas, project manager at the Saudi Heritage Preservation Society, a nongovernmental organization established in 2010. “Hopefully, by the inscription of this (cultivation process) in UNESCO, it will help promote (Khawlani coffee beans) throughout Saudi Arabia and encourage the nation to help these farmers.”

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The bid process itself is time-consuming. It normally takes around 18 months to work on, from field visits to theory work.

On March 31, 2019, the society finished the application and delivered it to UNESCO. By November 2020 they hope to know the decision as to whether they were successful.

“We are very optimistic,” added Gassas. “The community itself is the biggest supporter, because they are very invested in the coffee beans they are planting, and it is really very important to them to show the world that they have this rich culture and heritage.”

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Khawlani coffee beans might be one of Saudi Arabia’s best-kept secrets. They are considered one of the finest types of coffee beans in the world, and Saudis are ranked as one of the biggest consumers of the beverage.

In many ways these beans are a national treasure, crucial to the preservation of Saudi heritage and the nation’s cultural identity. “They are described as the green gold of Jazan,” said Gessas. “But there is lack of knowledge amongst Saudis that the Jazan region is one of the biggest producers of coffee in the world.”


In 2017 the Ministry of Interior cited more than 76,390 Khawlani coffee trees farmed by 724 farmers, producing 227,156 kilograms of coffee from an average production of 4 kilograms per tree. “The trees are thought to have been brought from Ethiopia to Yemen, and perhaps from Yemen to the mountains of this governorate,” says deputy governor of Al-Dair, Yahia Mohammed Al-Maliki.

“In the past, people mainly relied on planting coffee beans as one of their major products to make a living during hard times. Nowadays, the situation has changed. People have started to come to the region looking for investments.”

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The cultivation process of Khawlani coffee is an arduous one. It involves planting the seeds for the trees, harvesting the fruits that start growing 2-3 years after planting, pruning the trees, collecting the fruits and transferring them to the rooftops of houses to put on dehydration beds in a cool shaded area to dry.

There the fruits must be stirred by hand until they turn black. They are then peeled, roasted and ground. The picking itself involves attention and care. The red color indicates that the fruit is ready for picking, which needs to be done using a twisting method to ensure the branch is not damaged in the process in order to ensure it can bear fruit next season.

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“We hold the fruit and with a little twist, we pick it off the tree,” said Hussein Al-Maliki, owner of Mefraz, a local coffee brand that recently won a coffee roasting competition in the UAE, and which hopes to soon distribute internationally outside the Kingdom.

The significance of Khawlani coffee goes beyond its cultivation. The process entails a celebration of familial ties and heritage as well as respect for the local land. Mohammed Salman, a 70-year-old farmer in Al-Dair, has been cultivating coffee beans since he was born. “I have learned the process of planting coffee from my father, who had inherited it from his ancestors,” he said. “He gets up each morning, performs his prayers, has his breakfast and then goes out to his farm.

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“I stay at the farm irrigating my trees, cleaning the soil, helping the two workers I have here until the sun sets and then get back home,” he continued. On the weekends, Salman’s two sons join him and the cultivation becomes a family activity. “I teach them how to care for our coffee trees and even how to pick the fruits that are ripe,” he added.

At the core of Khawlani coffee is the beauty of generosity. Offering small cups of coffee to guests is an age-old tradition in Saudi Arabia — one practiced since ancient times. For the community of Khawlan, it is of utmost importance to offer visitors coffee using beans harvested from their farms. It’s a sign of honor and respect. Now, on the verge of UNESCO protection, the Khawlani farmers will soon offer their golden cups to the world.

https://www.arabnews.com/node/1613806/saudi-arabia
 
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Coffee cultivation originated in Arabia, more precisely Sufi monasteries. It is an Arabian drink. In recent years coffee cultivation in KSA has been growing a lot which is great news.
 
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Push to increase number of Saudi Arabia’s Al-Dayer coffee trees to a million
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Updated 03 February 2020
TARIQ AL-THAQAFI
February 02, 2020

  • The company had carried out four phases of the project and that by mid-2020 it will have planted more than 67,000 trees


JAZAN: Efforts are underway to increase the number of coffee trees in the southern governorate of Al-Dayer to a million by 2030, from the current amount of 158,000.
The push comes as the annual Coffee Beans Festival takes place in Jazan for the seventh time.
The event, which ends on Feb. 4, brings together nearly 200 farmers. It has expanded this year to include a coffee street, a cinema showing films on coffee production and tourism activities that underline the historical importance of coffee bean cultivation in the region.
The governor of Al-Dayer, Nayef bin Lebdah, said that the finest types of coffee came from the south of the Kingdom, and that production had increased by 50 percent to reach 336 tons, an increase of 109 tons from the previous year.
The rise has been helped by an integrated government program covering the development, production, manufacture and marketing of Arabic coffee in order to boost the production efficiency of the coffee crop to 7,000 tons annually by the end of 2025.
Bin Lebdah said that Al-Dayer’s coffee farms were being supported by a sustainable rural development program from the Ministry of Environment, Water and Agriculture and the Mountain Areas Development Authority.
Saudi Aramco is also supporting Al-Dayer’s coffee industry through a project to raise knowledge and improve production standards among hundreds of farmers in Jazan, by providing tools and training in the latest coffee cultivation methods and planting new trees.
Bin Lebdah said the company had carried out four phases of the project and that by mid-2020 it will have planted more than 67,000 trees.
The next step was to double the current quantities of coffee production. “We are in the process of benefiting from 82,000 coffee trees that have not started production yet,” the governor told Arab News.

https://www.arabnews.com/node/1621896/saudi-arabia

Coffee Beans Festival returns to Saudi Arabia’s Jazan for its seventh edition
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Updated 30 January 2020
REBECCA ANNE PROCTOR
January 30, 2020

  • Launched in 2013, the festival includes a coffee exhibition as well as numerous local cultural, entertainment and shopping activities

JAZAN: Nearly 200 farmers will come together in the Al-Dayer governorate, located in the eastern part of the Jazan region, to showcase their products in the seventh annual Coffee Beans Festival, taking place from Jan. 30 to Feb. 4. While the region remains known for Khawlani coffee, its most famous product, visitors will get the chance to peruse a variety of coffee beans, offering different aromas and tastes.




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The 2020 Coffee Beans Festival will run from Jan. 30-Feb. 4. (Supplied)



Launched in 2013, the festival includes a coffee exhibition as well as numerous local cultural, entertainment and shopping activities. Over the years, the festival has contributed to the return in local farmers’ interest in coffee cultivation as well as the opening of a branch of the Ministry of Agriculture in Al-Dayer.

Award-winning coffee farmer Hussain Hadi Al-Malki, who hails from the Al-Dayer governorate, told Arab News that the Jazan region produced 250 tons of coffee beans last year, but by the end of 2020 production is estimated to reach 300 tons, highlighting the importance of the beans to the local economy.




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Sixty-five percent of farmers in the mountains of Jazan are from the Al-Dayer governorate. (Supplied)



This year, the festival has expanded to include a coffee street, a cinema showing films on coffee production and touristic routes that will underline the historical importance of coffee bean cultivation in the region. Mefarah Al-Malki, director of the festival, stated that such activities will shine a spotlight on the achievements of young Saudi men and women working to cultivate coffee in Jazan.




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This year, the festival has expanded to include a coffee street, a cinema showing films on coffee production and touristic routes. (Supplied)



Sixty-five percent of farmers in the mountains of Jazan are from the Al-Dayer governorate, according to the Jazan Mountain Development and Reconstruction Authority. The second largest number hail from Fayfa at 12 percent, followed by the governorates of Al- Reeth, Al-Edabi, Al-Aridhah and Harub. According to Hussain Hadi Al-Malki, the number of coffee farmers in the region has now exceeded 700 — and their work will go on show at the event.




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The Coffee Bean Festival is gaining momentum as an event that preserves a vital aspect of the Kingdom’s ancient past. (Supplied)



Coffee beans from the region are a national treasure and crucial to the preservation of Saudi heritage and identity. So much so that in 2019, the Saudi Heritage Preservation Society, a nongovernmental organization established in 2010, applied to UNESCO to provide protection for art of Khawlani coffee making.

As investors flock to the Jazan region, lured by its landscape, unique history and opportunities, the Coffee Bean Festival is gaining momentum as an event that preserves a vital aspect of the Kingdom’s ancient past.

https://www.arabnews.com/node/1620271/lifestyle

Fantastic initiatives.
 
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