Saudi Drama Modern Past: Al-Assouf
- Wafa Nabil
- Jun 23, 2018
- 3 min read
Saudi TV drama extolling 'modern past' draws awe and ire. Al-Assouf, set in the 1970s and aired on satellite broadcaster MBC during Ramadan, has emerged as a cultural flashpoint.

A Saudi television drama that glorifies a period before the rise of religious fundamentalism has evoked nostalgia about the kingdom's "modern past" -- and fury from arch-conservatives sidelined in a much-publicised liberalisation drive. "Al-Assouf", set in the 1970s and aired on satellite broadcaster MBC during the holy fasting month of Ramadan, has emerged as a cultural flashpoint that has pitted hardliners against more moderate proponents of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's reforms. It portrays a different Saudi Arabia -- a traditional but tolerant society where the sexes mingle unfettered, some women blithely pursue lovers and appear unveiled in musical soirees, and the men appear disinterested in controlling what they wear. That image of Saudi society, dismissed as a distortion by hardliners, chimes with Prince Mohammed's repeated assertion that the kingdom was a cradle of moderate Islam until 1979, a turning point that marked the birth of radicalism. That year saw an Islamic revolution in arch-rival Iran and a militant siege of Mecca's Grand Mosque, which the crown prince has said gave conservatives free rein to enforce an austere vision of Islam. Al-Assouf, which portrays the pre-1979 era -- widely hailed as Saudi Arabia's "modern past" -- has left conservatives bristling. "To picture a community that accepts the mixing of genders, adultery and children born out of wedlock... is a disaster," prominent cleric Abdulbaset Qari said in a YouTube video. "They (the show) want to spread immorality, to normalise this culture." One Al-Assouf scene showing a young Saudi boy leaning over a neighbourhood boundary wall to talk to a girl was widely criticised on social media. "Young children flirting!" tweeted Abdulrahman al-Nassar, a Kuwaiti cleric popular in the kingdom. "The ugly distortion of childhood in Saudi Arabia."
But moderates, including Al-Assouf's lead actor Nasser al-Kasabi, have fiercely defended the show. "Extremists are against it because they believe it is an attempt to destroy what they built over the next two decades (since 1979), which they refer to as the 'awakening'," columnist Abdulrahman al-Rashed wrote in the pan-Arab daily Asharq al-Awsat. "They are attacking Al-Assouf because it has cast light on an era that was deliberately made dark. The raison d'etre of the extremists is to extinguish this light."

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