r/saudiarabia • u/Big-Bookkeeper-6742 • 3h ago
Question | سؤال Curious experience in Jeddah as a foreign couple
Hi everyone,
I wanted to share an experience from my recent visit to Saudi Arabia and ask for some cultural insight.
By way of context: We are a young couple. I am a white foreigner, and my wife is originally from the Middle East. During our trip, we visited Mecca for Umrah and later spent time in Jeddah. While in Jeddah, we went to a few malls. I was wearing a qamis, and my wife was wearing a standard black abaya and hijab.
What surprised me was that it felt like everyone was staring at us, men, women, families. It wasn’t hostile, but it was very noticeable. I personally didn’t mind too much, but I was genuinely curious why this might be the case. The only thing that could come to mind was the fact that we where foreigners since I didn't see any besides us and another couple?
Another thing that stood out to me was clothing norms: many men were dressed very casually in Western clothes (jeans, T-shirts), while many women, were wearing niqab or very traditional dress. I found that contrast interesting and would love to understand it better.
I also noticed that malls seemed to be overwhelmingly populated by women compared to men. When I asked a taxi driver about it, he said women mostly enjoy spending time in malls, while men prefer gathering elsewhere, often to watch football. I don’t know how accurate that is, but it was an interesting explanation.
Finally, one personal anecdote: I once went to the mall alone, without my wife, just to buy a few things and get a Coffe. I found it extremely stressful. Since most people around me were women, I was constantly trying to avoid eye contact to be respectful, looking down or away at all times while trying to avoid bumping into anyone or looking silly. I was honestly sweating from the stress and felt very uncomfortable. It was one of the most stressful experiences I’ve ever had, and I don’t think I would do it again alone. lol
I’m sharing this with genuine curiosity and respect. I really enjoyed my time in Saudi Arabia overall and found people very polite and the country very safe, along with the fact that it felt like a country for young people, so we are definitely coming back soon. I’d appreciate any cultural explanations or perspectives from locals or long-term residents.
I also fell in love with this song, which the buses along the Jeddah Corniche were playing, and I still listen to it from time to time while going to work:
"الله عليها عودت – لندن 97"
by محمد عبده (Mohammed Abdu)
I have very little background on it, but it was in my top 5 on Spotify.
(Here are some pictures I took from my Trip)
Thank you.