The Red Truck: A Cherished Heritage Symbol of Saudi and Gulf Transportation

The Red Truck: A Cherished Heritage Symbol of Saudi and Gulf Transportation
The Red Truck: A Cherished Heritage Symbol of Saudi and Gulf Transportation
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The iconic red truck, locally known as a lorry, has become a deeply ingrained heritage symbol in the Gulf and Saudi Arabia, having played a pivotal role from the 1940s to the 1970s in facilitating transportation and connecting remote villages to bustling cities during a time of limited travel options and challenging conditions.

Historian Abdullah Al-Zahrani told the Saudi Press Agency that residents and pilgrims heavily relied on these trucks for long journeys often spanning several days.

He noted that the red truck represented a shift in transportation, offering much-needed comfort for families and children.

Beyond passenger transport, the truck also held significant economic importance by ferrying food supplies to markets and commercial centers.

Merchants used it to ship goods such as dates, spices, livestock, and textiles, thereby stimulating rural trade and fostering regional interconnectedness.

Local resident Salem Al-Abdali, whose father drove a red truck in the villages south of Taif, recalled its distinctive red color, handcrafted sunroof, juniper wood floors, and hand-stitched canvas roof that protected passengers from the elements.

Al-Abdali explained that the red truck held a special social status as the primary alternative to camels for residents, adding that it is deeply associated with stories, experiences, and chants recited during trips in popular memory.

He highlighted that some drivers even offered their services to villagers free of charge, embodying the strong spirit of cooperation and community solidarity that characterized the era.

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