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Qatar launches 2026 Year of Culture with Canada and Mexico through winter sports push

News RoomBy News RoomMay 3, 2026
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In the heart of Doha, under the soaring roof of the Ali Bin Hamad Al Attiyah Arena, an unexpected scene unfolds. The crisp sound of blades carving ice and the low rumble of granite stones fills the air. Here, in Qatar, a nation synonymous with sun and desert warmth, children are taking their first wobbly steps on skates, families are laughing as they slide curling stones across the ice, and amateur hockey players are engaged in a friendly match. This vibrant, chilly spectacle is not a mirage, but the opening act of the Qatar Canada and Mexico 2026 Year of Culture. By choosing winter sports as its centrepiece, this initiative boldly demonstrates that shared human experiences—joy, play, friendly competition—can thrive in the most unlikely settings, transcending geographical and climatic boundaries.

This launch carries a profound resonance, arriving during what participants describe as turbulent global times. As Canada’s ambassador to Qatar, Karim Morcos, poignantly noted, such cultural exchanges serve as a vital bridge. “Culture and sports is what brings humanity together,” he reflected. “We bring down the barriers and we show what it’s like to be human.” For Ambassador Morcos, this partnership is also a vibrant showcase of Canada’s core identity: its profound diversity. He hopes to illustrate how sport and culture act as powerful tools for integration, bringing people from countless backgrounds together on common ground. The arena in Doha becomes a microcosm of this ideal, where Qatari families, expatriate residents, and diplomatic officials mingle, united by the novel thrill of ice and winter play.

For many attendees, this event marked a thrilling first encounter with disciplines like curling, speed skating, and ice hockey. It represents the seed of a new sporting community in the region. The personal journey of Besan Elwadia, a coach with the Learn to Play Hockey programme, exemplifies this growth. Beginning as a teenage figure skater, she helped recruit players for Qatar’s first national women’s ice hockey team, witnessing firsthand how a shared passion can forge a community. “We were able to build this community in Qatar, parents from different countries coming together through one sport,” she shared, highlighting a programme that now nurtures over sixty children. In a land of intense heat, the appeal is both simple and delightful: “Sometimes you just need a cool place and a sport to play indoors.”

While the joyful clamour of the arena takes centre stage, the Year of Culture is rooted in deeper, strategic partnerships. Ambassador Morcos pointed to a “new page” in Qatar-Canada relations, underscored by recent agreements spanning political, security, and economic cooperation. This cultural exchange is a lively, people-focused manifestation of those strengthening ties. Furthermore, the collaboration looks ahead to major global events, with Canada seeking Qatar’s expertise following its highly successful hosting of the 2022 FIFA World Cup as preparations ramp up for the 2026 edition, which Canada will co-host. Mexico, the third partner in this year’s programme, similarly views the initiative as a conduit for friendship. Ambassador Guillermo Ordorica noted that Qatar’s global profile rose significantly in Mexico after 2022, and this year-long dialogue is a chance to reinforce positive perceptions and shared values between the nations.

The 2026 programme is designed as a sustained engagement, not a one-off event. The Winter Sports Development Programme will unfold over the entire year, with monthly activities aimed at nurturing grassroots participation and creating potential pathways to competitive sport. This long-term commitment suggests a genuine investment in leaving a lasting legacy. If the enthusiasm of the launch event is any indicator, these frosty sports are planting surprising but sturdy roots in the Arabian Peninsula. The initiative proves that cultural connection isn’t confined to traditional arts; it can be forged in the glide of a skate, the sweep of a curling broom, and the collective laughter of a community trying something wonderfully new.

Ultimately, the scene in the Doha arena is a powerful metaphor. It shows that with shared will and open-mindedness, a patch of Canadian winter can indeed be cultivated in the Qatari desert. The Year of Culture between Qatar, Canada, and Mexico is more than a diplomatic calendar; it is a living, breathing experiment in human connection. By using the universal languages of sport and play, it builds understanding not through words, but through action and shared experience. It demonstrates that our common humanity—our capacity for curiosity, joy, and teamwork—is the most powerful culture of all, one that can flourish anywhere, even on an ice rink under a desert sun.

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