A
cleaner in the capital of Saudi Arabia was given a set of gold jewels
and promised thousands of riyals after he was ridiculed on social media
when a photo of him staring at a jewelry shop display went viral.
An
Instagram user had mocked the cleaner, who is from Bangladesh but works
in Riyadh, by posting the photo with a caption that read "he looks as
though he is seeing trash".
The
comment prompted an outpouring of support for the cleaner on social
media, and Abdullah al Qahtani, the owner of the Twitter account Ensaniyat (humanitarianism), started a campaign to find the man in the photo.
"I received tons of phone
calls and messages in response to my tweet. Some were really helpful,
while others were claiming that they were the cleaner," al Qahtani said.
"But three hours my
tweet, which was shared over 6,000 times, we found him," the 38-year-old
businessman told CNN over the phone.
Twitter
users were able to identify the location of the cleaner, Nazer al-Islam
Abdul Karim, from the reflection of the shop glass visible in the
photo.
When al Qahtani posted a new photo of Abdul Karim, people began asking for a way to get in touch with him.
"Some wanted to donate gold
sets, others cash, iPhones and Samsung Galaxy phones," al Qahtani said.
"Even a rice company wanted to donate rice bags to Nazer al-Islam."
Turki
al-Dajam, an executive at a Saudi sports channel, posted videos on
Snapchat showing Abdul Karim choosing a gold set. He also posted photos
of the cleaner with his new gifts.
Abdul Karim, who is 65, told
CNN that he was delighted with the gifts. Describing the moment the
photo was taken, he said: "I saw a flash. I didn't know what this was.
Then I heard that my photo was in the media."
"I
was just doing my job as a cleaner in the municipality and found myself
in front of the gold shop. I am very happy about the gifts and very
thankful."
Al Qahtani -- who set
up the Ensanyat Twitter account to connect social media users with
people in need across Riyadh -- said it was very endearing to see the
amount of solidarity from people in Saudi Arabia, but also across the
Gulf region.
"I really wish we can always stay united like this to help people in need," he told CNN.
source: cnn
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