Intra-tribal In the Arabian peninsula generally the tribe (
qabila) refers not only to a blood relation but also to a social status. Tribal (
qabili or
asil) people assign themselves into inferior and superior tribes that assume purity in blood and root (
asl). This form of discrimination has roots in the vicious tribal wars and conflicts which predated Saudi Arabia and Islam. Matrimony between individuals of
qabila and
khadiri stock, and between individuals of superior and inferior tribes, is frowned upon. This is because
qabili status itself depends on purity of paternal lineage. Children of mixed marriages would carry mixed blood which would reflect on the position of the tribe as a whole. Favoritism of one's own tribe to others in many matters, including those in which it is prohibited to do so such as in governmental affairs, is common.
Khadiri In
Najd region, all freeborn citizens who cannot claim tribal descent are unofficially called non-
asil or Khadiri. This group included many of the urban tradesmen, artisans, merchants, and scholars of pre-oil Arabia. Historically, rule in Najd villages towns, and larger politics was regularly held by the tribal (
asil) groups while
Khadiri people generally were held to an inferior social status.
Hejazi Hadar Hejazi Hadar are Saudi citizens of non-tribal, non-
Bedouin origins in the urban areas of
Hejaz region, colloquially called
Hadar (city-dwellers). These include multi-ethnic citizens from
Medina and
Taif in the
Hejaz area, and from
Jeddah,
Mecca, and
Yanbu in the Hejazi part of the
Tihamah. The Hadar in these places are known by their distinctive
dialect yet contrasting physical features. Their diversity is largely due to their ancestors migration to Hejaz, cradle of Islam, from all over the world prior or in the early days of the Saudi reign. Saudi Bedouins call Saudis of non-Bedouin origins "Sea Refuse" (Tarsh Bahar), a derogatory term largely used for Hejazi Hadar that dates back to the fall of the
kingdom of Hejaz. "Pilgrims’ remains" (
bagaya hujjaj) is another phrase used unflatteringly. Hejazi Hadar, on the other hand, consider themselves more sophisticated and civilized, while the Bedouin population see themselves as racially pure. ==Racism in media==