The city of Ramadi in Iraq's Anbar province has entered the "Guinness" World Records after designing and installing the largest "dishdasha" in the world in front of a residential complex. The creators of the idea stated in a statement that they purchased the largest sewing machine in Iraq for this purpose and used 700 meters of fabric. The dishdasha measures 22.3 meters in length and 8.4 meters in width, weighing 160 kilograms, and is raised on a concrete tower weighing 65 tons. Its sewing took more than 70 days of work. They communicated with Guinness World Records and received international recognition, noting that the previous record was for a dishdasha measuring 13.7 meters in length and 5.5 meters in width. The choice to design and sew the dishdasha is to highlight and take pride in Arab culture and attire, demonstrating to the world that Iraqi cities are developing and undergoing reconstruction.