Deena Aljuhani Abdulaziz is a princess of Saudi Arabia who does not wear a burka or a hijab

She is a modern princess who wears short hair and an even shorter skirt, even though she is married with children.


Her people consider her vulgar because she decided to cultivate a European style of dress.

Deena owns an exclusive boutique D'NA, where only selected people can shop. She takes pride of place in fashion shows, because everyone knows that Princess Dina has good fashion taste, reports the Telegraph.

Deena Abdulaziz Al Saud in Asymmetrical Skirt

She is married to Prince Nasser bin Abdulaziz Al Saud of Saudi Arabia and the couple has three children: a daughter and two twin sons.

As a child, she accompanied her father on trips between Middle Eastern countries and the United States, and later studied at several American universities.

Deena Abdulaziz Al Saud Street Style

She refused the hijab and, unlike other wives of monarchs and princes, she is also a successful business woman and a truly influential figure in the fashion world. For two consecutive years, Her Highness is on the BoF 500 influential list (the list of 500 people who define the vector of the global fashion industry, according to The Business of Fashion).

Deena Abdulaziz Al Saud in White

Dina was one of the first to break the stereotype that Arab ladies, with excessive financial resources, suffer from a lack of taste.

"Women in Saudi Arabia have been paying attention to fashion since the late sixties and have been buying unique pieces of fashion. They don't talk about it, they don't show it to others, they don't take pictures because it's considered vulgar," she once said.

Style Icon Deena Abdulaziz Al Saud

Also, her love of fashion led her to the position of editor of Vogue Arabic, but she left the position just two years later because she "didn't want to compromise with a publisher who didn't understand her ideas."

Deena Abdulaziz Al Saud in Balloon Pants

Milan Fashion Week Day 4 063 PS 1 scaled

Deena Abdulaziz Al Saud in All Black

IMG 9725

/Telegraph/