Dubai Telegraph - Short hair, don't care: Saudi working women embrace cropped locks

EUR -
AED 4.284647
AFN 75.290193
ALL 95.230378
AMD 438.109466
AOA 1069.849125
ARS 1618.738848
AUD 1.668421
AWG 2.100031
AZN 1.985085
BAM 1.945186
BBD 2.346297
BDT 143.119074
BHD 0.439402
BIF 3462.705829
BMD 1.166684
BND 1.4844
BOB 8.050075
BRL 5.844153
BSD 1.164944
BTN 108.069322
BWP 15.639663
BYN 3.343556
BYR 22867.006725
BZD 2.342916
CAD 1.617567
CDF 2683.372701
CHF 0.922373
CLF 0.026467
CLP 1041.666173
CNY 7.966086
CNH 7.977336
COP 4242.650081
CRC 539.158097
CUC 1.166684
CUP 30.917126
CVE 109.666607
CZK 24.371794
DJF 207.448065
DKK 7.472168
DOP 70.147243
DZD 154.29012
EGP 62.299748
ERN 17.50026
ETB 182.795879
FJD 2.58012
FKP 0.866769
GBP 0.871093
GEL 3.1383
GGP 0.866769
GHS 12.820048
GIP 0.866769
GMD 85.763905
GNF 10221.228114
GTQ 8.911375
GYD 243.720147
HKD 9.136425
HNL 30.939181
HRK 7.496996
HTG 152.746542
HUF 367.029469
IDR 19937.813165
ILS 3.539964
IMP 0.866769
INR 108.607196
IQD 1526.073019
IRR 1535502.001566
ISK 142.557374
JEP 0.866769
JMD 184.184999
JOD 0.827147
JPY 186.264016
KES 150.74745
KGS 102.026846
KHR 4663.553432
KMF 490.007231
KPW 1050.013489
KRW 1732.421168
KWD 0.360144
KYD 0.970803
KZT 550.506176
LAK 25689.82409
LBP 104324.555561
LKR 367.64396
LRD 214.350402
LSL 19.11301
LTL 3.444914
LVL 0.705715
LYD 7.405592
MAD 10.827818
MDL 20.07148
MGA 4834.620012
MKD 61.310461
MMK 2450.926995
MNT 4169.735853
MOP 9.397722
MRU 46.56293
MUR 54.274236
MVR 18.036634
MWK 2019.978038
MXN 20.317043
MYR 4.625915
MZN 74.620811
NAD 19.11301
NGN 1586.10407
NIO 42.866102
NOK 11.145052
NPR 172.910518
NZD 2.011177
OMR 0.448741
PAB 1.164944
PEN 3.931647
PGK 5.042486
PHP 69.856952
PKR 324.928436
PLN 4.25605
PYG 7533.891501
QAR 4.247026
RON 5.066091
RSD 116.733049
RUB 90.37186
RWF 1701.217348
SAR 4.373039
SBD 9.401313
SCR 17.716331
SDG 701.176804
SEK 10.887898
SGD 1.4888
SLE 28.729593
SOS 665.767257
SRD 43.691112
STD 24148.003618
STN 24.367042
SVC 10.19338
SYP 128.954205
SZL 19.117685
THB 37.576558
TJS 11.072682
TMT 4.089227
TND 3.404026
TRY 52.13952
TTD 7.905862
TWD 37.032654
TZS 3023.005045
UAH 50.61333
UGX 4310.479969
USD 1.166684
UYU 47.003526
UZS 14165.705169
VES 555.152356
VND 30725.790261
VUV 137.57713
WST 3.190285
XAF 652.39721
XAG 0.015307
XAU 0.000246
XCD 3.153022
XCG 2.099544
XDR 0.811373
XOF 652.39721
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.678778
ZAR 19.336329
ZMK 10501.551321
ZMW 22.163068
ZWL 375.671777
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    22.63

    +0.18%

  • NGG

    -0.0300

    90.29

    -0.03%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    58.21

    -0.26%

  • BCC

    -0.4100

    80.17

    -0.51%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    58.81

    -0.07%

  • AZN

    -0.9600

    204.03

    -0.47%

  • RIO

    1.1300

    98.26

    +1.15%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    33.3

    -0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.43

    +0.18%

  • BCE

    -0.5400

    23.35

    -2.31%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.02

    +0.31%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2700

    16.96

    -1.59%

  • VOD

    -0.1600

    15.69

    -1.02%

  • BP

    0.5400

    46.44

    +1.16%

Short hair, don't care: Saudi working women embrace cropped locks
Short hair, don't care: Saudi working women embrace cropped locks / Photo: Fayez Nureldine - AFP

Short hair, don't care: Saudi working women embrace cropped locks

When Saudi doctor Safi took a new job at a hospital in the capital, she decided to offset her standard white lab coat with a look she once would have considered dramatic.

Text size:

Walking into a Riyadh salon, she ordered the hairdresser to chop her long, wavy locks all the way up to her neck, a style increasingly in vogue among working women in the conservative kingdom.

The haircut –- known locally by the English word "boy" –- has become strikingly visible on the streets of the capital, and not just because women are no longer required to wear hijab headscarves under social reforms pushed by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Arabia's de facto ruler.

As more women join the workforce, a central plank of government efforts to remake the Saudi economy, many describe the "boy" cut as a practical, professional alternative to the longer styles they might have preferred in their pre-working days.

For Safi, who asked to be identified by a pseudonym to preserve her anonymity, the look also serves as a form of protection from unwanted male attention, allowing her to focus on her patients.

"People like to see femininity in a woman's appearance," she said. "This style is like a shield that protects me from people and gives me strength."

- A practical time-saver -

At one salon in central Riyadh, demand for the "boy" cut has spiked –- with seven or eight customers out of 30 requesting it on any given day, said Lamis, a hairdresser.

"This look has become very popular now," she said. "The demand for it has increased, especially after women entered the labour market.

"The fact that many women do not wear the hijab has highlighted its spread" while spurring even more customers to try it out, especially women in their late teens and twenties, she said.

The lifting of the headscarf requirement is just one of many changes that have reordered daily life for Saudi women under Prince Mohammed, who was named as the heir to his 86-year-old father, King Salman, five years ago.

Saudi women are no longer banned from concerts and sports events, and in 2018 they gained the right to drive.

The kingdom has also eased so-called guardianship rules, meaning women can now obtain passports and travel abroad without a male relative's permission.

Such reforms, however, have been accompanied by a crackdown on women's rights activists, part of a broader campaign against dissent.

Getting more women to work is a major component of Prince Mohammed's Vision 2030 reform plan to make Saudi Arabia less dependent on oil.

The plan initially called for women to account for 30 percent of the workforce by the end of the decade, but already that figure has reached 36 percent, assistant tourism minister Princess Haifa Al-Saud told the World Economic Forum in Davos last month.

"We see women today in every single job type," Princess Haifa said, noting that 42 percent of small and medium-sized enterprises are women-owned.

Many working women interviewed by AFP praised the "boy" cut as a tool for navigating their new professional lives.

"I am a practical woman and I don't have time to take care of my hair," said Abeer Mohammed, a 41-year-old mother of two who runs a men's clothing store.

"My hair is curly, and if my hair grows long, I will have to spend time that is not available to me taking care of it in the morning."

- 'Show of strength' -

Saudi Arabia has traditionally outlawed men who "imitate women" or wear women's clothing, and vice versa.

But Rose, a 29-year-old shoe saleswoman at a Riyadh mall, sees her close-cropped hair as a means of asserting her independence from men, not imitating them.

It "gives me strength and self-confidence... I feel different, and able to do what I want without anyone's guardianship", said Rose, who did not want to give her full name.

"At first my family rejected the look, but over time they got used to it," she added.

Such acceptance partly reflects the influence of Arab stars like actress Yasmin Raeis or singer Shirene who have adopted the style, said Egyptian stylist Mai Galal.

"A woman who cuts her hair in this way is a woman whose character is strong because it is not easy for women to dispense with their hair," Galal told AFP.

Nouf, who works in a cosmetics store and preferred not to give her family name, described the message of the "boy" cut this way: "We want to say that we exist, and our role in society does not differ much from that of men."

Short hair, she added, is "a show of women's strength".

A.El-Nayady--DT