Taekwondo, Olympics 2024: Donia Abu Taleb trailblazing for Saudi Arabian female athletes

The 27-year-old is the first Saudi woman to qualify for the Olympics and is hoping to win big in Paris.

Taekwondo, Olympics 2024: Donia Abu Taleb trailblazing for Saudi Arabian female athletes

Join our WhatsApp Community to receive travel deals, free stays, and special offers!
- Join Now -

Join our WhatsApp Community to receive travel deals, free stays, and special offers!
- Join Now -

Saudi taekwondo standout Donia Abu Taleb had an unusual introduction to the sport – for years she trained at a boys’ club because there were no girls to compete with.

Now the 27-year-old has become the first Saudi woman to qualify for the Olympics and is dreaming of bringing home the Gulf kingdom’s first gold medal when she competes in Paris.

Though her smiling face today appears on posters and billboards, underscoring Saudi officials’ recent push to champion women’s athletics, the Jeddah native had much humbler beginnings.

“I started taekwondo when I was eight years old and there was no support like now,” Abu Taleb, who also has a law degree, told AFP after a recent training session in the southern mountain city of Abha.

“I always played with the boys in the boys’ centre, originally without girls. I used to wear a head-covering on my hair so as not to show that I was a girl.”

Facing off against boys, she added, “distinguished me and made me strong... I love the challenge”.

High hopes for Paris

For many decades, Saudi Arabia’s restrictions on women's rights extended to their participation in sports, even as spectators.

While privileged Saudi women could compete in tennis and even football in private compounds, there was limited official backing for women...

Read more