Hajar Ali (born 1978 or 1979)[1] is a Singaporean entrepreneur, founder of Urbane Nomads and the website Travel Like a Humanitarian. She was the first recorded woman to cross the Rub' al Khali, the "Empty Quarter" of the Arabian Peninsula.
Ali has a master's degree in strategic studies from the Institute of Defense and Strategic Studies in Singapore, now the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies; her thesis "[applied] James C Scott’s model of peasant resistance to the daily transgressions of Iranian youths against the ruling mullahs".[2][3][4] She previously worked as a real estate agent.[5]
Ali founded Urbane Nomads, a bespoke luxury travel agency, in 2008 after conceiving the idea while traveling in Patagonia.[6] A lover of horses, she likes to include riding in the company's trips.[1][3] She later launched Travel Like a Humanitarian, a website on which NGOs can advertise travel offerings.[6]
In March 2012, she made the first known crossing of the Rub' al Khali by a woman.[3][7][8][9] She intends to make a future expedition to the pole of inaccessibility in Antarctica.[4][9]
In 2011 Ali was included by Singapore Women's Weekly in its annual "Great Women of Our Time".[1][8]
She serves as the editor of Mensa Singapore's newsletter[10] and is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society. She considers Singapore her home,[5][11] but as of November 2015[update] lives in Istanbul.[2] She has a Bengal cat named Loki.[5] Ali is a practicing Muslim but does not wear the hijab.[2]