Kuwait Crown Princess Faces Execution for Having a Bible in Her House.

JESUS INTERVENED
My name is Princess Lujene Al-Saba.
I was 25 years old when everything changed on a quiet morning in Kuwait City.
I had been a devoted Muslim all my life.
Raised inside a royal system that shaped every breath I took.
I never imagined that a single hidden book could put my life in danger.
But that morning, guards stormed into my private residence and discovered a Bible inside my room.
And in Kuwait’s royal family, that was enough to end my life.
I was summoned before a royal tribunal, accused of apostasy, and sentenced to elimination unless I burned the Bible myself.
But Jesus had other plans for my life.
I was born into luxury that most people will never see.
Yet even surrounded by riches, I felt a hunger in my soul I could not explain.
And the journey to fill that emptiness is the reason you’re hearing my story today.
Contrary to what many believe, not all royal daughters grow up in the main palaces.
Instead, I lived in a private royal estate reserved exclusively for princesses known as the Al-Masila Royal Residence, located in a quiet, heavily guarded area near the outskirts of Kuwait City.
My earliest memories are not of grand public halls or crowded receptions, but of peaceful mornings in a quiet villa surrounded by tall date palms and white stone pathways that only members of the royal family were allowed to walk.
Though the residence was luxurious, it carried a strictness that shaped my life from the moment I could walk.
Every rule, every lesson, every expectation was rooted in one reality.
I was a princess, a representative of the Al-Saba name, and my life belonged to tradition long before it belonged to me.
From childhood, my identity was shaped around Islam, discipline, and the honor of my family.
My routine began each day before sunrise when the sound of the adhan drifted softly through the courtyard speakers.
My caretaker, a kind but very strict woman named Nura al- Shamari would wake me before the call finished, insisting that a princess must be the first to rise for prayer.
She sat beside me each morning as I washed my face with cold water, adjusted my tiny prayer scarf, and performed the prayer with slow, deliberate movements.
These mornings became the foundation of my life.
My mother often visited the residence, but her responsibilities kept her in the main palace most days.
My father, a respected shake within the extended Alsaba family, visited even less frequently.
Yet somehow, I never felt unloved.
I simply understood that duty separated us.
And the palace system raised royal children differently from the rest of the nation.
My life was shaped more by caretakers, teachers, and imams than by parents.
As I grew older, the expectation surrounding my devotion to Islam intensified.
Tutors from respected mosques across Kuwait came to the Al-Masila residents to teach me Tajid, Tapsir, and the rules of Islamic juristprudence.
They were not gentle teachers.
They insisted on perfection, perfect recitation, perfect posture, perfect memorization.
By age 12, I had memorized many chapters of the Quran.
And the imams praised my discipline.
They told my father I possessed a rare spiritual seriousness for someone so young, and he repeated their words proudly whenever he visited.
These compliments made me feel valued and I worked even harder to meet every expectation placed upon me.
I prayed five times a day without fail, fasted with complete devotion during Ramadan, and avoided any form of distraction or entertainment that might pull me away from religious discipline.
In my mind, devotion to Allah became my identity, my purpose, and the source of my dignity as a princess.
Life in the princess residence was both beautiful and restrictive.
The villas were quiet, decorated with cream colored marble floors, traditional Kuwaiti art, and libraries filled with Islamic texts and Arabic literature.
From the outside, it looked like a drea
Gardens trimmed to perfection, fountains with soft lights at night, and guards stationed discreetly behind the hedges and gates.
But inside, life followed a strict pattern that never changed.
After morning prayers, and Quran recitation, I attended lessons in etiquette, historical studies, political behavior, and cultural representation.
These lessons were designed to prepare me for future public appearances, charity work, and roles in women’s organizations across the country.
Every movement was monitored.
Every interaction with staff was recorded.
Every behavior reflected on my family.
Even my laughter had to be controlled, my speech refined, and my friendships supervised by palace officials who reported directly to the royal court.
Despite the pressure, I embraced my role with pride.
When I turned 19, the royal court began preparing me for public responsibilities.
I attended events in Salmia, Hawaii and Jahra, encouraging young Kuwaiti girls to pursue education, confidence and modesty.
I wore elegant abayas and hijabs chosen by palace stylists.
And whenever I spoke in public, whether in schools, charity gatherings or cultural centers, girls looked at me with admiration.
Many of them saw me as an example of a devoted Muslim woman with strength, dignity, and a deep connection to Allah.
Their admiration motivated me to maintain a perfect image.
I never allowed doubts to show.
I never questioned traditions.
I believed that being a princess required absolute loyalty to Islam and to the expectations of my family.
And for years, that identity sustained me.
My devotion only grew stronger as I matured.
I spent long evenings in the Al-Masila library reading classical Islamic texts with my tutors.
I memorized hadiths, studied the writings of respected scholars, and learned the history of Kuwait’s Islamic movements.
I felt proud whenever an imam praised my understanding.
They told me that many young people struggled to maintain spiritual discipline in a modern world filled with distractions, but that I remained steady and unwavering.
I carried those words in my heart like a badge of honor.
In my eyes, my devotion was the proof that I deserved my position as a princess.
It was the one thing no one could question.
I was certain that no temptation, no ideology, and no foreign influence could ever challenge my faith in Allah.
Yet, even with all my devotion, there were moments when I felt a quiet emptiness inside.
An emptiness I never spoke about.
In the silence of my room, after the last prayer of the night, I sometimes wondered why I felt incomplete.
I reminded myself that this was normal, that humans always felt some degree of longing, no matter how blessed they were.
Whenever I felt that emptiness, I pushed myself deeper into prayer and study.
I convinced myself that more devotion would fill the gap, that if I memorized one more sura or spent more hours reviewing taps, the emptiness would disappear.
And sometimes, for a while, it did.
But it always returned and I always ignored it, believing it was a test from Allah, a reminder to keep pushing myself towards spiritual excellence.
By my early 20s, the royal court began involving me more in social responsibilities.
I visited cultural centers, attended conferences on women’s development, and participated in charity events for families in need across Kuwait.
Every appearance strengthened my public image and people often commented that I represented the ideal blend of modern elegance and traditional Islamic devotion.
They admired my modesty, my speech, and my commitment to the values of Kuwait.
Young women wrote letters to the princess residents expressing how much they looked up to me.
Their admiration felt overwhelming sometimes, but it reinforced the idea that my life was meant to reflect the beauty of Islam to the nation.
I carried that responsibility as if it were a crown made of glass, fragile, precious, and impossible to set down.
Deep inside, however, I still felt a subtle ache, a longing for something I could never explain.
It was not rebellion.
It was not dissatisfaction.
It was simply a quiet sense that something was missing.
A silence inside me that was never truly filled no matter how many prayers I performed.
But because I had no language for that feeling, I buried it beneath more discipline, more studies, and more devotion.
After all, doubt was not permitted in my world.
A princess did not question her religious path.
A princess did not seek anything beyond what tradition offered her.
So I told myself that the emptiness was a weakness I had to overcome.
At that time everything in my life seemed stable.
My days were predictable, my responsibilities clear, and my image polished.
I fully believed that the path before me was set, unchangeable, and blessed by Allah.
I never imagined that anything in my life could shift the certainty I carried so deeply.
I felt safe in my understanding of Allah.
Protected by tradition and anchored by the rules that had shaped me since childhood.
There was nothing in my world that suggested danger.
Nothing that hinted that my faith would soon be tested in ways I was completely unprepared to face.
nothing that warned me that the ground beneath my life, built so carefully on devotion and duty, would soon crack open.
If someone had told me then that a single object found inside my own residence, would change everything I believed, I would have laughed.
If anyone had suggested that my devotion would be challenged by something completely forbidden and unexpected, I would have dismissed it instantly.
But life has a way of revealing truth at the moment you least expect it.
And mine began with something small, quiet, and hidden.
Something that waited for me in the very place I believed was the safest in the world.
My room inside the Al-Masiela royal residence.
I did not know that my world was about to shift.
I did not know that the faith I clung to so tightly would soon collide with something far greater than anything I had ever been taught.
I was certain of my identity, certain of my purpose, certain of my devotion, but certainty can disappear in an instant.
And mine did the day I discovered something in my home that no princess of Kuwait should ever possess.
I remember the exact afternoon my life took a turn I never saw coming.
It was a quiet Tuesday, the kind of day where everything in the Al-Masila royal residence moved slowly under the warm Kuwaiti sun.
I had just finished an early charity meeting in Salwa and returned home to prepare for a lesson with my Quran tutor.
The villa was unusually still.
The hallways empty except for the soft hum of the air conditioner echoing through the marble floors.
I walked through the main sitting room on my way to my private quarters, mentally reviewing the topics I intended to study that evening.
There was nothing remarkable about that moment, nothing that warned me I was about to encounter something that would shake the very foundation of my faith.
But life often changes quietly in places where you least expect it.
and mine changed on an ordinary afternoon in a quiet room I had walked through a thousand times.
As I stepped into my private lounge, I noticed something out of place on the corner of my cream colored sofa.
It was a book, black, slightly worn, and pressed awkwardly between two decorative cushions.
I never allowed anyone to move.
At first, I assumed it belonged to one of the housemmaids who might have accidentally left it behind while cleaning.
I moved closer, intending to return it to the staff.
But as I reached for the book, something in my spirit tightened.
The cover was too familiar in its shape.
Too distinctive in its thickness.
My breath caught in my chest before I even turned it fully.
And when I lifted the front cushion, the golden letters on the cover confronted me with a reality I had never imagined would enter my home.
Holy Bible.
Two simple words.
Yet they felt like a storm crashing against everything I believed.
My hands froze, trembling slightly as I stared at the forbidden book, resting in my palm like a dangerous secret.
For a long moment, I could not breathe.
My eyes were fixed on the title, unable to look away, unable to process what I was holding.
In Kuwait, and especially within the royal family, possessing a Bible was far more serious than simply breaking a rule.
It was a threat to identity, to faith, to loyalty.
It was an act viewed as foreign, dangerous, and deeply offensive.
Even touching one was considered a step toward corruption.
I knew the rules well.
I knew the consequences even better.
My father had lectured us many times about avoiding anything that could open a door to disbelief.
My tutors had warned us that Christian scriptures were distorted and misleading.