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Princess Diana was known for her compassionate hospital visits, where she brought warmth and comfort to those who needed it most. But one visit in 1995 — just two months before her historic Panorama interview — marked the beginning of a private and deeply meaningful relationship that would remain hidden from the world for years.
The connection between them came through an unexpected link. Diana had accompanied Oonagh Shanley-Toffolo — an Irish nun, acupuncturist, and close friend — whose husband had just undergone heart surgery. During that visit, Diana met Dr. Khan for the first time.
She returned the next day.
Then the day after that.
Soon she was visiting almost every afternoon.
Despite his brilliance, Dr. Khan lived simply. He worked long hours, smoked too much, and often grabbed KFC between shifts. He loved late-night jazz clubs, quiet dinners, and anonymity — everything the princess did not have. Yet they slipped into each other’s lives with surprising ease.
“He’s drop-dead gorgeous,” Diana reportedly told Oonagh with a conspiratorial smile.
Their bond deepened. They shared private jokes, simple meals, and late-night conversations. Diana read books on Islam, eager to understand the world he came from. She even traveled to Lahore to meet his family, who welcomed her warmly over afternoon tea.
Pressures That Love Couldn’t Hold
But the world around them was relentless.
Diana lived beneath a magnifying glass. Khan, intensely private, feared that public exposure could destroy both his career and his peace. They spoke of moving to Pakistan, even Australia or South Africa, but the balance was impossible. Diana longed for a relationship that could exist openly. Khan longed for one that could exist quietly.
The Month That Changed Everything
Just weeks after their breakup, news broke that Diana was spending time with Dodi Fayed. Khan said he learned of it only through the media, and the discovery devastated him.
Then, in the early hours of August 31, 1997, the world changed forever. Diana’s death in Paris stunned him. He attended her funeral quietly at Westminster Abbey, mourning a woman he had loved deeply — privately, sincerely, and without need for recognition.
“She was a normal person with great qualities… a very kind person. We all have our faults, but she had a wonderful heart.”
Life After Diana
In 2006, he married Hadia Sher Ali, a woman of Afghan royal descent, but the marriage ended two years later. Today, he continues his work as a heart surgeon and participates in humanitarian projects in Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. He leads a quiet life, grateful for peace.
A Love That Revealed the Woman Behind the Crown
Diana and Hasnat Khan’s relationship remains one of the most intimate chapters of her life — a reminder that behind the public image was a woman searching for sincerity, companionship, and a love untainted by status or duty.
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