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Abida Sultan

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Abida Sultan Begum
Princess Suraya Jah, Nawab Gowhar-i-Taj
Born28 August 1913
Bhopal, Bhopal State, British India
Died11 May 2002 (aged 88)
Malir, Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan
Burial
Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan
SpouseMohammad Sarwar Ali Khan
IssueShahryar Khan
HouseNawab of Bhopal
FatherHamidullah Khan
MotherMaimoona Sultan

Princess Suraya Jah, Nawab Gowhar-i-Taj (born Abida Sultan Begum Sahiba; 28 August 1913 – 11 May 2002), also known as Abida Sultaan, was the eldest daughter of Hamidullah Khan, the last Nawab of the Bhopal state, and his wife Begum Maimoona Sultan.

Early life and birth family

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Bhopal royal family. L to R: Nawab Hamidullah Khan, his wife Maimoona Sultan, their daughters – Rabia Sultan, Abida Sultan, Sajida Sultan, in London, 1932

Abida Sultan Begum Sahiba (begum being a Muslim woman of high rank[1]) was born on 28 August[citation needed] 1913,[1] the daughter of Hamidullah Khan, the Nawab of Bhopal and Begum Maimoona Sultan. She was the eldest of three children; she had two younger sisters Sajida Sultan, and Rabia Sultan.[2]

The Begum of Bhopal, Sultan Jahan, was her grandmother,[2] and her predecessor Shah Jahan Begum was her great-grandmother.[citation needed] Her grandmother brought her up, and her own mother "had nothing to do with [her]". Her grandmother, who was nearly 70 when Abida was born, brought her up very strictly. She had to rise at 4am to read the Quran, and had to do menial duties such as sweeping the floor, but she was also allowed to do all the same activities as the boys did, including sports, music, and horse riding.[2][1]

From the age of nine, Abida drove a Rolls-Royce.[1]

She was also known as Abida Sultaan.[2][1]

Marriage and governing

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In 1926, at the age of 12, she married Nawab Mohammad Sarwar Ali Khan,[3] ruler of Kurwai State, who was a childhood friend.[1]

In 1928,[3] at the age of 15, she was recognised as the heiress apparent to the Bhopal throne. She then managed her father's cabinet from 1935 until 1949, when Bhopal was merged with the state of Madhya Pradesh. During this time, she met Mahatma Gandhi, Motilal Nehru, and his son, Jawaharlal Nehru, first prime minister of India.[1]

She had been completely unprepared for her wedding day, and her marriage broke up after around ten years. She later wrote that she had found the consummation of her marriage would "horrified, numbed and feeling unchaste". She moved back to Bhopal, and an ugly custody dispute over the couple's son, Shaharyar Khan, ensued. In 1937 she drove for hours to the home of her ex, gave him a gun and said that if he did not shoot her, she would shoot him.[1]

Move to Pakistan

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After the partition of India in 1947, she experienced discrimination, and witnessed violence between Hindus and Muslims.[1] She gave up her right to the throne and in 1950 emigrated to the newly-formed Pakistan, aged 37, with her young son.[3]

In Pakistan she joined the foreign service; the government of India responded by excluding her from the line of succession. Her younger sister Sajida succeeded her instead upon her father's death in 1960, despite Abida Sultan contesting the succession in court.[3]

She spent the greater part of her life in Malir District in Karachi.[3]

Death

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Sultan died in Karachi in 2002. Her son, Shaharyar Khan, became the Foreign Secretary of Pakistan and then the chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board.[3]

Personal life

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The cricketer Iftikhar Ali Khan Pataudi was her brother-in-law through his marriage to Sajida, and the cricketer Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi is her nephew.[citation needed]

During her life, she flew aeroplanes, played polo, and wore her hair short.[1]

She wrote an autobiography, Memoirs of a Rebel Princess, which was published posthumously in 2004.[1][4]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Mollan, Cherylann (24 November 2024). "India's 'rebel' Muslim princess who shot tigers and drove a Rolls-Royce". BBC News. Retrieved 26 November 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d Sultaan, Abida (1990–1991). "Seven interviews with Princess Abida" (Interview). Interviewed by Omar Khan. Harappa.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "The remarkable Begums who defied patriarchal norms to rule Bhopal for more than a century". 3 June 2019.
  4. ^ Sultaan, A. (2004). Memoirs of a Rebel Princess. Oxford Pakistan paperbacks. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-579958-3. Retrieved 26 November 2024.