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    Begum: a portrait of Ra'ana Liaquat Ali Kahn, Pakistan's pioneering first lady

    Posted By: DZ123
    Begum: a portrait of Ra'ana Liaquat Ali Kahn, Pakistan's pioneering first lady

    Deepa Agarwal, "Begum: a portrait of Ra'ana Liaquat Ali Kahn, Pakistan's pioneering first lady"
    English | 2019 | ISBN: 0670091189 | EPUB | pages: 256 | 4.9 mb

    Begum Ra'ana Liaquat Ali Khan was the wife of Pakistan's first prime minister. She was born
    Irene Margaret Pant in Kumaon in the early twentieth century. A generation earlier, her family
    had converted to Christianity, and Irene grew up in the shadow of the Brahmin community's still
    active outrage. Always intelligent, outgoing and independent, she was teaching economics in a
    Delhi college when she met the dashing Nawazada Liaquat Ali Khan, a rising politician in the Muslim
    League and an ardent champion of the cause for Pakistan.
    She was immediately inspired by both the man and the idea; they married in 1933 and Irene Pant
    became Ra'ana Liaquat Ali Khan. In August 1947 they left for Pakistan-led by Liaquat's mentor
    and friend, Mohammad Ali Jinnah. Ra'ana threw herself into the work of nation building, but in
    1951 Liaquat Ali Khan was assassinated, and the reasons for his murder are still shrouded in mystery.
    Ra'ana continued to be active in public life-and her contribution to women's empowerment in
    Pakistan is felt to this day.
    Ra'ana's life story embodies all the major tropes of the Indian subcontinent's recent history.
    Three religions-Hinduism, Christianity and Islam-had an immense impact on her life,
    and she participated actively in all the major movements of her time-the freedom struggle,
    the Pakistani movement and the fight for women's empowerment. She could see clearly what went
    wrong after 1947 and wasn't afraid to say so. She spoke out openly against the rise of religious
    conservatism in Pakistan and the growing role of corruption. She occasionally met with opposition,
    but she never gave up. It is this spirit that The Begum captures.