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A Woman With Many Firsts' - Newspaper
A Woman With Many Firsts' - Newspaper
She was 46 when her husband Liaquat Ali Khan, the country’s first prime minister, was martyred. She had two minor
children to take care of all by her own self as her parents and blood relations had cut off all ties once she embraced
Islam by choice. She had no property or support for survival in that hour of need. Her husband had not filed any claim
against his rural or urban properties that the couple had left behind in the wake of partition.
A visionary without doubt, she was the driving force behind the All-Pakistan Women’s Association (APWA), and had set
up projects, like the Pakistan Women’s National Guard and the Pakistan Women’s Naval Reserve. She actively worked for
women empowerment in a practical manner.
When she fell on hard times after the death of her illustrious husband, she struggled for a while before joining the
foreign service. She first served as Pakistan’s representative to the 7th session of the United Nations General Assembly in
1952 where she was the first Muslim woman delegate.
In 1954, she was appointed Pakistan’s ambassador to the Netherlands, becoming the first woman ambassador of the
country. She represented Pakistan in the Netherlands until 1961 and was also the doyen of the Diplomatic Corps there.
She subsequently served as Pakistan’s ambassador to Italy and Tunisia.
During her foreign assignments, she successfully promoted cordial bilateral relations. Though her husband had banned
Dutch flights from using Pakistan’s airspace as a token of his policy of promoting decolonisation of Indonesia, Begum
Ra’ana was able cultivate warm relations with the Netherlands, and the Queen there counted her among personal
friends.
After a successful diplomatic career lasting over a dozen years, Begum Ra’ana returned to the country and subsequently
became the governor of Sindh in 1973. Again, she was the first Pakistani woman to hold a gubernatorial position in the
country. In many diverse ways, she was way ahead of her times.
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Appeasement is a debatable policy