The Pakistani woman who helped shape the human rights charter

Begum Shaista Ikramullah was Pakistan's delegate to the UN in 1948

Begum Shaistah Ikramullah. PHOTO:FILE

Begum Shaista Ikramullah, who passed away in 2000, is featured as a woman who shaped the Universal Declaration of Human Rights at a United Nations (UN) exhibition

The renowned politician, diplomat and writer was Pakistan's delegate to the UN and ambassador to Morocco in 1964.

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A description shared by Pakistan's current ambassador to the UN, Maleeha Lodhi, reads:

"As a delegate to the General Assembly’s Third Committee on social, humanitarian and cultural matters, which in 1948 spent 81 meetings discussing the draft of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Begum Shaista Ikramullah of Pakistan advocated for emphasis on freedom, equality and choice in the declarations. She championed the inclusion of Article 16, on equal rights in marriage, which she saw as a way to combat child marriage and forced marriage.”




Begum Ikramullah was one of the first Indian Muslim women of her generation to leave purdah. She completed a thesis titled A Critical Study of the Development of the Urdu Novel and Short Story for which she became the first Muslim woman to be awarded a PhD from the University of London.

After meeting Muhammad Ali Jinnah in Delhi, Begum Ikramullah became inspired to join Muslim politics. She led the Muslim Women Students' Federation and the Women's Sub-committee of the All India Muslim League and migrated to Karachi in 1947.

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Begum Ikramullah joined the Constituent Assembly as one of only two female members and her efforts to improve relations between East and West Pakistan and to improve the political participation and legal status of Muslim women marked her seven-year legislative career.

Begum Ikramullah also made significant literary contributions throughout her life including her autobiography titled From Purdah to Parliament (London, 1963). She was conveyed the Nishan-e-Imtiaz posthumously in 2002.

 
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