KARACHI: Atia Zafar, a housewife who became a medical practitioner in the face of overwhelming odds, died on Wednesday of sudden respiratory failure at her home. She was 88.

She is survived by her three sons and six daughters — all medical professionals.Born in Desna, a remote village in the Indian state of Bihar, in 1926, Ms Zafar lost her parents when she was barely eight and began to look after her four younger siblings.

She could not go to school as was married to Abu Zafar Azad, a schoolteacher, when she was 13. She had two sons when the family migrated to Karachi after partition.

After she gave birth to her third son and a daughter, she started her education from scratch on the insistence of her husband who was running a school in Lyari’s Atmaram Preetamdas Road area.

Interestingly, when she made it to the final year of her MBBS in the Dow Medical College in 1962 her eldest son, now a prominent doctor, Dr Tipu Sultan, also got admission there.

She ran a clinic in Lyari and then worked in Karachi’s outskirts as an employee of the defunct Karachi District Council. “Throughout her life till she took her last breath she worked for the marginalised people,” said her son, Dr Shershah Syed.

She was buried in Koohi Goth near a charity hospital for fistula patients.

Opinion

Editorial

NAP revival
Updated 17 Mar, 2025

NAP revival

This bloody cycle of violence will continue unless action is complemented with social, economic, political efforts in Balochistan and KP.
New reality
17 Mar, 2025

New reality

THE US retreat from global climate finance commitments could not have come at a worse time. Pakistan faces an...
Killer traffic
17 Mar, 2025

Killer traffic

MYSTERIOUS and unstoppable. It is these words that perhaps best describe the recent surge in traffic-related...
After the review
Updated 16 Mar, 2025

After the review

Should prepare economy for durable growth by attracting foreign private investments to boost productivity and exports.
Embracing crypto
16 Mar, 2025

Embracing crypto

IT seems a little prod was all it took for Pakistan to finally ‘embrace the future’. The Pakistan Crypto Council...
Fault lines
16 Mar, 2025

Fault lines

IT was a distressing spectacle, though a sadly predictable one. As the National Assembly took up for discussion the...