Mrs Haroon (front centre) with Mr Jinnah and other members of the Pakistan Women National Guard. “When her car arrived, there was some problem and Yahya Khan was a couple of minutes late in opening the door [as protocol required] and she was very upset,” recalls Mrs Haroon.
Late that night, the National Guard adjutant came to inform her that the brigadier stood in imminent peril of being discharged from the army, and asked if she and Mr Haroon could use their good offices with the commander-in-chief Gen Douglas Gracey to salvage the Brigadier’s career. That is what the couple did – and the rest, as they say, is history.
Nearly two decades later, when Yahya Khan became president, he invited Mr and Mrs Haroon to dinner in Islamabad. “At the table, he said ‘I want you all to know that I wouldn’t have been here if it wasn’t for this lady, Pasha Haroon.’ I got such a shock – it was so embarrassing!”
In Karachi, the Farsi-speaking residents formed a kind of informal fraternity. Thus it was that Naheed Mirza, daughter of an Iranian statesman and second wife of Iskander Mirza, Pakistan’s first defence minister and later president, was also well known to Mrs Haroon.
On one occasion, Mrs Haroon was privy to an interesting exchange between the president and his army chief, General Ayub Khan. She and her husband had been invited to accompany the first couple to Rawalpindi by the special railway salon for VIPs. During the journey, a game of bridge got underway.
Among the players were the president and his army commander. At one point, Mr Mirza jestingly accused Ayub Khan of cheating against him. “And Ayub khan said ‘No sir, I’m not cheating against you. If you cut my hand, every drop of blood will say ‘Iskandar, Iskandar, Iskandar’,” recalls Mrs Haroon. “Yet a few years later, he was the man who would remove him [from power].”
When General Ayub Khan forced Iskander Mirza to resign and go into exile in London, Mr and Mrs Haroon happened to be in that city and they went to receive the former president and his wife at the airport. They both looked shaken, and Mrs Mirza was trembling. She narrated to her friends the ordeal they had undergone on the flight from Karachi to Quetta with armed guards pointing their guns at them.
The couple spent their exile in straitened circumstances. “Iskander wasn’t a crook: he was a regular army man,” says Mrs Haroon. “Naheed began to work for a porcelain maker in order to earn a living.” Upon her husband’s death in 1969, she wanted to take his body to Pakistan, but president Ayub Khan refused to give permission.
“Finally, Ardeshir Zahedi, the Shah of Iran’s foreign minister who was ambassador to London at the time and a close friend of Naheed’s daughter, called the Shah who sent a plane. We accompanied Naheed to the airport with the body, which was taken to Tehran to be buried. Can you imagine – how cruel!”
A stormy ZAB-Nusrat union
Among the people known to Mrs Haroon who were to later achieve prominence on Pakistan’s political firmament was Nusrat Sabunchi, the stunning daughter of an Iranian businessman who decided that moving to the newly formed country of Pakistan would be a financially astute step.
He was an old associate of Mrs Haroon’s parents, who requested Lady Nusrat to put up Mr Sabunchi at Seafield until he found his feet in the city. “My mother-in-law of course agreed without hesitation,” says Mrs Haroon. “As an Iranian herself, she took anyone who was Iranian under her wing.”
Lady Nusrat soon persuaded Mr Sabunchi to bring his wife and two unmarried daughters – Nusrat and Behjat – from his first wife to Seafield as well, where she gave them the guest quarters to stay in and encouraged him to start a business dealing in Persian carpets.
As was her wont, she became fiercely protective of the Sabunchi family and remained very close to them even after they moved out of her house. It was a trait that manifested itself often after Nusrat married Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, a stormy union if there ever was one.
Following a particularly nasty row between the husband and wife, which saw Mrs Bhutto come sobbing to Lady Nusrat along with a young Benazir and Murtaza, the latter firmly declared she wouldn’t allow him to take her back. She only relented after Mr Bhutto agreed to seek his wife’s forgiveness. “When Zulfi came to the house, I took him up to my mother-in-law’s room,” says Mrs Haroon. “He got down on his knees, placed his hands on Nusrat’s knees and begged her to forgive him. Then my mother-in-law said, ‘Ok go’.”
However, that didn’t deter Mr Bhutto from continuing to give his wife grief. In the early ‘60s, when he was foreign minister, Princess Ashraf, the Shah of Iran’s twin sister, arrived for a visit. Mrs Haroon served as the princess’s lady-in-waiting during her stay. On the evening before her departure for Tehran, the Bhuttos threw her a farewell dinner at their house, 70 Clifton.
“Zulfi came to me during dinner to say that I should go home and tell Nawab Chhatari who was chief of protocol, as well as the ADCs to leave and take her ladies-in-waiting to the government house where they were staying,” recalls Mrs Haroon. Mr Bhutto told her he would himself take Princess Ashraf back to her lodgings afterwards. She did as she was told.
“At 3am that morning, the phone next to my bed rang. It was Nusrat. ‘Where is my husband?’ she asked. I said I don’t know, and I really didn’t know where he was!”
Many years later, Benazir – now a seasoned politician – would once again visit Seafield. This took place shortly after a dinner party at the home of her parents-in-law, to which Mr and Mrs Haroon were also invited. As it was a small gathering, she had brought along her mother who was by now increasingly descending into Alzheimer’s. Benazir thought it would be pleasant for Mrs Bhutto to meet old acquaintances and speak in Farsi with them.
“Later that evening Benazir was talking to me, and asked if she could come and see the room that her mother and aunt had stayed in when they first came to Pakistan,” says Mrs Haroon. The very next day, she came across to Seafield, staying for over three hours reminiscing with the couple about the early years of her mother’s arrival in the newly created nation. “I had not seen her for a long time, not since she was a little child,” says Mrs Haroon, adding pensively, “BB had a way of reaching out to people.”
Today, while still as spry and alert as ever, Mrs Haroon lives at a more sedate pace, dividing her time between an apartment in New York and her living quarters in Seafield, which she still calls home.
Published in Dawn, February 14th, 2016