The unassuming young woman made a lasting impact on the publishing world of Lahore a century ago | Photos from the book
Hers is almost a forgotten name now. It is hardly likely that general readers of today would recall her name or those of any of her publications, but Syeda Muhammadi Begum was the stuff legends are made of and she made a lasting impact on the burgeoning publishing world of Lahore around a century ago.
Muhammadi Begum was born in 1878 in Shahpur, a suburb of Delhi, and died six months after her 30th birthday in 1908. Yet in this brief span she managed to accomplish what many people are not able to do in much longer lifetimes. In her father’s home she was taught Urdu and memorised the Holy Quran. At 19 years of age she was married to Syed Mumtaz Ali, founder and owner of the Darul Ishaat publishing house in Lahore, who was nearly twice her age and had lost his first wife. Impressed with his young wife’s enthusiasm and talent, the gentleman taught her Arabic and Persian and engaged tutors to educate her in English, Hindi and mathematics.
Over the next decade, Muhammadi Begum went on to author 30 books for women and children, including Sharif Beti — about a woman who starts a school at home — and Safiya Begum, which is a cautionary tale about childhood engagements and marrying off daughters without their consent. In addition to her own writing, she worked closely with her husband to establish the popular weekly magazine Tehzeeb-i-Niswaan for women, one of the first of its kind, which did much to educate and inform women in their seclusion and published for 50 years. Naeem Tahir, the compiler of Syeda Muhammadi Begum Aur Un Ka Khandaan includes an extract from Gail Minault’s book Secluded Scholars: Women’s Education and Muslim Social Reform in Colonial India in which the American scholar and historian writes that “before her untimely death, Muhammadi Begum helped make Urdu journalism for women not only acceptable, but successful. She wrote voluminously: journal articles, novels, books of etiquette, housekeeping manuals and cookbooks.” No mean achievement, managing to fit all this in a short but eventful life.
Syeda Muhammadi Begum died at just 30 years of age, but managed to author more than 30 books for women and children in her short but eventful life
Details of Muhammadi Begum’s family background form the bulk of Tahir’s book. The family tree and photographs of family members add to the documentary value. The most interesting part is the biographical note penned by the late author’s sister, Syeda Ahmadi Begum. For reasons which have not been made clear, this is the first time this note has been published — even though it was written soon after the death of its subject. There are no skeletons in the cupboard or family disputes being aired. Perhaps the manuscript was not considered to have a high literary quality. In spite of this, there is a wealth of personal information.
There is some indication of sibling rivalry, but it is dealt with in a simple and natural manner and one can see genuine affection in the way this note has been written. However, while one can understand the style of the original being maintained and preserved, even old-fashioned spellings have been retained, such as the approach of joining some words such as ‘un ki’; this could have easily been avoided by tighter editing.