Anis Kidwai

Anis Kidwai (1906–1982) was a writer, an activist and a politician from Uttar Pradesh. She worked towards peace and the rehabilitation of the victims of India's bloody Partition, and spent a majority of her life in service of the newly independent India. She served two terms as a Member of the Parliament in the Rajya Sabha as a part of the Indian National Congress from 1956-62.[1]

Personal life

Anis Kidwai was born in 1906 in Barabanki, Uttar Pradesh into a patriotic and orthodox family of Awadh. Her father, Wilait Ali was a prominent lawyer who wrote humorous columns in local papers. Anis was a self-taught student. She became well-versed in Urdu and English literature by listening to the tutors that taught her brothers.[2] After her father's death, she was consigned to a life behind the purdah until the late 1930s, when India's final efforts at the freedom struggle allowed her a greater degree of participation in public life.[3]

Anis married her cousin Shafi Ahmed Kidwai in 1920 and lived with him first in Allahabad and then in other cities, wherever her husband’s job took them. Her husband's brother Rafi Ahmed was a freedom fighter and was regularly imprisoned for his activism, and his family, including Shafi and Anis regularly faced political persecution for it.[2]

In October 1947, her husband was murdered in a brutal communal attack, and this catapulted Anis into her role as an activist and a writer. She gave up wearing the burkha and came to Delhi to offer her support to Gandhi and his cause. It was after she came to Delhi that she was suggested by Gandhi to focus on helping others In just a few months, working alongside Subhadra Joshi, Anis helped victims of the communal bloodbath that followed Independence; and with Mridula Sarabhai she helped in the recovery of abducted women.[3]

In 1973, her daughter Azadi died after many years battling rheumatic heart disease.[1]

Anis Kidwai died on 16 July 1982, leaving behind a daughter and two sons – Seema, Parvez and Kamal.[2]

Political career

Anis Kidwai's political career began in part due to the death of her brother-in-law Rafi on 24 October 1954. Shortly after his death, the Congress offered a Rajya Sabha seat 'to the family'. Although Rafi and Shafi's younger brother Mahfuz could have assumed the sear, he asked that Anis be the nominee. Anis Kidwai served as a Member of the Parliament from the Indian National Congress party from Bihar at the Rajya Sabha for two terms, from 1956–62 and then from 1962–68.[4] She retired on 2 April 1968.

During her tenure, she participated actively in the proceedings alongside other women MPs like Savitry Devi Nigam, Dr Seeta Parmanand and Subhadra Joshi. She spoke in favour of the Punishment for Molestation of Women Bill 1958, which was introduced by Savitry Devi, which eventually lapsed and was not taken up again. Before her official political career began, Anis served as a secretary of the Women’s Congress Committee from 1921 to 1923.[1]

In 1961, she was the sole woman member of a six-member parliamentary committee constituted by Jawaharlal Nehru to look into possible reforms of Muslim Personal Law, which was disbanded almost immediately as its very first meeting drew vociferous protests by Muslim MPs and ministers.

Literary work and awards

Anis wrote a memoir in Urdu, Azaadi Ke Chaaon Mein (In Freedom's Shade) which gives a detailed account of the struggles faced by the refugees post partition and the emotional dilemma's she faced as she worked for the resettlement of the abducted women.[5]. It was published in 1974 to great critical acclaim and won her an award from the Urdu Academy of Uttar Pradesh. In 1976 and 1980, two collections of essays were published, titled Nazre Khush Guzre and Ab Jinke Dekhne Ko. In her book Zulum, she condemns the inhumanity of communal violence[6]. She also authored Char Rukh, a book on the lives and work of writers and poets. Anis Kidwai was honoured by the Sahitya Kala Parishad for her contribution to literature.[2]

Published accounts

Film

Mersiya 1947, is a short film documenting the oral histories of partition survivors and the stories of women across religions and borders experiencing the different phases of partition violence. The film was co-directed by Akanksha Damini Joshi and is titled Mersiya 1947. This film is based on the accounts of two social workers, Anis Kidwai and Kamala Ben Patel who had rescued abducted women for three years after partition.[7][8]

gollark: I apparently have to pick a course within a few months before applying to university, and because the English system is so perfect and without flaw™ cannot really do the American thing of studying multiple things and specializing later. Fun!
gollark: Do related things and pick later?
gollark: As you can see, they're very pingy.
gollark: I have no idea what the spikes are, saturated network somewhere or something?
gollark: This is what my ping times look like.

References

  1. Kidwai, Anis (2011). In Freedom's Shade. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-143-41609-8.
  2. "StreeShakti - The Parallel Force". www.streeshakti.com. Retrieved 29 July 2017.
  3. "Anis Kidwai - Penguin India". Penguin India. Retrieved 29 July 2017.
  4. "K" (PDF). rajyasabha.nic.in. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  5. Zainab, Umara (20 June 2018). "Anis Kidwai: Social Worker Who Chronicled The Lives Of Women During Partition | #IndianWomenInHistory". Feminism In India. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  6. teamht. "Anis Begum Kidwai : Freedom Fighter Who Chronicled The Lives Of Women During Partition". HeritageTimes. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  7. "Mersiya: 1947". YouTube.
  8. "MERSIYA 1947". Earth Witness.
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