Mai Bakhtawar Explained

Mai Bakhtawar Lashari
Birth Date:1880
Birth Place:Tando Bago, Badin District, British India (now Pakistan)
Death Place:Rural Sindh, British India (now Pakistan)
Nationality:Indian
Movement:Hari Movement
Occupation:Revolutionary leader, freedom fighter, political activist

Mai Bakhtawar Lashari Baloch (Sindhi: مائي بختاور لاشاري) was a farm worker who was murdered during a landlord and peasants' confrontation during British Rule in India. She was killed in Rural Sindh, British India.

Early life

Bakhtawar was born in 1880 in the village of Dodo Khan Sarkani, near Roshanabad, Taluka Tando Bago, Badin District, Sindh, British India. She was the only child of Murad Khan Lashari. In 1898, Bakhtawar married Wali Mohammad, a peasant working on the Ahmadi Estate. The couple had four children: Mohammad Khan, Lal Bukhsh, Mohammad Siddique and daughter Rasti.

Movement for peasants' rights

Before the Partition of India, the agricultural population in Sindh was divided in two classes. The landlords who owned lands and The peasants, who worked on these land, receiving a small compensation for their labors. Bakhtawar's village was the property of an Ahmadi who owned forty thousand acres of land, known as the "Ahmadi Estate". An agrarian activist, Hyder Bux Jatoi, called for a conference of farmers to demand that they receive a half share of the yield. The Hari Conference in started in Judho on 22 June 1947.[1]

Confrontation

On 22 June 1949, the last day of the Hari conference, the Ahmadi Muslims Qudiani decided to seize 1,20,000 kilograms of flour from Dodo Khan Sarkani while the village men were still absent. When the Ahmadi Muslims and their men arrived at the village, they were confronted by Bakhtawar, an old disabled man and other women. The villagers asked the Ahmadi Muslims to wait on taking the flour until the village men returned from the conference. In a rage, Choudhry Saeedullah and his manager Choudhry Khalid ordered their men to shoot, and Mai Bakhtawar was killed instantly. Her body was taken to the town of Samaro for postmortem rites and buried there.

Success after death

In 1950, a law was passed by the Government of Pakistan that forced landlords to allot half of the yield to the farmers. Saeedullah, the nephew of then Pakistani foreign minister Muhammad Zafarullah Khan, and Khalid were sentenced to 20 years' imprisonment by the court for the killing of Mai Bakhtawar.

Acknowledgements

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mai Bakhtawar: A forgotten daughter of Sindh | Political Economy . thenews.com.pk . May 17, 2020 . 2022-09-04.
  2. Web site: Bilawal to inaugurate Mai Bakhtawar Airport near Islamkot today - Pakistan - DAWN.COM. 11 April 2018.
  3. Web site: Hari movement icon Mai Bakhtawar remembered. The Newspaper's Staff. Correspondent. 23 June 2016.
  4. Book: Suad Joseph. Encyclopedia of Women & Islamic Cultures: Methodologies, paradigms and sources. 1 January 2000. University of California Press. 978-90-0413-247-4. 279.
  5. Web site: بختاور شهيد : (Sindhianaسنڌيانا). www.encyclopediasindhiana.org.