Honorific-Prefix: | Princess |
Zamina Begum | |
Order: | 1st |
Office: | First Lady of Afghanistan |
Term Label: | In role |
Term Start: | 17 July 1973 |
Term End: | 28 April 1978 |
President: | Mohammed Daoud Khan |
Birth Date: | 11 January 1917 |
Birth Place: | Kabul, Emirate of Afghanistan |
Death Date: | 28 April 1978 (aged 61) |
Death Place: | Kabul, Democratic Republic of Afghanistan |
Resting Place: | Kabul |
Spouse: | Mohammed Daoud Khan (1934–1978) |
Relatives: | Mohammed Zahir Shah (brother) |
Children: | 8 |
Mother: | Mah Parwar Begum |
Father: | Mohammed Nadir Shah |
Mawards: | is not set --> |
Awards: | is not set --> |
Death Cause: | Assassination |
Zamina Begum (11 January 1917 – 28 April 1978), also known as Zainab Begum, was an Afghan princess who was the First Lady of Afghanistan from 1973 until her assassination in 1978. She was the wife of Mohammed Daoud Khan, the first president of Afghanistan, and the brother of the last king of Afghanistan, Mohammed Zahir Shah.
She was killed along with her husband and family in the Saur Revolution in 1978.
Zamina Begum was the daughter of King Mohammed Nadir Shah and Mah Parwar Begum, and the sister of King Zahir. Her brother succeeded her father in November 1933. She married Daoud in September 1934.
Zamina Begum famously played a role in the women's emancipation policy of her husband's government, notably by appearing unveiled in public. The Prime Minister prepared women's emancipation carefully and gradually. He began by introducing women workers at the Radio Kabul in 1957, by sending women delegates to the Asian Women's Conference in Kairo, and by employing forty girls to the government pottery factory in 1958.[1] When this was met with no riots, the government decided it was time for the very controversial step of unveiling.[1]
In August 1959, on the second day of the festival of Jashn-e-Esteqlal (Afghan Independence Day), Princess Zamina appeared unveiled alongside Queen Humaira and Princess Bilqis in the Royal Box at the military parade.[1] A group of Islamic clerics sent a letter of protest to the Prime Minister to protest and demand that the words of sharia be respected.[1] The Prime Minister answered by inviting them to the capital and present proof to him that the holy scripture indeed demanded the chadri.[1] When the clerics could not find such a passage, the Prime Minister declared that the female members of the Royal Family would no longer wear veils, because the Islamic law did not demand it.[1] While the chadri was never banned, the example of the Queen and the Prime Minister's wife was followed by the wives and daughters of government officials as well as by other urban women of the upperclass and middle class, with Kubra Noorzai and Masuma Esmati-Wardak, who is known as the first commoner pioneers.[1]
On 28 April 1978, Zamina Begum and her husband were killed during the Saur Revolution at the Arg.
She was reburied in the Deh Sabz District in Kabul along with her husband and other family members in 2009.[2]
The couple had four sons and four daughters: