Early life She was born Yvonne Blanche Labrousse in the town of
Sète,
France on 15 February 1906, but was called Yvette. She was the daughter of Adrien Labrousse, a tramway conductor, and Marie Brouet, a seamstress. Her family soon moved to
Cannes and later on to
Lyon where the young Yvette spent most of her childhood. In 1929, at the age of twenty-four, she became Miss Lyon and one year later she was named
Miss France. As a beauty queen and a representative of France, she traveled to many countries around the world. She found herself particularly taken by
Egypt and, in the late 1930s, she moved to
Cairo and adopted the faith of Islam.
Married life Yvette Labrousse met Sultan Muhammad Shah III in Egypt, and they were married on 9 October 1944 in Switzerland. Upon marriage, she adopted the name Om Habibeh, reportedly in reference to
one of the wives of the Prophet Muhammad. Aga Khan III is said to have nicknamed her "Yaky", a combination of "Yvette," "Aga," and "Khan." A residence was later built in Le Cannet, France, named "Yakymour," a portmanteau of her nickname and the French word for love.. In 1954, she was referred to within the Ismaili community as
Mata Salamat, a term loosely translated as "Serene Mother" or "Mother of Peace." The title appears to have been honorary and symbolic, with no formal or institutional role publicly documented. The site was later developed into a mausoleum, a project overseen by Om Habibeh and completed in 16 months with the assistance of architect Farid El-Shafie and contractor Hassan Dorra.
Om Habibeh Foundation In 1991, she founded the Om Habibeh Foundation, a non-profit organization focused on health and education initiatives in the Aswan region. The foundation funded projects including a dialysis centre and several schools. In Le Cannet, she also supported the establishment of a retirement home. In 1999, a statue of her was unveiled in the Jardin des Oliviers by the mayor of Le Cannet Rocheville.
Red Rose Ritual and Public Perception While in Egypt, Om Habibeh is reported to have regularly placed a red rose on the tomb of her husband, a ritual that was reportedly continued by a gardener in her absence. Some accounts have described her relationship with Aga Khan III in romanticized terms, characterizing it as a "storybook" or "legendary" romance; such descriptions originate primarily from biographical or community sources rather than independent scholarship. == Honours ==