•
Mirza Mehdy Ispahani (1841–1913): Mehdy Ispahani was the grandson of Haji Muhammad Hashem (the patriarch of the House of Ispahani), who moved from
Isfahan,
Iran to
Mumbai in 1820. Mehdy Ispahani established the company's corporate headquarters in Madras from Mumbai. Prior to that he spent twelve years in Cairo trading in leather, tea, turmeric, tamarind, peanuts and other Indian products. He also established a branch in Dhaka in 1888. •
Mirza Mohammad Ispahani (1871–1925): In 1900, Mohammad Ispahani established M.M Ispahani & Sons in
Calcutta and also opened a branch office in
London. His three sons
Mirza Ahmad Ispahani,
Mirza Abul Hassan Isphani, and Mirza Mahmood Ispahani established the private limited company
M. M. Ispahani Limited in the year 1934. •
Mirza Mehdy (Sadri) Ispahani (1923–2004): Sadri was made the chairman of
M. M. Ispahani Limited in 1949 and remained in that post until his death. He served as the chairman of the
Pakistan Jute Mills Association. He co-founded with his father many institutions such as the
Islamia Eye Hospital, M.A Ispahani Institute of Ophthalmology, Ispahani Public School and College, Mirza Ahmed Smrity Biddalaya, CJM High School, Waisia Darassuna Dakhil Madrassah, Mirza Ahmed High School, Victory High School, Comilla Public School and College, Ispahani Girls School and College (Dhaka), Siddeshwari (University) College. Sadri resided in the Ispahani Colony in Dhaka, but died in
Bangkok in 2004 at the age of 81. He left behind his wife, Razia Ispahani, 5 sons, and 3 daughters. Razia (Sultani) Ispahani died in
London in 2017 at the age of 93. •
Mirza Ali Behrouze Ispahani (1950–2017): Behrouze Ispahani completed his education in
Dhaka from
St Joseph Higher Secondary School. Behrouze served as the chairman of
M. M. Ispahani Limited from 2004 until his death. He was also the managing director of International Publications Limited (the holding company of
The Financial Express), and a trustee of the
Independent University, Bangladesh. He died in
Dhaka in 2017 from a heart-attack and diabetic complications. His death was condoled by Prime Minister
Sheikh Hasina. He was married to Zahida Ispahani. •
Mirza Salman Ispahani: Salman Ispahani became the chairman of
M. M. Ispahani Limited after the demise of his elder brother,
Behrouze. Salman was elected the chairman of the
International Cotton Association for 2017–18. He was the first
Bangladeshi and first cotton spinner/buyer to be elected the president of this association. Salman was elected to the ICA Board of Directors in 2013. He is the former Chairman of the Tea Traders Association of Bangladesh, former chairman of the Chittagong Stock Exchange and was a member of the Bangladesh Cricket Board. He is also the honorary consul of
Italy in
Chittagong. Salman is also an avid golf player, playing in many national tournaments and hosts the annual Ispahani Cup golf tournament. •
Mirza Shakir Ispahani: Shakir Ispahani completed his education in
England, where he obtained a law degree from the
University of Kent, and completed an
LLM from the
University of Cambridge. He was called to the
Bar of England and Wales (
Lincoln's Inn) in 1984. Shakir is currently managing director of
M. M. Ispahani Limited. He also serves as the
honorary consul of
Germany in
Chittagong. •
Mirza Sajid Ispahani: Sajid Ispahani is a Chartered Accountant. He retired in 2019 but remains Chairman of Ispahani Foods Limited as well as a Director of
M. M. Ispahani Limited. Sajid is also a
bridge player, who served as the captain of the national bridge team representing
Bangladesh in international tournaments. He also has 2 sons, Ali and Hasan, who have both worked for
M. M. Ispahani Limited. •
Mirza Imran Ispahani: Imran Ispahani is a son of
Sadri Ispahani and Sultani Ispahani. He is primarily based in the UK. He is involved in the I.T industry and lives in Richmond. •
Farah Khanum Ispahani: One of the daughters of
Sadri Ispahani and Sultani Ispahani. She, like her elder brothers was educated in London where she went to London University's School of African & Oriental Studies to study law. Subsequent to obtaining her degree, joined Freshfields in 1983, a leading firm of solicitors in London. In 1996 she was promoted to partner based in the UK, and now heads the corporate mergers and acquisitions team of Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer. •
Mirza Abul Hassan Ispahani (1902–1981): Mirza Abul Hassan (MAH) Ispahani was a son of Mirza Mohammad Ispahani. He completed his education from the
St John's College, Cambridge, where obtained a Bar-at-Law in 1924. MAH was one of the closest associates of
Muhammad Ali Jinnah (he is popularly known as the Quaid's Lieutenant). He met
Jinnah at
Cambridge in 1920 and developed a friendship with him. In 1937, at the request of
Jinnah, MAH joined the
Bengal Provincial Muslim League and became its joint secretary. He was elected to the
Bengal Legislative Assembly from the party that same year. MAH was present in the 1941
All-India Muslim League session held in
Madras, where the
Lahore Resolution was incorporated into the party's charter. He served as the Deputy Mayor for
Calcutta from 1941 to 1942 and the President of Muslim Chamber of Commerce, Calcutta from 1945 to 1947. In 1946, he was elected as a member of the Indian Constituent Assembly. After the
independence of Pakistan he served as the first Pakistani ambassador to the
United States. His residence in
Washington, D.C. was donated to the
Pakistani embassy, and is still used as the official residence of the Pakistani ambassador to the
USA. MAH also served as the high commissioner to the
UK from 1952 to 1954. From 1954 to 1955 he served as the
Federal Minister for Industries and Commerce. He served in his final diplomatic position from 1973 to 1974 as the Pakistani ambassador to
Afghanistan, after which he retired from public work and became a writer. MAH was married to Ameneh Sultan and also to Begum Ghamar Ispahani, an Iranian citizen. She was the daughter of an Iranian diplomat. Ghamar Ispahani was a social worker who was a recipient of Pakistan's
Nishan-e-Imtiaz and Italy's Cavalleri award. They were married during MAH's tenure as the Pakistani High Commissioner to the
United Kingdom. As a result of this marriage, MAH had to resign from his diplomatic post because according to diplomatic law, a running diplomat couldn't be married to a foreigner. Ghamar Ispahani also served as a director of the
EFU Life Insurance Company alongside her step-son Isky Ispahani, until 1989. She also established a girl's orphanage in
Karachi. She died in 2007 at the age of 90. •
Mirza Mohammad (Isky) Ispahani (1930-2013): Isky Ispahani was born in
Calcutta in 1930 and completed his education from the
University of Cambridge. Isky Ispahani was initially based in
East Pakistan, where he had successfully established his business. However, after the
Bangladesh Liberation War, his assets were nationalized. •
Mirza Iraj Ispahani (b. 1960): Iraj Ispahani is the chief executive of Ispahani Advisory,Ispahani Advisory – Since 1820 a London-based firm which specialized in advising company leaders on strategic management. He graduated from the
University of London in politics and history and then earned an
MPhil in international relations from the
University of Cambridge. He joined
J.P. Morgan & Co. as a trainee in New York but returned to
London a year later and served as a vice-president at J.P. Morgan. Iraj replaced his father, Isky Ispahani, in the board of
M.M. Ispahani in 2011. He is married to Eva-Kristiina Lindholm (who was also a J. P. Morgan banker) since 1994, with whom he has two children. They all reside in
London. Iraj is also the deputy chairman of
Shakespeare's Globe Theatre in
London. •
Farahnaz Ispahani (b. 1963): Farahnaz Ispahani is a Pakistani politician, author, and human rights lawyer. She lived in
London and completed her education from
Wellesley College in 1985. She served as a member of the
National Assembly of Pakistan from 2008 to 2012 from the
PPP. She also served as the media advisor to President
Asif Ali Zardari before her seat was terminated due to her holding dual nationality. Farahnaz is also a journalist and writer. She has worked with
CNN,
MSNBC,
ABC News, and also authored a book called Purifying the Land of the Pure: Pakistan's Religious Minorities, which focused on the persecution of minorities in
Pakistan. She is married to
Husain Haqqani, the former Pakistani ambassador to the
United States and
Sri Lanka. •
Lalehnaz Ispahani: Lalehnaz Ispahani is a lawyer and advocate for democracy and human rights issues. She obtained her bachelor's degree from
Harvard College and her law degree from the
Georgetown University Law Center. Lalehnaz served as a senior policy counsel at the
American Civil Liberties Union working on racial justice and human rights for 6 years. She is currently the co-director of the Open Society Foundations-U.S. She married Tapio Vaskio in 2005, the co-founder and managing director of Enterprise Research Group. He graduated from the
University of Helsinki and obtained a
master's degree in international relations from
Columbia University. Laleh and Tapio have a 15-year-old daughter named Ameneh. •
Mirza Zia Ispahani: Zia Ispahani is the youngest son of
Mirza A.H Ispahani. He is a former diplomat who served as the Pakistani ambassador to
Switzerland and
Italy in the 1990s. •
Iran Ispahani Rahim: Iran Ispahani is a daughter of
Mirza A.H Ispahani and Ameneh Sultan. She lives in
Karachi. Mahmood shifted to
West Pakistan after the
Partition of India, while his sons Alijoon and Khaleel shifted to
East Pakistan. He lived in Karachi until his demise in 1991. When
Pakistan hosted the International Jute Conference in
Dhaka in 1957, Alijoon attended it along with his cousin
Sadri Ispahani as members of the
Pakistan Jute Mills Association. He is regarded as the most low-profile member of the Ispahani family. Being a linguist, he spoke
English,
Bengali,
Urdu, and
Farsi. Alijoon Ispahani died in
Dhaka in 2019 at the age of 88. He was married to Ameneh Ispahani, with whom he had 2 children. Ameneh Ispahani is a granddaughter of
Mirza Ismail, who served as the Diwan of
Hyderabad,
Jaipur, and
Mysore. Her mother, Shah Taj Begum, was the youngest daughter of Mirza Ismail. •
Emaad Ispahani: Emaad Ispahani is the only son of Alijoon Ispahani and Ameneh Ispahani. He currently serves as a director of
M.M. Ispahani. Emaad is married to Pooja Ispahani with whom he has two children. •
Mirza Mohammad Khaleel Ispahani (1933–2001): Khaleel Ispahani was a son of Mirza Mahmood Ispahani and Bibi Kuchik Kazerooni. He initially moved to
East Pakistan after the
Partition of India and lived in
Dhanmondi,
Dhaka along with his brother Alijoon. After the
independence of Bangladesh, he moved to
Karachi where he lived and eventually died in 2001. •
Mirza Ali Ispahani (1900-1982): Ali Ispahani was born in 1900 in
Calcutta to Hashem Ispahani and Fatimah Ispahani. In 1947, he moved to
Dhaka,
East Pakistan after the
Partition of India along with his cousin Ahmad Ispahani. He served as a secretary in the Ministry of Law and later as the Chief Justice of
East Pakistan from 1959 to 1962. M.A Ispahani used to live in Dhaka's Ispahani Colony, his family estate. He was married to Monirea Rashti Ispahani and had a son with her, Mirza Shahab Ispahani. He died in 1982 and was buried in
Dhaka. •
Mirza Shahab Ispahani: Shahab Ispahani was a son of Justice M.A Ispahani and Monirea Rashti Ispahani. He was born in
Calcutta on 17 September 1941 but moved to
Dhaka,
East Pakistan after the
Partition of India. He moved to
England in 1952 for his studies and qualified as a chartered accountant there. In 1962, he was allotted a piece of land in Road 75,
Gulshan, where he constructed a two-storey house and named it Lismore Court. The house was rented to the British Deputy High Commissioner to Bangladesh while Shahab continued to live in the Ispahani Colony. In 1972, the
Government of Bangladesh seized Lismore Court under the controversial
Enemy Property Act. The Ispahani family negotiated with the government to release the property and Monirea Rashti Ispahani even visited the president in 1984. However, the negotiations failed and Shahab filed a case against the government and won back the property in 1985. The
Government of Bangladesh appealed the decision but the appeal was turned down. Shahab was represented by the prominent lawyer
Barrister Rafique Ul Huq. ==References==