At the exile of the imperial family in March 1924, Seniha was the oldest living Ottoman princess, age seventy-three. She had no money of her own, and her sons were too busy with their affairs to care of her, so she went to exile alone. Her half-brother, the deposed Sultan Mehmed, who went to live in
San Remo gave her refuge in his home, the Villa Magnolia, where she lived until his death in 1926. After Mehmed's death, she didn't have enough money on her own to rent a house, and so slept in the public gardens of
Cimiez,
Nice. Somehow her younger son Lütfullah figured out about his mothers way of living, he came to Nice, and took his mother to
Abdulmejid II's Villa, who gave her a room in the attic. Where she lived in a miserable way. Seniha Sultan died at the Villa Carabacel on 15 September 1931 at age seventy-nine in
Nice,
France the last surviving child of Abdulmejid, and was buried in the cemetery of the
Sulaymaniyya Takiyya in
Damascus. Her burial was very difficult. In Nice at the time there were no Muslim cemeteries, so she must be buried in a Muslim country, but that was an expensive undertaking and her family had no money, not even to pay the rent of a place in the morgue for a long time, where her body, embalmed at the cheapest rate, had been placed in waiting for a solution. However, her family, especially Abdülmecid II, absolutely did not want to bury her in a mass grave. So he instructed his son, Ömer Faruk Efendi, and Şehzade Osman Fuad Efendi, a descendant of Murad V, to request the money for the burial from Jefferson Cohn & Ranz, the company that had been officially appointed to reclaim the properties of the Ottoman family on their behalf. The negotiation was long and difficult, but when the princes threatened to dissolve the contract they managed to get the money. The body of Seniha Sultan followed the same route as that of her brother Sultan Mehmed VI Vahideddin: to
Beirut by boat, then from there to
Syria, where she was buried. ==Personality==