She was born in
Mussoorie on 8 August 1916 and went to school in Darjeeling, Switzerland and Dhaka. She married the diplomat Mirza Rashid Ali Baig and was famous artist
Anjolie Ela Menon’s aunt. In 1937 she was appointed to the first Planning Committee as the convener of a group to examine the social and economic disabilities of women. Shortly after Independence her husband was posted abroad, and during their tour she established the Women’s International Club in Indonesia and later a similar club in Iran. When her husband became Chief of Protocol in Delhi she built up the
Indian Council for Child Welfare of which she later became president, and she also helped Indira Gandhi (q.v.) to Indianise the style of entertainment for state banquets at Rashtrapati Bhavan. In 1977, she was elected president of the
International Union for Child Welfare in Geneva, the first Asian and the first woman to hold the post. She was a member of the
Tibetan Homes Foundation and was president of the SOS Children’s Villages of India for 22 years (1967 to 1989). From 1968 onwards, she was vice president of the SOS Kinderdorf International, Austria. She was the architect of the Child Welfare Policies in the Five Year Plans and a member of the National Children’s Board from 1975. Her books include the autobiographical
Portraits of an era; the biography
Sarojini Naidu; The Moon in Rahu: an account of the Bhowal sannyasi case;
Women of India;
India’s Woman Power; and many children’s books such as
Indrani;
The Enchanted Jungle; and
The Forbidden Sea. Her talks over All India Radio and her historical and cultural programmes on television were very popular. She received an honorary degree from the
Tehran School of Social Work in 1965; a gold medal and special award from the
International Union for Child Welfare in 1984, the National Award for Child Welfare in 1984; and an honorary degree of Doctor of Law from
Alberta University, Canada in 1988. ==References==