On 1 September 1938, they arrived in Calcutta and
Hassan, a widower for a good many years, began to put the make on her. Vera promptly sought out his nephew,
Huseyn, to put a stop to his advances and in Huseyn she found a colorful, brilliant and witty man; an
Oxford graduate and prominent lawyer (
Gray's Inn), and also a widower (his first wife Begum Niaz Fatima had died in 1922) who had recently been elected to the new
Bengal Assembly in 1937. Vera, living in Calcutta with her son on her own earnings and without any support from her husband, found "relief and solace" in the teachings of
Islam. She cabled her husband with the news of her conversion to Islam and requested that he accept the Islamic faith. Eugene, a
Greek Orthodox replied that his religious convictions were unshakable and "refused absolutely" to change his faith and insisted that their son remain Greek Orthodox. Vera, who had changed her name to
Begum Noor Jehan at her conversion on 27 June 1940, applied to the
High Court of Calcutta on 5 August 1940, for a suit declaring dissolution of her marriage to Eugene Tiscenko. The
Calcutta High Court originally declared that her marriage to Eugene was dissolved. Despite a subsequent appeal that left the case unresolved, she married
Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy later in 1940 and they had one son, Rashid (aka Robert Ashby). One year later, on 19 December 1941, the Calcutta High Court overturned the dissolution of marriage. The "Tiscenko" decision came to affect the lives of women all over
South Asia. A
Polish woman who was married to a Russian man in Germany trying to dissolve her marriage before a court in Calcutta. ==Vera Vlasova==