Begum Mahmooda Salim Khan was a Pakistani social worker, early political figure and a former cabinet minister in West Pakistan.
Background
Begum Salim Khan was born in 1913, in Amritsar, Punjab, in then British India, the eldest daughter of the Punjabi aristocrat and renowned Unionist Party statesman, Sir Sikandar Hayat Khan and his first wife, Begum Zubaida Khanum, of the Hayat Khattar family of Wah. After her mother"s death in 1919, she was raised by her aunt and educated at the Aligarh school for Muslim women and the Queen Mary"s College, Lahore. In 1934, she was married to Khan-Sahib Abdus Salim Khan, Tarin, of Talokar, eldest son of the prominent North-West Frontier Province leader, Khan Sahib Abdul Majid Khan Tarin, Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire.
Her husband was a civil servant in the Government of British India and later a member of the diplomatic service of the new state of Pakistan from 1947 onwards, and for the early part of her life, she focussed chiefly on running her household and raising her three children.
Career
She also became interested, gradually, in various types of social work at this time and began to involve herself in such activities. On her husband"s death in 1957, Begum Salim Khan moved to the town of Abbottabad, Pakistan, where she became increasingly involved in various social and charitable works over the years, in close collaboration with other well-known women social workers such as Lady Viqar un Nisa Noon, Begum Zari Sarfaraz, Doctor Attiya Inayatullah and to some extent Begum Shaista Suhrawardy Ikramullah. And eventually came to be amongst the chief executives of organizations such as the Family Planning Association of Pakistan, the Pakistan Red Crescent Society, the National Crafts Council of Pakistan, the Anti Tuberculosis Association of Pakistan, the SOS Children"s Villages, Pakistan and others
She also received several other national and international awards for social service.During the 1960s, she also remained West Pakistan"s first-ever woman cabinet minister, in the General Ayub Khan regime but soon left politics to return full-time to her social work. Begum Salim Khan was active in her social and philanthropic activities till the end of her long and eventful life, and also fond of flowers and gardening and she died peacefully at her home in Abbottabad, Pakistan, in 2007, aged 94 years.
Achievements
She also remained patron-president of the National Youth Council of Pakistan and received the Adelaide Ristori Award, Italy, in 1980, for her work in promoting cultural activities among Pakistani youth.
Connections
Begum Mahmooda Salim Khan died at the ripe old age of 94 and had three children, many grandchildren and great-grandchildren .