تلخیص
The woman who brought colour and joy in Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah’s life was Ruttie Dinshaw--Bombays most beautiful and elegant lady in her times. Ruttie was young and passionate and she transmitted these qualities in Jinnah. If we study Jinnah's politics from 1919 to 1928, we find passion and enthusiasm that are blessed to young people. His youthfulness could be studied while dealing with Bombay Lord Willingdon, and how Ruttie Jinnah supported him makes it an interesting study. Ruttie was brought up in an environment of literature and poetry. Their impact on impressionable Ruttie was inevitable. She became romantic. It is in that atmosphere that she met the hero of her dreams. She felt attracted to the tall, towering, handsome and heroic Jinnah who had already etched for himself a place on the legal, social and political firmament. Ruttie admired Jinnah’s scintillating personality. Although Ruttie Jinnah never took an active part in politics, but there are certain events, which reveal that she was not only desirous of india’s freedom but also had a deep political insight. As long as Ruttenbai lived she was a tower of strength to Mr. Jinnah and a comrade-in-arms. She waged many a political battle alongside her husband and in famous Town-Hall incident…. Mrs. Jinnah proved that she was a valiant wife of a valiant husband. Ruttie was intensely patriotic, independent and anti-colonial. She was so enthused and excited by Jinnah’s involvement in politics that during the showdown drama with Lord Willingdon, she flung herself passionately into the fray. According to Bombay Chronicle report: “I should say that when the meeting was going on in the Town Hall, Ruttie was waiting outside, but soon she managed to get upon a side box and shouted, “We are not slaves. Jinnah and Ruttie loved and respected each other but Jinnah’s
hectic schedule of work alienated her from him. In January 1928 Ruttie and Mr.Jinnah separated. Jinnah's dream collapsed in 1929, on her birthday i.e., 20 February 1929, she left this world.