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Fatima Jinnah was the youngest of eight brothers and sisters born to Jinnah’s father Poonja Jinnah, a comfortable merchant of Karachi. In appearance Fatima Fatima resembled Mohammad Ali Jinnah, her eldest brother.1 In 1902, she was sent to the Bandara convent where she remained in the hostels as her parents had died. In 1919, she enrolled in Dr. Ahmed’s Dental College at Calcutta. On graduating in 1923, she opened her own dental clinic in Bombay.2 By his support for his sister, Jinnah made a point that he was not averse to the idea of girls getting higher education. He always wanted women to participate in political rallies. Fatima was always at her brother’s side on all public occasions. She made speeches at various girls schools and colleges, and also at the women’s rallies.3 No wonder she came to be known as Khatoon-i-Pakistan.4 He trusted her implicitly and she had full faith in him. Once Jinnah told his naval ADC Ahsan, “nobody had faith in me; everyone thought I was mad except Miss Jinnah”.5 After Jinnah’s death, she came to be called Madar-i-Millat.

Naureen Talha. (2009) FATIMA JINNAH’S LIFE, Journal of the Research Society of Pakistan, Volume 46, Issue 1.
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