What's new

Famous Pakistani women

jinxeD_girl

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Feb 13, 2010
Messages
2,409
Reaction score
0
Pakistani women have been active in all walks of life and they enjoy a better status as compared to many other muslim and middle eastern women... :D This thread is for famous and not so famous Pakistani women and their contributions... :D


Yasmeen Ghauri


Profession - Model

Yasmeen Ghauri is an internationally famous Model of Half German/Half Pakistani descent. She has modeled for many international magazines and brands including Christian Dior, Vogue, Elle, Cosmopolitan, Revlon etc etc

http://img641.imageshack.us/i/cosmo101992.jpg/

http://img175.imageshack.us/i/yascov06.jpg/
 
Princess Sarvath

Profession - Princess and Social Activist

Ethnicity - Bengali

Princess Sarvath El Hassan (née Sarvath Ikramullah) is the wife of Prince Hassan bin Talal of Jordan. She was born in Kolkata, India on 24 July 1947, to a prominent Muslim family of the Indian subcontinent. Princess Sarvath married Prince Hassan bin Talal of Jordan, in Karachi, Pakistan on 28 August 1968. They live in one of the oldest houses in Amman and have four children. Princess Sarvath speaks several languages, including Arabic, English, French and Urdu. Her hobbies include reading, embroidery, cooking and gardening. She also enjoys various outdoor activities, including skiing. The Princess is Honorary President of the Jordanian Badminton Federation and was the first woman in Jordan to obtain a black belt in Taekwondo.

http://img704.imageshack.us/i/princesssarvath2.jpg/

http://img10.imageshack.us/i/princesssarvath.jpg/
 
Anoushka Kachelo

http://img168.imageshack.us/i/anoushka.jpg/

http://img716.imageshack.us/i/anoushkasm.jpg/

Anoushka Kachelo, 24, resident of London, is perhaps the youngest woman, and first Pakistani, to walk the last degree to the North Pole. After eight days of hauling over 55 kilos across about 50 miles of the frozen continent, Anoushka achieved her goal of reaching the Geographic North Pole at 7.10am (GMT), Sunday April 24, 2004. In November, Anoushka will set off on a 730 mile journey across Antarctica in an attempt to complete her bid to become the youngest woman to trek to both the North and South Poles in the same year, and the first Pakistani to reach either Pole, while raising money for charity.
 
Pakistani women have been active in all walks of life and they enjoy a better status as compared to many other muslim and middle eastern women... :D This thread is for famous and not so famous Pakistani women and their contributions... :D


Yasmeen Ghauri


Profession - Model

Yasmeen Ghauri is an internationally famous Model of Half German/Half Pakistani descent. She has modeled for many international magazines and brands including Christian Dior, Vogue, Elle, Cosmopolitan, Revlon etc etc

http://img641.imageshack.us/i/cosmo101992.jpg/

http://img175.imageshack.us/i/yascov06.jpg/




This a contribution ? of all the things women have done for pakistan you found this as a contribution

Here are some women who actually contributed to Pakistan


These women put their life on the lines alongside their brothers to protect this nation everyday


This one gave up all the dreams that a woman has just to stand by her brother



Bilquis Siddiqui, Sir Edhis wife...words cant describe the service this woman has rendered to so many helpless children of our nation


A woman who left her home for barracks to support the sons of this nation, instilling in them the jazba and giving them hope that a million guns couldnt
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Carla Khan

http://img514.imageshack.us/i/carlacoltonwide.jpg/

Profession = Squash Player

Ethnicity = Pakhtun

Carla Khan is a Pakistani professional squash player and is the granddaughter of Azam Khan, one of the legends of squash in Pakistan and daughter of Wasil Khan, a junior world champion, who was also her coach. She started playing squash in England at age 12.
 
Dude you started off with a fluuzy and ur calling me effed up ??

How the hell does she represent the women of Pakistan ?
Dude, since when its within Pakistani norms to call any woman a slut for her job? Learn to let the little things go.
 
Last edited:
Asma Jahangir


Profession = Human Rights Activist

Ethnicity = Punjabi

Famous for - She made the Times Magazine list of 100 Asian Heroes...

TIME Magazine: Asian Heroes - Asma Jahangir


http://img31.imageshack.us/i/heroasma.jpg/

At 152 centimeters tall, Asma Jahangir is a mere sparrow of a woman. But she's got a big voice, which she isn't afraid to use. Jahangir and her colleagues at the Lahore-based Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, an independent body of lawyers and activists, defend Christians and Muslims sentenced to death by stoning under harsh and capricious blasphemy laws. She shelters women whose families want to murder them—only because they deserted cruel husbands. She investigates the fate of prisoners who vanish in police custody and battles for their release through the courts and in the press. In short, Jahangir rails against the myriad injustices that plague her homeland, a type of cage rattling that doesn't always get popular support. "People aren't willing to believe that these injustices happen in our society," says Jahangir, 51. "But it's all going on next door."

Jahangir's father, Malik Jilani, was a politician who spent years in jail and under house arrest for opposing a string of military dictatorships, so his daughter grew up in Lahore with secret policemen at the garden gate. "Asma was always charging off against bullies," says Seema Iftikhar, a childhood friend, "or challenging the school's silly rules." She earned a law degree in 1978 and managed in the mid-1980s to overturn a death sentence against a blind woman who was gang-raped and then, grotesquely, charged with adultery. Since then, she and I.A. Rehman, director of the Human Rights Commission, have defended thousands of hopeless cases.

Yet many Pakistanis wish Jahangir would just shut up. President Pervez Musharraf occasionally explodes into fury against her, saying she is unpatriotic. Eight years back, five gunmen burst into her house, searching for her and her young son; fortunately, neither were home. Five years ago, a policeman was caught creeping up to her house with a dagger.

Today, in addition to her work for the Human Rights Commission, Jahangir serves as a United Nations Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial killings, a job that has taken her to Afghanistan, Central America and Colombia. "There have to be principles, justice," she insists. "Otherwise, we fall into a cycle of revenge." And back home, people are starting to recognize that a voice capable of challenging authority is invaluable. Checking in at the Lahore airport recently, she was asked by fellow passengers to confront an immigration official who was harassing passengers for bribes. She did, and the official swiftly backed down. "I couldn't resist," Jahangir says with a laugh. She's a small lady—with a large job.
JG, not a fan of this one.
 
Dr. Shamshad Akhtar

Ethnicity: Probably Sindhi




Dr Shamshad Akhtar (Urdu: ڈاکٹر شمشاد اختر) was appointed by the President Pervez Musharraf as the governor of the State Bank of Pakistan for three years in December 2005. She is the 14th governor of the State Bank and the first female to assume this position. Previously, she also held positions with the Asian Development Bank.
Born in the city of Hyderabad, Sindh, Dr Akhtar completed her Ph.D in Economics from Scotland's Paisley College of Technology. She has an M.S. in Economics from Quaid-e-Azam University in Islamabad and an M.A. in Development Economics from the University of Sussex, England. In 1987 she attended Harvard University under the Fulbright programme. Furthermore, she served in the World Bank prior to joining the State Bank of Pakistan.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
callin someone a sl**t isnt a norm, its an adjective a title this one rightly deserves. Anyways im done questioning you guys morality
nuff said

brother! wake up! :wave:

Welcome to 21st Century :cheers:
 
Bapsi Sidhwa

Profession - Author

Ethnicity = Parsee

http://img52.imageshack.us/i/bapsisidhwa.jpg/

Bapsi Sidhwa (1938 - ) is an author of Pakistani origin who writes in English. She is perhaps best known for her collaborative work with filmmaker Deepa Mehta: Sidhwa wrote both the 1991 novel Cracking India which is the basis for Mehta's 1998 film Earth as well as the 2006 novel Water: A Novel which is based upon Mehta's 2005 film, Water.

Awards

Bunting Fellowship at Radcliffe/Harvard (1986)
Visiting Scholar at the Rockefeller Foundation Center, Bellagio, Italy, (1991)
Sitara-i-Imtiaz, (1991, Pakistan's highest national honor in the arts)
Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Writer's Award (1994)
Premio Mondello for Foreign Authors for Water (2007
 
callin someone a sl**t isnt a norm, its an adjective a title this one rightly deserves. Anyways im done questioning you guys morality
nuff said
Dude they way I've been raised, if I didn't like what a woman was doing, I'd walk away, but not call her anything. Slut is an extremely offensive word, being disrespectful towards women - ALL women, is more a reflection on us, than any adjective we may put on them.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom