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Woman pilot who is a Kashmir hero

ayesha.a

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Young Ayesha Aziz gives wings to Kashmir women’s dreams

Screenshot20210220-190938Instagram

25-year-old commercial pilot is a role model in a profession otherwise dominated by men



Ayesha Aziz, 25, became the country’s youngest pilot when she acquired her flying license at the age of 16. She now flies GoAir planes and is emerging as a role model among women in the Kashmir valley, who too are eager to break the social barriers of a conservative society to join professions otherwise dominated by men.

Ms. Aziz came into the limelight when she was swarmed by dozens of enthusiastic girls on January 2 this year at the Sher-i-Kashmir International Convention Centre (SKICC) in Srinagar, when she attended the Lal Ded Khatoon-e-Kashmir Award 2021 function organised by the NGO Elfa International to honour Kashmir’s talented women achievers in different fields.

Ms. Aziz, whose mother is from north Kashmir’s Baramulla, and father a businessman from Maharashtra, procured her pilot’s license in 2011.

“I am half Kashmiri and trace my maternal roots to Kashmir. I received my first pilot licence at the age of 16, immediately after passing out of my Class X examination. I clocked 200 hours [of flying] to procure a commercial [pilot’s] licence. I was 22 when I got my commercial licence,” Ms. Aziz said.

Becoming a pilot was a challenge for Ms. Aziz. “Our family went through trials and tribulations because we don’t come from an aviation family. I am the first pilot [in my family]. It was a challenge and a whirlwind, in which my father encouraged me a lot," she added.

Motivated by astronauts Sunita Williams and the late Kalpana Chawla, Ms. Aziz was in Class VI when she was attracted to flying the planes.

“My daughter used to do five-day schooling and weekend flying to achieve her goal. I feel proud that she became the country’s youngest pilot at 16, when she already had 50 hours of flying to her credit,” Ms. Aziz’s father Abul Aziz, who is engaged in the business of lignite extraction from Kashmir’s Kupwara, told The Hindu.

Mr. Aziz said his daughter’s determination could be gauged from the fact that she met both her role models. “She also underwent an astronaut training program at the NASA-Huntsville Space Centre,” he added.

Ms. Aziz was given the First Ladies’ Award by the President of India in 2018 and figured among the country’s top 100 women achievers.

“It gives me solace to see my daughter motivating others. It’s her determination and inquisitiveness that forced me to be a part of her career journey,” Mr. Aziz said.

Ms. Aziz’s friend Irtiqa Ayoub, a rugby coach in Srinagar, said she had managed to infuse courage and motivation in Kashmir’s younger generation. “Ayesha is rooted in Kashmiri culture and very strong. Many local girls are in touch with her to become pilots. Even I took her advice on how to withstand online bullying, especially if one is an achiever in otherwise male-dominated fields. Her tips really helped me tide over the online bullying,” Ms. Ayoub said.

Mehran Khan, who heads Elfa International, said Ms. Aziz’s interaction with local girls last month has renewed desire among them to be pilots. “She is a living example of achieving goals with sheer determination and focus,” Mr. Khan said.
Saiqa Rashid, a Class XII student from Bandipora, said she was motivated by Ms. Aziz to pursue her dream profession of being a pilot. “I had a mental block about the profession. She just removed it. When she can do it, I too can,” Ms. Rashid said.
Kashmir has already produced two female pilots in the past.

https://www.thehindu.com/news/natio...mens-dreams/article33890174.ece?homepage=true
 
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Could be ......:unsure: @ayesha.a please confirm........

@ayesha.a, is it you in the article ? :D

Haha no, despite the name and several other eerie similarities, I am not her. I am not in the habit of posting laudatory articles about myself. :)

Yup, some women wants to be pilot, same here the condition in Indonesia.

Indonesian female pilot landing. Sarah Widyanti Kusuma.


Interestingly, India has the highest share of female pilots in the world, at 12.5%. That statistic also shows what a male dominated profession it is. Globally, the percentage of female commercial pilots is only about 5%. The top three airlines with the highest female pilot ratio are all Indian. (Indigo, Spicejet and Air India.)

https://www.statista.com/statistics/1177746/female-pilots-countries-worldwide/

https://www.forbes.com/sites/bishopjordan/2018/09/12/female-pilots-india/?sh=50e41055469d

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-46071689
 
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She said: "A lot of people think it's a highly technical job, which puts them off.

"But a huge amount of it is being good with people. As a captain, you're a people manager. There needs to be a change in perception around the job."
A good point !

But this article and the other two didn't mention Saarah Hameed Ahmed, another Indian Muslim female pilot. Not that her being Muslim matters in the global sense but it does matter in the current atmosphere among Indian Muslims which is stifling. The effects of the Tableeghi Jamaat being popular in the last 15 or so years.
 
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Young Ayesha Aziz gives wings to Kashmir women’s dreams

Screenshot20210220-190938Instagram

25-year-old commercial pilot is a role model in a profession otherwise dominated by men



Ayesha Aziz, 25, became the country’s youngest pilot when she acquired her flying license at the age of 16. She now flies GoAir planes and is emerging as a role model among women in the Kashmir valley, who too are eager to break the social barriers of a conservative society to join professions otherwise dominated by men.

Ms. Aziz came into the limelight when she was swarmed by dozens of enthusiastic girls on January 2 this year at the Sher-i-Kashmir International Convention Centre (SKICC) in Srinagar, when she attended the Lal Ded Khatoon-e-Kashmir Award 2021 function organised by the NGO Elfa International to honour Kashmir’s talented women achievers in different fields.

Ms. Aziz, whose mother is from north Kashmir’s Baramulla, and father a businessman from Maharashtra, procured her pilot’s license in 2011.

“I am half Kashmiri and trace my maternal roots to Kashmir. I received my first pilot licence at the age of 16, immediately after passing out of my Class X examination. I clocked 200 hours [of flying] to procure a commercial [pilot’s] licence. I was 22 when I got my commercial licence,” Ms. Aziz said.

Becoming a pilot was a challenge for Ms. Aziz. “Our family went through trials and tribulations because we don’t come from an aviation family. I am the first pilot [in my family]. It was a challenge and a whirlwind, in which my father encouraged me a lot," she added.

Motivated by astronauts Sunita Williams and the late Kalpana Chawla, Ms. Aziz was in Class VI when she was attracted to flying the planes.

“My daughter used to do five-day schooling and weekend flying to achieve her goal. I feel proud that she became the country’s youngest pilot at 16, when she already had 50 hours of flying to her credit,” Ms. Aziz’s father Abul Aziz, who is engaged in the business of lignite extraction from Kashmir’s Kupwara, told The Hindu.

Mr. Aziz said his daughter’s determination could be gauged from the fact that she met both her role models. “She also underwent an astronaut training program at the NASA-Huntsville Space Centre,” he added.

Ms. Aziz was given the First Ladies’ Award by the President of India in 2018 and figured among the country’s top 100 women achievers.

“It gives me solace to see my daughter motivating others. It’s her determination and inquisitiveness that forced me to be a part of her career journey,” Mr. Aziz said.

Ms. Aziz’s friend Irtiqa Ayoub, a rugby coach in Srinagar, said she had managed to infuse courage and motivation in Kashmir’s younger generation. “Ayesha is rooted in Kashmiri culture and very strong. Many local girls are in touch with her to become pilots. Even I took her advice on how to withstand online bullying, especially if one is an achiever in otherwise male-dominated fields. Her tips really helped me tide over the online bullying,” Ms. Ayoub said.

Mehran Khan, who heads Elfa International, said Ms. Aziz’s interaction with local girls last month has renewed desire among them to be pilots. “She is a living example of achieving goals with sheer determination and focus,” Mr. Khan said.
Saiqa Rashid, a Class XII student from Bandipora, said she was motivated by Ms. Aziz to pursue her dream profession of being a pilot. “I had a mental block about the profession. She just removed it. When she can do it, I too can,” Ms. Rashid said.
Kashmir has already produced two female pilots in the past.

https://www.thehindu.com/news/natio...mens-dreams/article33890174.ece?homepage=true

Role model?? Lolz RSS telling kashmiri women they can have rights? First of all how about stop killing their fathers and brothers? Or maybe stop raping them and give them their basic rights of self determination.
 
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Certainly a hero in India, as long as she does not demand justice. As mentioned earlier, the value of Muslims in India is only in the service of the Hindu nation.

The moment she even feebly demands justice for the oppressed in India, she will be branded a Kashmiri separatist, ISI agent and subjected to rape threats.
 
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Anyway, she's done well for herself, hats off to that.



Ms. Aziz, whose mother is from north Kashmir’s Baramulla, and father a businessman from Maharashtra, procured her pilot’s license in 2011.

“I am half Kashmiri and trace my maternal roots to Kashmir.


Explains a great deal about her links to Kashmir, a region under boots.
 
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Multiple id troll
Certainly a hero in India, as long as she does not demand justice. As mentioned earlier, the value of Muslims in India is only in the service of the Hindu nation.

The moment she even feebly demands justice for the oppressed in India, she will be branded a Kashmiri separatist, ISI agent and subjected to rape threats.
rota hi rahega ya fatega bhi? andar itna zehar jama kiya hai, nasoor ban jayega, jaldi se fat ja.
 
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Role model?? Lolz RSS telling kashmiri women they can have rights? First of all how about stop killing their fathers and brothers? Or maybe stop raping them and give them their basic rights of self determination.
Yawn
 
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Thank you for reminding me why I decided not to visit this forum anymore.

@WebMaster @waz @oscar @Chak Bamu : If you want to know why most sane non-Pakistanis have stopped posting here, this is why. I'm out.

good riddance you can post this rubbish on India today or whatever . The lady pilot has stated is Indian she is not Kashmiri by rule of the United Nations the British the Americans and the Europeans even Arabs Africans Australians do not class Kashmiris as Indians .

please keep your rubbish fantasy to the cow worshippers you belong to .

bye Indian:tup:
 
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