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The slumdog princess: How the descendant of the Indian Moghul rulers who built the Taj Mahal now lives in desperate poverty in Kolkata



Sultana Begum, 60, married the great-grandson of Bahadur Shah Zafar

Descendants of the last Mughal emperor survive on a pension of £60

Their home is a two-room hut in a bleak shantytown in Kolkatta


Her ancestors would have lived in luxurious palaces while they ruled over a vast and wealthy empire.
But Sultana Begum's lifestyle is a far cry from the conditions enjoyed by the rulers of the Mughal empire.
She is confined to life in a slum on the outskirts of Kolkatta (once known as Calcutta).
The 60-year-old is the great grand daughter-in-law of the last emperor of India, Bahadur Shah Zafar, and struggles to make ends meet on a basic pension, despite her royal heritage.


article-2424410-1BE45666000005DC-959_634x491.jpg


article-0-1BE45505000005DC-258_634x438.jpg


Ever since the death of her husband Prince Mirza Bedar Bukht in 1980, Sultana has descended into a life of poverty.
The Mughal heiress is forced to live in a tiny two-room hut in Howrah, a slum area of Kolkatta. She shares a kitchen with her neighbours and washes in the street using water from public taps.
Despite evidence that she is related to the 19th century royal family, Sultana goes about her daily life on a basic pension of just £60 a month.
Sultana, who lives with her only unmarried daughter, Madhu Begum, said: 'We have been living, but God knows how.
'My other daughters and their husbands are poor people, they barely survive themselves so cannot help us.'
She receives £60 (6,000 rupees) a month as part of her pension, which covers herself and her six children, five daughters and one son.
In recent years her plight has been highlighted by a number of campaigners, who lobbied authorities to provide more care for India's royal descendants, many of whom were left with nothing after British rule ended the Mughal dynasty.
The Mughal dynasty from which Sultana is descended contributed a vast architectural legacy to the Indian sub-continent throughout the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries.
The Taj Mahal is one of the finest examples of monuments built by the Muslim emperors but the Mughals also built the Red Fort, the Agra Fort and the Lahore Shalimar Gardens most of which are now UNESCO world heritage sites.
But Sultana has spent years petitioning central and state governments to help her with basic living arrangements and a pension.
To date the government has provided a job for her grand-daughter Roshan Ara, who receives a salary of £150.
But many other family members, who are illiterate, failed basic government tests when offered jobs.
Instead, Sultana spent years running a small tea hut, before it was shut down and she turned her attentions to producing ladies clothing.
Sultana added: 'I am grateful there are some who have come forward to help me.
'My husband, the late Muhammad Bedar Bakht who was the son of Jamshid Bakht and grandson of Jawan Bakht, used to tell me that we come from respectable royal families who never begged for a living.
'I have always asked governments to provide me what my family deserves.'
Emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar, the great-grandfather of Sultana's husband, was placed on the throne in 1837. He was the last of the Mughal emperors who ruled India for three centuries.
In 1857, when Indian soldiers unified and mutinied against their British masters, Bahadur Shah Zafar was declared their commander-in-chief.
But when the uprising was crushed by the British in 1858, he was exiled to Rangoon, where he lived for five years until his death at at the age of 87.

article-2424410-1BE45453000005DC-975_306x423.jpg

Poverty: Sultana Begum, the great grand daughter-in-law of the last Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar, is living in a tiny, two-room home in Howrah, India.


article-2424410-1BE45420000005DC-115_634x754.jpg

Slum: Sultana Begum washes dishes outside her tiny two-bedroom home while Parbant Singh Maihari is seen taking a stand-up bath in West Bengal, India


article-2424410-1BE4552A000005DC-974_306x423.jpg

Career: Sultana Begum is pictured (right) hanging onto a tree at the side of the busy Howrah Road where she used have a tea stall


article-2424410-1BE45525000005DC-357_306x423.jpg

Nostalgia An illustration the last emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar II alongside a photo in the Begum household

For more details and pics:- The last Mughal emperor was her ancestor but Sultana Begum is forced to live in a slum, washes in the street and struggles to feed herself and her children | Mail Online

They are living in a pathetic condition.:tdown:
 
The slumdog princess: How the descendant of the Indian Moghul rulers who built the Taj Mahal now lives in desperate poverty in Kolkata



Sultana Begum, 60, married the great-grandson of Bahadur Shah Zafar

Descendants of the last Mughal emperor survive on a pension of £60

Their home is a two-room hut in a bleak shantytown in Kolkatta


Her ancestors would have lived in luxurious palaces while they ruled over a vast and wealthy empire.
But Sultana Begum's lifestyle is a far cry from the conditions enjoyed by the rulers of the Mughal empire.
She is confined to life in a slum on the outskirts of Kolkatta (once known as Calcutta).
The 60-year-old is the great grand daughter-in-law of the last emperor of India, Bahadur Shah Zafar, and struggles to make ends meet on a basic pension, despite her royal heritage.


article-2424410-1BE45666000005DC-959_634x491.jpg


article-0-1BE45505000005DC-258_634x438.jpg


Ever since the death of her husband Prince Mirza Bedar Bukht in 1980, Sultana has descended into a life of poverty.
The Mughal heiress is forced to live in a tiny two-room hut in Howrah, a slum area of Kolkatta. She shares a kitchen with her neighbours and washes in the street using water from public taps.
Despite evidence that she is related to the 19th century royal family, Sultana goes about her daily life on a basic pension of just £60 a month.
Sultana, who lives with her only unmarried daughter, Madhu Begum, said: 'We have been living, but God knows how.
'My other daughters and their husbands are poor people, they barely survive themselves so cannot help us.'
She receives £60 (6,000 rupees) a month as part of her pension, which covers herself and her six children, five daughters and one son.
In recent years her plight has been highlighted by a number of campaigners, who lobbied authorities to provide more care for India's royal descendants, many of whom were left with nothing after British rule ended the Mughal dynasty.
The Mughal dynasty from which Sultana is descended contributed a vast architectural legacy to the Indian sub-continent throughout the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries.
The Taj Mahal is one of the finest examples of monuments built by the Muslim emperors but the Mughals also built the Red Fort, the Agra Fort and the Lahore Shalimar Gardens most of which are now UNESCO world heritage sites.
But Sultana has spent years petitioning central and state governments to help her with basic living arrangements and a pension.
To date the government has provided a job for her grand-daughter Roshan Ara, who receives a salary of £150.
But many other family members, who are illiterate, failed basic government tests when offered jobs.
Instead, Sultana spent years running a small tea hut, before it was shut down and she turned her attentions to producing ladies clothing.
Sultana added: 'I am grateful there are some who have come forward to help me.
'My husband, the late Muhammad Bedar Bakht who was the son of Jamshid Bakht and grandson of Jawan Bakht, used to tell me that we come from respectable royal families who never begged for a living.
'I have always asked governments to provide me what my family deserves.'
Emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar, the great-grandfather of Sultana's husband, was placed on the throne in 1837. He was the last of the Mughal emperors who ruled India for three centuries.
In 1857, when Indian soldiers unified and mutinied against their British masters, Bahadur Shah Zafar was declared their commander-in-chief.
But when the uprising was crushed by the British in 1858, he was exiled to Rangoon, where he lived for five years until his death at at the age of 87.

article-2424410-1BE45453000005DC-975_306x423.jpg

Poverty: Sultana Begum, the great grand daughter-in-law of the last Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar, is living in a tiny, two-room home in Howrah, India.


article-2424410-1BE45420000005DC-115_634x754.jpg

Slum: Sultana Begum washes dishes outside her tiny two-bedroom home while Parbant Singh Maihari is seen taking a stand-up bath in West Bengal, India


article-2424410-1BE4552A000005DC-974_306x423.jpg

Career: Sultana Begum is pictured (right) hanging onto a tree at the side of the busy Howrah Road where she used have a tea stall


article-2424410-1BE45525000005DC-357_306x423.jpg

Nostalgia An illustration the last emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar II alongside a photo in the Begum household

For more details and pics:- The last Mughal emperor was her ancestor but Sultana Begum is forced to live in a slum, washes in the street and struggles to feed herself and her children | Mail Online

They are living in a pathetic condition.:tdown:

And so are hundreds of millions other Indians since this is a poor country. Why should there be special focus on some Mughal descendants ?
 
And so are hundreds of millions other Indians since this is a poor country. Why should there be special focus on some Mughal descendants ?
Do you know who is the real Bahadur Shah duffer, the Buddhu? It's Rahul Ghandi, the Prince.:taz:
 
The slumdog princess: How the descendant of the Indian Moghul rulers who built the Taj Mahal now lives in desperate poverty in Kolkata



Sultana Begum, 60, married the great-grandson of Bahadur Shah Zafar

Descendants of the last Mughal emperor survive on a pension of £60

Their home is a two-room hut in a bleak shantytown in Kolkatta


Her ancestors would have lived in luxurious palaces while they ruled over a vast and wealthy empire.
But Sultana Begum's lifestyle is a far cry from the conditions enjoyed by the rulers of the Mughal empire.
She is confined to life in a slum on the outskirts of Kolkatta (once known as Calcutta).
The 60-year-old is the great grand daughter-in-law of the last emperor of India, Bahadur Shah Zafar, and struggles to make ends meet on a basic pension, despite her royal heritage.


article-2424410-1BE45666000005DC-959_634x491.jpg


article-0-1BE45505000005DC-258_634x438.jpg


Ever since the death of her husband Prince Mirza Bedar Bukht in 1980, Sultana has descended into a life of poverty.
The Mughal heiress is forced to live in a tiny two-room hut in Howrah, a slum area of Kolkatta. She shares a kitchen with her neighbours and washes in the street using water from public taps.
Despite evidence that she is related to the 19th century royal family, Sultana goes about her daily life on a basic pension of just £60 a month.
Sultana, who lives with her only unmarried daughter, Madhu Begum, said: 'We have been living, but God knows how.
'My other daughters and their husbands are poor people, they barely survive themselves so cannot help us.'
She receives £60 (6,000 rupees) a month as part of her pension, which covers herself and her six children, five daughters and one son.
In recent years her plight has been highlighted by a number of campaigners, who lobbied authorities to provide more care for India's royal descendants, many of whom were left with nothing after British rule ended the Mughal dynasty.
The Mughal dynasty from which Sultana is descended contributed a vast architectural legacy to the Indian sub-continent throughout the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries.
The Taj Mahal is one of the finest examples of monuments built by the Muslim emperors but the Mughals also built the Red Fort, the Agra Fort and the Lahore Shalimar Gardens most of which are now UNESCO world heritage sites.
But Sultana has spent years petitioning central and state governments to help her with basic living arrangements and a pension.
To date the government has provided a job for her grand-daughter Roshan Ara, who receives a salary of £150.
But many other family members, who are illiterate, failed basic government tests when offered jobs.
Instead, Sultana spent years running a small tea hut, before it was shut down and she turned her attentions to producing ladies clothing.
Sultana added: 'I am grateful there are some who have come forward to help me.
'My husband, the late Muhammad Bedar Bakht who was the son of Jamshid Bakht and grandson of Jawan Bakht, used to tell me that we come from respectable royal families who never begged for a living.
'I have always asked governments to provide me what my family deserves.'
Emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar, the great-grandfather of Sultana's husband, was placed on the throne in 1837. He was the last of the Mughal emperors who ruled India for three centuries.
In 1857, when Indian soldiers unified and mutinied against their British masters, Bahadur Shah Zafar was declared their commander-in-chief.
But when the uprising was crushed by the British in 1858, he was exiled to Rangoon, where he lived for five years until his death at at the age of 87.

article-2424410-1BE45453000005DC-975_306x423.jpg

Poverty: Sultana Begum, the great grand daughter-in-law of the last Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar, is living in a tiny, two-room home in Howrah, India.


article-2424410-1BE45420000005DC-115_634x754.jpg

Slum: Sultana Begum washes dishes outside her tiny two-bedroom home while Parbant Singh Maihari is seen taking a stand-up bath in West Bengal, India


article-2424410-1BE4552A000005DC-974_306x423.jpg

Career: Sultana Begum is pictured (right) hanging onto a tree at the side of the busy Howrah Road where she used have a tea stall


article-2424410-1BE45525000005DC-357_306x423.jpg

Nostalgia An illustration the last emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar II alongside a photo in the Begum household

For more details and pics:- The last Mughal emperor was her ancestor but Sultana Begum is forced to live in a slum, washes in the street and struggles to feed herself and her children | Mail Online

They are living in a pathetic condition.:tdown:

"'I have always asked governments to provide me what my family deserves.'" - And what exactly do they deserve?
 
Karma in action. Many descendants of Hindu zamindars are also a living example that if you do something wrong, somehow you can't get away with it.
 
So what ... Those who doesnt walk with time ... will fall in ts Traps ... Time doesnt Consider ur blood line ur family legacy ...

No need to helps such people ... let them be Price of Princess of 18th century ...

Ya Go a head make them the prince of Bengal or ... give them the Gandi Title as well... like buddhu and his Family...
 

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