Fatima Bhutto
Fatima Bhutto فاطمہ بھٹو |
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Born | Fatima Bhutto 29 May 1982 Kabul, Afghanistan |
Residence | Karachi, Pakistan |
Nationality | Pakistani |
Alma mater | Columbia University University of London |
Occupation | Writer, columnist, journalist |
Relatives | Bhutto family |
Fatima Murtaza Bhutto (Urdu: فاطمہ مُرتضیٰ بھُٹّو; born 29 May 1982), known as Fatima Bhutto (Urdu: فاطمہ بھٹو), is a Pakistani poet and writer.[1] Born in Bhutto family, She is the granddaughter of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and Nusrat Bhutto, niece of Benazir Bhutto and Shahnawaz Bhutto, and daughter of Murtaza Bhutto. Bhutto came to public note after the publication of her first book, a collection of poems, Whispers of the Desert. She received notable coverage for her second book, 8:50 a.m. 8 October 2005.[2][3][4]
Bhutto is active in Pakistan's social-political arena,[5] supporting her stepmother Ghinwa Bhutto's party the Pakistan Peoples Party (Shaheed Bhutto), but has no desire to run for political office.[6]
Contents
Personal life
Background
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Bhutto was born on 29 May 1982 to Murtaza Bhutto and an Afghan mother, Fauzia Fasihudin Bhutto, the daughter of Afghanistan's former foreign affairs official in Kabul.[4] Her father was in exile during the military regime of general Zia-ul-Haq. Her parents divorced when she was three years old and her father took Bhutto with him moving from country to country and she grew up effectively stateless. Her father met Ghinwa Bhutto, a Lebanese ballet teacher in 1989 during his exile in Syria and they married. Bhutto considers Ghinwa to be her real mother and political mentor. She is the granddaughter of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto and Nusrat Bhutto, niece of Benazir Bhutto, Shahnawaz Bhutto and Sanam Bhutto, and cousin of Bilawal Bhutto, Bakhtawar Bhutto and Asifa Bhutto.[4][7]
Her father was killed by the police in 1996 in Karachi during the premiership of his sister, Benazir Bhutto, and her mother unsuccessfully attempted to gain parental custody of Bhutto.[4] She lives with her stepmother and her half-brother Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto Jr.[8] in Old Clifton, Karachi.[4]
Education
Bhutto completed her B.A. degree in Middle Eastern studies[9] from Barnard College, Columbia University[2][10] in Manhattan, USA, after receiving her secondary education at the Karachi American School. She received a master's degree in South Asian Studies from the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London.[11]
Politics
Following the assassination of her aunt, Benazir Bhutto, there was speculation over her entrance into politics. In an interview, she has stated that for now she prefers to remain active through her activism and writing, rather than through elected office[4] and that she has to "rule a political career out entirely because of the effect of dynasties on Pakistan" referring to the Bhutto family dynasty and its ties to Pakistani politics. Although Bhutto is politically active, she is not affiliated with any political party.[12] She also expressed great sadness at her estranged aunt, Benazir Bhutto's death.[13]
Publications
The title of Bhutto's book 8.50 a.m. 8 October 2005 marks the moment of the 2005 Kashmir earthquake; it records accounts of those affected. She has also written a book of poetry, Whispers in the Desert. A memoir, Songs of Blood and Sword, was published in April 2010. The Shadow of the Crescent Moon, her fiction debut, was published in November 2013.[14]
See also
- Bhutto family
- Politics of Pakistan
- Pakistan Peoples Party (Shaheed Bhutto)
- List of Pakistani writers
References
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External links
- Official Fatima Bhutto Website
- Fatima Bhutto: Living on the Edge by William Dalrymple for the Times Online, 18 May 2008
- Fatima Bhutto on Her Memoir, Songs of Blood and Sword
- In Conversation: Songs of Corruption: Christian Parenti with Fatima Bhutto, The Brooklyn Rail
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- ↑ Fatima Bhutto: A beauty to tame George Clooney – and even Pakistan? Daily Telegraph, 15 February 2009
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- ↑ http://brooklynrail.org/2010/10/express/songs-of-corruption-christian-parenti-with-fatima-bhutto
- ↑ THE LAST WORD ‘I Loved Benazir’ – An interview with Fatima Bhutto 6 December 2010 in Newsweek Pakistan
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- Pages with reference errors
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- Articles with hCards
- Articles containing Urdu-language text
- 1982 births
- Living people
- Pakistani poets
- Pakistani writers
- Pakistani activists
- Pakistani women
- People from Kabul
- People from Clifton, Karachi
- Pashtun people
- Sindhi people
- Bhutto family
- Pakistani Shia Muslims
- Pakistani people of Afghan descent
- Barnard College alumni
- Alumni of SOAS, University of London
- Writers from Karachi
- Journalists from Karachi
- Pakistani journalists
- Karachi American School alumni
- Pakistani women writers
- Pakistani expatriates in Syria
- Pakistani people of Kurdish descent
- 21st-century women writers