Roquiah Sakhawat Hossain (1880-1932)
litterateur, educationist, and social reformer, who played a
pioneering role in awakening Muslim women, was born on 9 December
1880 into a landed family of Pairaband
in rangpur. Zahiruddin Abu Ali
Haider Saber was her father and Rahatunnesa Chowdhury, her mother.
Her ancestors served in military and judiciary departments during
the Mughal regime. Named Roquiah Khatun, she is commonly known as
Begum Rokeya in Bangladesh. Her name became Roquiah Sakhawat
Hossain after her marriage and in literary circles, she was known
as Mrs RS Hossain.
Roquiah's father was well versed in Arabic, Urdu,
Persian, Bangla, Hindi and English. However, he held the
conservative view of the time regarding women's education. He sent
Roquiah's elder brothers, Mohammad Ibrahim Abul Asad Saber
and Abu Zaigam Khalilur Rahman Saber, to Saint Xavier's College,
Calcutta, but Roquiah and her elder sister, Karimunnessa, were not
sent to school. Though Roquiah was not allowed to receive formal
education, she learnt both Bangla and English with the help of her
brothers. Roquiah's elder brothers and sister not only contributed
to educating Roquiah, but also inspired her in
writings.
In 1898, Roquiah was married to Syed Sakhawat Hossain,
an Urdu-speaker from Bhagalpur in Bihar. A deputy magistrate,
Sakhawat Hossain was liberal and progressive, and encouraged his
wife to study both Bangla and English and also inspired her to read
literary works from home and abroad. She also started writing at
the inspiration of her husband. Unfortunately, Roquiah had a short
marital life. Her husband died on 3 May 1909. She had two
daughters, but they died in infancy.
Despite her personal losses, Roquiah did not sit idle
but started working for women's education and emancipation. The
Muslim women of Bengal at that time were backward, neglected and
oppressed. Roquiah realised that women could be freed from their
shackles only if they were educated and became economically
independent. Accordingly, on 1 October 1909, she started a school
for Muslim girls at Bhagalpur with only five students, naming it
after her husband, Sakhawat Memorial Girls' School. However, she
could not continue at Bhagalpur for domestic reasons and decided to
move to Calcutta.
At Calcutta she set up Sakhawat Memorial Girls' School
in a house at 13, Waliullah Lane on 16 March 1911 with eight
students. The school was upgraded to Middle English Girls' School
in 1917 and to High English Girls' School in 1931, all through the
untiring efforts of Roquiah. The school was shifted to different
places because of the increase in number of students and some other
reasons. In 1931, it was at 13, European Asylum Lane, in 1932, at
162, Lower Circular Road and in 1938, at 17, Lord Sinha Road and
Alipur Hastings House. The school got its permanent address in 1968
when it was finally shifted to its own house at 17, Lord Sinha
Road. By that time, Roquiah ran the school for twenty-four years,
braving harsh criticism and various social obstacles, and made it
the best seat of learning for Muslim girls. At the seminal stage,
only non-Bengali girls used to go to Sakhawat Memorial School.
Roquiah worked hard to convince Bengali Muslim families to send
their daughters to school. She went from house to house, persuading
the parents that education was good for girls and promising
that purdawould be observed at her
school. Her tireless efforts paid off, with middle class Muslim
girls breaking the taboo against stepping out of the house to
study. She also arranged horse-carriages so that girls could go to
school and return home observing purdah.
Sakhawat Memorial Girls' School gave lessons in
recitation from the quran, along with
explanations, Bangla, English, Urdu, Persian, home nursing, first
aid, cooking, sewing, physical exercise, music etc. Roquiah used to
visit other girls' schools to see for herself the teaching methods
employed there and how the schools were run. As there were not many
competent female teachers at that time in Calcutta, Roquiah herself
used to train the teachers she appointed from Madras, Gaya, Agra
and other places. It was at her repeated requests that the
government set up the Muslim Women Training School in Calcutta in
1919. She worked to ensure government funding and social patronage
for the institute, enduring considerable criticism.
Roquiah realised that social injustices and extreme
forms of purdah kept Muslim women backward. She knew that before
women could be emancipated, people's attitudes had to change. In
order to achieve her goals, Roquiah, who was skilled in writing
fine Bangla prose, started using her pen to target social
prejudices, religious bigotry and ignorance. Roquiah wrote in a
number of genres, short stories, poems,
essays, novels and satirical
writings, developing a distinctive literary style, characterised by
creativity, logic and a wry sense of humour. She started writing in
the nabanoor from about 1903,
under the name of Mrs RS Hossain. However, there is an opinion that
her first published writing pipasha appeared in the
Nabaprabha in 1902. Ever since she wrote regularly for the
saogat, mohammadi,
Nabaprabha, Mahila, Bharatmahila,
Al-Eslam, Nawroz, mahe-nao, bangiya mussalman sahitya
patrika, The Mussalman, Indian Ladies
Magazine etc.
Roquiah wrote on a wide range of subjects: social
prejudice, adverse effects of the purdah system, women's education,
social repression on women, women's rights and her progressive
views of women's awakening. She also wrote against the tradition of
childhood marriage and polygamy.
Roquiah's writings called upon women to protest against
injustices and break the social barriers that discriminated against
them. Abarodhbasini (The Secluded Women, 1931) is a spirited
attack on the extreme forms of purdah that endangered women's
lives. Her other noted works include Matichur (essays lst
vol 1904, 2nd Vol. 1922), Sultana's Dream (satire, 1908),
Padmarag (novel, 1924). Sultana's Dream, which she
later translated into Bangla as Sultanar Svapna, is a
satirical piece, set in a place called Lady Land, a world ruled by
women. The second volume of Matichur includes stories and
fairy tales such as Saurajagat (The Solar System),
Delicia Hatya (translation of the Murder of Delicia,
by Mary Corelli), Jnan-phal (The Fruit of Knowledge),
Nari-Sristi (Creation of Women), Nurse Nelly,
Mukti-phal (The Fruit of Emancipation) etc. Roquiah also
wrote fine poetry. Her poem titled 'Saogat' was published on
the first page of the first issue of the Saogat in
Agrahayan, 1325 (1918 AD). Many of her other poems and essays were
also published in the magazine.
Roquiah left behind innumerable letters in Bangla and
English. She had a respect for the Bangla language. Although Urdu
was spoken by the aristocratic Muslims of the time including her
own home she understood that Bangla, spoken by the majority of the
Muslims of Bengal, should be her medium of expression. She mastered
Bangla and strongly advocated its use at the Bangiya Nari
Shikkha Sammelan (Convention on Women Literacy in Bengal) in
1927.
Roquiah is still remembered for her liberal thoughts,
secular outlook and powerful writing. She spoke against the abuse
of religious regulations that arrested the physical, mental and
psychological growth of women in almost all her writings. In some
of her writings, she advocated a concerted effort by men and women
for social development. She also wrote on contemporary politics.
Other luminaries of the period such as Sarojini Naidu, Lady
Chelmsford, Lady Carmichael, Queen Sultan Jahan of Bhopal etc.
spoke in praise of Roquiah and extended cooperation to
her.
Roquaih was always vociferous against the subjugation
of women in the Muslim society of Bengal. She led the movement for
women's education and awakening towards the beginning of the first
decade of the twentieth century, a time popularly referred to as
the reawakening of the Muslims of Bengal. She broke out of the
fetters of the purdah system and advocated women's emancipation.
Her literary genius juxtaposed her organisational capabilities and
helped her in the movement for women's education. She understood
that nothing but education would emancipate Muslim women, and she
worked towards that end with the intellect of a teacher, zeal of a
social reformer and conscience of a humanitarian.
Roquiah Sakhawat Hossain is primarily remembered for
her role in the women's movement in Bangladesh. She founded an
organisation called Anjuman-e-Khawatin-e-Islam, or the
Muslim women's society, in 1916 to make women aware of their
rights. The society was in the forefront of the fight for women's
education, employment and their legal and political rights. The
society defrayed the cost of education for a large number of girls
and arranged marriages for many poor girls. It gave shelter to
orphans and the destitute and extended financial help to widows. It
also established some businesses for women to earn economic
independence. The society contributed greatly towards the
development of Muslim women in Calcutta. Braving harsh comments and
allegations from conservatives, Roquiah inspired women to join the
society.
The harbinger of Muslim women's awakening and
emancipation, Roquiah lived for only 52 years. She died in Calcutta
on 9 December 1932. Her legacy, however, lived on. Many women who
were noted for their role in the women's movements in Bangladesh
were Roquiah's students.