Wednesday 18 May 2022

Durru Shehvar: The Beguiling Princess of Hyderabad: Heir of Ottoman Dynasty: Married to Indian Prince Azam Jah-A Sad End Story

Hatice Hairie Ayse Durru shehvar Sultan(1914–2006)  was born in Istanbul. In November 1922, her father, Abdul Mejid II, became the last caliph of the disintegrating Ottoman Empire.


Earlier, Turkey's Grand National Assembly in Ankara decided to split the sultanate and caliphate. The first was abolished, but the representative of the Turkish Sultanate was given the title of spiritual leader of all Muslims in the country.

Princess Durru Shehvar and prince Azam Jah
 

Durru shehvar is Abdul-Mejid's only daughter. The girl grew up in the Dolmabahce Palace and received a decent education.

 

Sultana is fluent in English and French, and subsequently studied Urdu. Although her father had four wives, Durru shehvar had only one half-brother, shehzade Omer Faruk.

 

On October 29, 1923, the Ottoman empire ceased to exist and the young republic no longer needed a caliph.

 

On March 3, 1924, a law was enacted, according to which all members of the Sultanate were required to leave the country within two days and could not return under the threat of trial.

Princess Niloufer and Princess Durru Shehvar with their husbands 

And the former caliph, his wife and children were immediately loaded into a car and sent to the Bulgarian border. There, they boarded the Orient Express to Nice. In France, the former sultan continued her studies.

 

The princess was ten years old when her family was banished from Turkey under the Ataturk reforms, following which they settled in Nice, France.

 

As Abdul Mejid had friendly relations with the British branch of the Red Cross, they began to worry about the fate of the former caliph.

Princess Durru Shehvar

In particular, an appeal to all Muslim monarchs for help was issued.

Persuaded by Maulana Shaukath Ali and his brother, Maulana Mohammad Ali, Nizam Mir Osman Ali Khan decided to send a life-time monthly pension of 300 pounds to the deposed Caliph, and allowances to several individuals in the family.

Obviously, this fact affected Durru shehvar's future marriage.

When Durru Shehvar, came of age, she was sought in marriage by several Muslim Royals including the Shah of Persia and the King of Egypt for their heirs.Her distant relative Mohammad Abid, son of Sultan Abdul Hamid, also wanted to marry her.

 

When the crown prince of Hyderabad, Azam Jah, came of age, the Nizam started looking for a suitable bride for his heir. Princess Durru Shehvar was the prime candidate.

 

But her father married her to the eldest son Azam Jah, the son of Nizam of Hyderabad. By the way, his youngest son married his cousin Durru shehvar Niloufer.

 

Durru Shehvar had the striking looks and bearing of someone born to be queen. Her ancestry was impeccable and, most importantly, through her bloodline.

Princess Durru Shehvar and her husband Prince Azam Jah with her Son Mukarram Jah

Shaukat Ali prevailed on the Nizam to send a proposal to the Caliph asking for Durru Shever’s hand for his elder son, Prince Azam Jah. The deposed Caliph could hardly reject the offer from his benefactor.

 

But it was not that easy; the Mehr (the bride money) of 50,000 pounds that the Caliph demanded for his daughter was “too big”, the Nizam felt.

 

But with the intervention of Shaukat Ali, the Caliph proposed to offer for the same Mehr, the hand of his brother’s daughter Niloufer, for the Nizam’s younger son, Prince Mauzam Jah. The Nizam readily agreed and sent his two sons to France.

The marriage of Princess Durru Shehvar with Prince Azam Jah, along with that of Prince Mauzam and Niloufer took place in Nice, in France, on 12 November, 1931, in a simple ceremony attended by only a simple affair with only the members of Sultan’s family at Nice, a few Turkish nobles and friends.

Princess Durru Shehvar at age of 9 Year

According to the marriage contract, Durru shehvar received $200,000 in compensation in the event of a divorce or death of his spouse

 

She held the titles of Princess of Berar through marriage, and Imperial Princess of the Ottoman Empire by birth before the monarchy's abolition in 1922.

 

Princess Durru Shehvar and Princess Niloufer with father last Ottoman Caliph --wedding 1932

Durru Shehvar was 18 at the time, and significantly taller than her husband of 25, Azam Jah. Her father-in-law, the Nizam loved pointing out how much taller she was than his son, at their parties.

 

The Princess became the first woman to inaugurate an airport when she inaugurated the airport in Hyderabad in the 1940s.

 

She is also credited with inaugurating the Osmania General Hospital. She set up the Durru Shehvar Children's & General Hospital for women and children in the old city of Hyderabad.

Princess Durru Shehvar with his Father Abdul Majeed Last Ottoman Caliph

She was subject to immense attention and adulation in the 1930s. “Jab woh paan khaati thi, toh halak se jaata hua dikhta tha (When she swallowed a paan, you could see it going down her throat!).

 

Following the birth of her sons Prince Mukarram Jah in 1934 and Prince Muffakham Jah in 1939, she took charge of their upbringing, the two princes being educated in Britain but got them married to Turkish ladies.

Mukarram studied in Eton, where India’s first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru had earlier studied.

 

The last Nizam- (Mir Osman Ali Khan) later bypassed his own son Azam Jah and nominated her first son Mukarram Jah his grandson, as his successor.

 

She was of impeccable lineage but her family had very little money, and it was a typical rags-to-riches story. She knew of her husband’s 50 concubines but carried herself regally.”

 

The Nizam called her his precious Jewel (Nagina) and encouraged her to participate actively in Hyderabad’s social life.

 

In Hyderabad, Durru Shehvar soon identified herself with the people. With a great passion for providing health care and education for common people, she set up a general and children’s hospital in Purani Haveli, which still runs in her name.

 

A Junior College for girls in Yakutpura, Bagh-e-Jahanara, is also run on the funds she provided. Durru Shehvar also laid the foundation stone of the Begum pet Airport building in 1936. Until then a small strip at Hakimpet served as the airport for Hyderabad.

She inaugurated (1939) the Ajmal Khan Tibbiya College Hospital in Aligarh Muslim University (AMU).

 

Durru Shehvar was fluent in French, English, Turkish and Urdu and even contributed articles to French magazines. She believed that women should earn their own living and worked hard to remove the practice of purdah.

 

Her marriage was not exactly a fairytale ending. Marriage "mismatched" in every sense, “She was 5’10", her husband was 5 ‘3". She brought with her a completely cosmopolitan life, while most of Hyderabad was still under purdah.

 

Perhaps this excerpt of a 1931 article in Time magazine, reporting on their wedding, can offer a hint. The Crown Prince Azam Jah stated his views on marriage thus:

 

‘I like horses. They are more dependable than women. If a horse throws you it will stand by until you get on your feet.’ Nevertheless Crown Prince Azam Jah obeyed his father’s orders to marry.”

 

It was very difficult for Durru Shehvar to adjust the very conservative Muslim culture that permeated Hyderabad at the time.

 

But she never went into purdah. There were also rumors at the time that the Nizam’s senior wife Dulhan Pasha wanted to poison her.

 

Relations between Azam Jah (her husband) and his brother Moazzam Jah were also strained. She always thought Hyderabad could never equal the Ottoman culture, and many Hyderabadis thought she looked down on them.”

Durru Shehvar knew of her husband’s 50 concubines but carried herself regally. However, there was a great gulf between the Princess and the Prince, Azam Jah and their marriage fell apart within few years.

 

Prince Azam Jah had a tendency for and gambling but carried herself regally.” Enough said.

Gorgeous Princess Durru Shehvar in London in 1999

It is an irony that when she was born, her father, the Caliph was the head of all the Muslims in the world; but was overthrown and sent away in exile.

 

After the divorce, Durru Shehvar stayed in Hyderabad for some years, and then moved to London, where she died in 2006, aged 93, with her two sons by her side.

 

(Her ex-husband Azam Jah, had passed away in 1970, aged 63.). After her husband’s death, she divided her time between Hyderabad and London. With her death, ended a glorious chapter of Hyderabad.

Gorgeous Princess Durru Shehvar in 1999 in London

Each time she returned to Hyderabad for a visit, she attracted big crowds. She always remained a superstar, fondly remembered and frequently written about in the Indian press.

 

We read historical events to learn from it, main learning point for Muslims of the Subcontinent is the role played by our ancestors that shaped the history and the world.

 

Our religious leaders were armed with both religious and modern education. This was the reason they influenced the masses and an individual.

 

As in this case, Maulana Shaukat Ali had influence on both the last Caliph and the richest man on earth, the Nizam of Hyderabad.

The End

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Sunday 15 May 2022

Mukarram Jah The Last Nizam of Hyderabad- From Richest To Rags: Where all Wealth of Seven Generations Vanished

 Now here's a richest-to-rags story on a truly astonishing scale, have you heard about the Indian prince who lost it all in the Australian outback? His name is Mukarram Jah and he is, or was, the last Nizam—which means he was the last ruler of Hyderabad.

 

This is story of Last Nizam Mukarram Jah of Hyderabad, From Untold Riches to Total Obscurity.

The Prince Mukarram Jah was born in 1933 in Hilafet Palace in Nice (France). His mother Princess Durru Shevar Sultan was the daughter of the last Sultan of Turkey (Ottoman Empire) Sultan Abdul Mejid II.  She died in the beginning of the 2000s. His father was Azam Jah, the son and heir of Osman Ali Khan, the last reigning Nizam of Hyderabad state. 

Mukarram Jah and Princess Esma at Coronation Ceremony

He was educated in India at the Doon School in Dehradun and in England at Harrow and Peterhouse, Cambridge. He also studied at the London School of Economics and at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst.

 

Mukarram Jah was a friend of India's first Prime Minister, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, and stated in 2010 that Nehru had wanted him to become his personal envoy or the Indian ambassador to a Muslim country.

 

Like his father, Mukarram was the richest man in India until the 1980s. However, in the 1990s he lost some assets to divorce settlements with his wife Princess Esra. His net worth is nevertheless estimated at $US1 billion.

Mukarram Jah with Princess Esra

Officially He was the Nizam of Hyderabad State, but since 1948 there was nothing to rule over.

Coming at the end of the 40-day period of mourning for Jah’s grandfather, Osman Ali Khan, it should have signified a new era for what had been India’s largest, richest and most powerful princely state. 

Princess Durr e Shahwar  her husband Azmat Jah and sons Mukarram Jah and Muffakham Jah

Jah had just inherited what was probably the largest fortune in the world. The vast estate included a treasury that was said to contain more jewels than those of all the other princely states put together.


 A list of properties including palaces, forts and havelis more than 50-pages long and 14,718 staff and dependents that his grandfather still maintained, two decades after Hyderabad had lost its independence.

 

The Nizam made his grandson the successor to the gaddi on 14th of June 1954 instead of his first son Mir Himayat Ali Khan alias Prince Azam Jah Bahadur. 

 

Therefore, Mukarram Jah succeeded as the Eighth Nizam on the passing away of the last former reigning ruler of Hyderabad on 24th February, 1967.

 

His succession was recognized in principle by the Government of India. He was officially called the Prince of Hyderabad until 1971 when the titles and the privy purses were abolished by the Indian Union.

Coronation Ceremony of Mukarram Jah as the Eighth Nizam

Wearing a yellow sherwani and dastar, Mukarram Jah looks stiff and uncomfortable as he emerges from a silver-blue Oldsmobile bearing the number plate ‘HYDERABAD 1’.

 

His wife Esra appears more relaxed, dressed in a pale green sari, her hair covered by a scarf.

 

Inside the Darbar hall of the Chowmahalla Palace in Hyderabad, male guests wearing dastars, fezzes and turbans sit patiently on a white cloth that covers the marble floor while the women watch from the gallery above the audience hall. 

Princess Durr u Shehvar Sultana with father Ottoman Calip Abdul Majeed  and husband Prince Azem Jah in 1931

The Hyderabad anthem is played, followed by prayers in Arabic and an inspection by Jah of the palace troops. Holding a ceremonial sword, he enters the darbar hall as verses are recited from the Koran.

Osman Ali Khan --vii Nizam of Hyderabad

As Jah takes his place on the musnad, the president of India’s two gazettes acknowledging him as the successor of the Seventh Nizam and declaring him the ruler of Hyderabad and the sole owner of all movable and immovable property of Osman Ali Khan’s private estate are read out.

 

From outside the palace come the sounds of a 21-gun salute and shouts of ‘Long Live the Nizam’ from the tens of thousands of people gathered in the streets.


Captured on grainy 16-millimetre footage shot by a German cameraman on April 6, 1967, the Mughal-style darbar would be the last of its kind not only in Hyderabad but also in India. 

After the coronation he famously told an American reporter that the only pleasure he got from going to Hyderabad was tinkering with the broken-down cars in his grandfather’s garage. “I inherited a scrapyard,” he said. “I have a lifetime’s work before me.”

 

When the government abolished princely titles, privileges and privy purses, he decided to settle in Australia and become a “farmer”. He rarely visits Hyderabad, and currently lives in Turkey.

 

Mukarram left the management of his inheritance in the hands of people he thought he could trust. It was a mistake. Priceless antiques were pillaged or sold off at a fraction of their worth.

Princess Durr e Shahwar and Azmat Jah at their Marriage in 1931

Jewels landed up at international auction houses. Palace lands were encroached on. Jah had just inherited what was probably the largest fortune in the world.

And fate had determined that he would never fulfil his dreams of living in Australia. He was a lonely man, cut off from his friends and deeply missing life in the Outback.

 

He loved the anonymity, the informality, the wide-open spaces of the Australian outback.

It was as far away as one could get from the fawning sycophants who surrounded him whenever he stayed in Hyderabad, and also the Indian tax authorities and the rapacious relatives who felt entitled to a slice of his inheritance.

 

For the next quarter of a century he tried to carve out a kingdom in the desert, nurturing dreams of retiring quietly and gracefully as ‘an old-fashioned gentleman farmer, who through choice of his own adopted the Australian way of life’, as he once said.

His adopted lifestyle, however, came at a cost. Murchison House Station ran at a constant loss, draining his resources. But the main damage was being done in Hyderabad.

 

But the property, the precious antiques and so on were vanishing from his palaces. Lots of people were making money and the controlling authority was very weak. Whoever Jah put there was unable to check the slide.”

 

By 1990 the slide had become a rout. The pain was being felt in Australia where Jah was unable to pay his bills.

An old family friend, the late Hyderabadi jeweler Sadruddin Javeri, lent him money and briefly put his affairs in order, but the damage had been done and in 1996 Murchison House Station and his mansion in Perth were on the market to pay off his debts to Javeri.

Princess Durru Shehvar Sultan in 1999 --London-She died here in 2006 at age of 93

But Jah rarely visits Hyderabad and has never returned to Australia, where he insists he spent the happiest years of his life. At 87, he is in frail health and his memory is fading.

 

Mukarram Jah Bahadur owns property in Hyderabad such as the Falaknuma Palace, Khilwat Palace, King Koti and Chiran Palace which is located in the middle of KBR National Park in Jubilee Hills. 

Falaknuma Palace

The properties are looked after by his first former wife Princess Esra who occasionally visits and stays in Hyderabad at Falaknuma Palace, which has been turned into the Taj Falaknuma Palace.

Chowmahalla Palace-=(Khilwat  Palace)

No one really knows where all the wealth has gone.

Mir Osman Ali Khan, the seventh Nizam of Hyderabad (1911-1967), was considered the richest man in the world with a fortune of $2 billion.

Nizam Hyderabad's Necklace Worn By Queen Elizabeth ii

For long his family wanted to know where all the money had gone. Now they are fighting for what is left.

“The fight is between two grandsons of the Nizam, Prince Mukarram Jah, the crown heir, and his brother Prince Muffakham and the rest of the family,” said Nawab Najaf Ali Khan, one of the grandsons of Mir Osman Ali Khan.

 

He is also the president of the Nizam Family Welfare Association. The family has nominated him to take care of the legal aspects of the dispute.

Princess Esra with her husband PRINCE Mukarram

Moin Nawaz Jung, who was Mir Osman Ali Khan's finance minister, transferred one million pounds to North Westminster Bank, now called Royal Bank of Scotland. This wealth is also being claimed by the two grandsons and the governments of Pakistan and India.” A day before Operation Polo, the military action that annexed Hyderabad to the Indian Union in September 1948.

 

Currently the amount has grown to 36 million pounds. “It has been in litigation since 1956,” said Nawab Najaf.

 

“I look after the untouched issues, which are pending in the form of assets and money,” he said. “I have been given absolute mandate from the 120 or so whom I am representing in the UK High Court, claiming the Nizam's money”.

 

In 2013, the Pakistan High Commissioner went to court claiming that the money belonged to his country, but the bank said the matter was in dispute.

 

India has also staked claim for the amount. “We hope for an amicable solution,” said Nawab Najaf. But, considering the adamant stance of the parties concerned, it would be difficult, he conceded.

 

The Nizam had 18 sons and 16 daughters. “Today, only one son and one daughter are alive,” said Nawab Najaf. “There are 120 grandchildren.

 

The richest of them are the two eldest grandsons, Mukarram and Muffakham, because all the assets were in their control after the demise of my grandfather in 1967.”

 

In 1951, Mir Osman Ali Khan formed a trust called The Nizam Jewelry Trust for his vast collection of jewelry and precious stones.

 

The government purchased it for Rs 206 crore in 1995, after 20 years of litigation. “The family was not allowed to sell the jewelry outside India,” said Nawab Najaf. “It could have fetched Rs 2,500 crore at that time.”

 

If he had chosen to stay in Hyderabad, a seat in the Indian Parliament would have been his for the asking.

 

Other maharajahs transmuted themselves into successful politicians and businessmen. So why couldn’t he, whose fortune and status was greater than theirs?

 

Most of what Mukarram Jah inherited is now gone. The palaces in Ooty and Mahableshwar were sold for a song. The five palaces in Hyderabad—Falaknuma, Purani Haveli, Chowmahalla, King Kothi and Chiran.

 

As for the famed jewelry collection, those in the know say what the government managed to acquire—the fabulous 173 pieces including the Jacob diamond that were bought by the government for Rs 218 crore in 1995 after nearly two decades of negotiations and court battles.

 

When Mir Osman Ali Khan, the seventh Nizam of Hyderabad died in 1967, his fortune was estimated to be the richest in the world by the Guinness Book of World Records.

Mir Osman Ali Khan with Prince MUKARRAM  Jah

Apart from the taxes that he was allowed to collect of a vast empire that stretched all the way from the borders of the present Madhya Pradesh in the North to Tamil Nadu in the south, Mir Osman Ali had devised other innovative ways to get richer.

 

Twice a year—on Eid and his birthday—the nobility of the state and government officials had to provide him gifts or Nazar, the minimum of which was one gold coin and four silver.

 

Noblemen who were granted his audience were expected to bring expensive gifts as a mark of gratitude. Even the famous Falaknuma palace in Hyderabad came to him as a gift from one of his subjects.

 

So it wasn’t surprising that his fortune was the size it became over the six decades that he was the Nizam.

Mukarram’s problems started at home itself, and that too with his father Azam Jah.

 

But he was so much in love with his kingdom that he unilaterally declared Hyderabad independent in June 1947, two months before the nation was granted independence.

 

The revolt was short lived and it did not take more than a police force to subdue his army in the September of 1948.

Princess Esra

He was however allowed to keep his wealth, and along with it the title of Nizam. As a sign of respect to his status he was also given a new title of Raj Pramukh, or the constitutional head of Hyderabad state.

 

Moharram's problems started at home itself, and that too with his father Azam Jah.

 

Azam Jah, the Nizam’s elder son, who was to inherit the throne, however proved to be a different kettle of fish. He was by all counts a profligate and rampant womanizer who caused his father a lot of pain.

 

His wife Princess Durru Shehvar (Mother of Mukarram Jah) was a beautiful European-born and educated royal, daughter of the then Caliph of Turkey and hence the pre-eminent Muslim princess in the world.

 

The wealth may have been aplenty, but her husband’s harems and lifestyle were too shocking for her European heart to accept. But she kept up the dignity of the marriage in the royal style and Hyderabadis still talk nostalgically about her wonderful grace and beauty with awe.

 

She packed off Mukarram to Eton at a very young age to make an Englishman out of him.

 

Mir Osman Ali Khan, who was already upset with the kind of debt Azam, had been running up with his wastrel lifestyle.

 

The last straw came while he was on his death bed, when Azam, by now desperate to end his father’s long reign, wrote to the government to recognise him as the new Nizam.

 

A shocked Mir Osman Ali retaliated by writing to the government that on his death Azam be passed over in favour of his grandson Mukarram Jah for the title of Nizam.

 

Thus Mukarram, then in his 30s, woke up one day to find he had superseded his own parents in royal status and now they had to bow to him as the future king. It may have offered him grim satisfaction, but the rift between father and son was now complete.

 

Mukarram, despite his British public school education, proved to be too inept to handle the enormous responsibility that was thrust on him. In 1969, the then prime minister Mrs Gandhi abolished all the officially recognized princely titles and two years later abolished the system of privy purses

 

The tax free annual compensation that was paid to the rulers in exchange for merging their kingdoms into the Indian union in 1948.

 

This meant that the rulers like him now had to feed and look after their palaces, courtiers and the thousands of retainers with money from their own pocket.

 

His problems were further compounded by hundreds of family members who moved courts for a share of the fortune. The internecine warfare to grab some of that booty would have tested the strongest of leaders.

 

So he crumbled. This was not the life of fame and fortune he had expected. He chose to deal with the problem in the only way he knew, by escaping from it. He left his affairs in the hands of courtiers, signing away his Power of Attorney and took to travelling aimlessly around the world.

 

With no one to manage the vast estates, it wasn’t surprising that the family fortune started dwindling at a rapid pace. While the king was away, it was a free for all at the palaces.

 

The courtiers, friends and relatives took to plundering the palaces and estates. Anything that they could lay their hands on was taken away to be sold. And whatever could not be taken away was mismanaged.

 

For example, in the case of the famous Nizam’s jewels, which some value at more than Rs 1000 crore, the family ended up getting very little. It was acquired by the government for Rs 218 crore, of which Rs 183 crore came to the family after taxes.

 

Of this Rs 25 crore was paid to Mukarram and another Rs 25 crore to his brother Prince Muffakham Jah. The rest of the money is still under litigation with hundreds of relatives claiming parts of it.

Marriages and issue

Mukarram wasn’t as prolific as his grandfather, but he had married five times only, including a former Miss Turkey who was his third wife. His first wife was a Turkish noble woman, Esra Birgin (b. 1936), and they married in 1959.

Mukarram JAH viii Nizam with Princess Esma at HIS Coronation Ceremony

In the family’s tradition Mukarram was married off very young to a Turkish blue blood, Princess Esra, when he was very young. Esra preferred the company of her mother-in-law with whom she had more in common than her taciturn, arrogant husband. 

Mukarram Jah with Son Prince Azmet Jah

Within a few years of taking over as Nizam he took refuge from the home front by escaping to Australia where he fell in love with his secretary Helen, a large, rambunctious, sensuous woman who enjoyed boasting of her many lovers.

 

She could not have been more different from the stiff lipped aristocratic women in his family and he adored her for it. He married Helen only to regret it a few years later when she contracted AIDS and died.

Helen Simons

The rift with his mother and first wife was now too vast to bridge. They were appalled at his choice and how he had allowed the prestigious 250 year’s old Asaf Jahi dynasty to be associated with a commoner.

 

After Helen’s death Mukarram got back to his globetrotting ways, moving, finally to Turkey. Istanbul had in any case, right from the beginning, felt more like home than Hyderabad. On a blind date there he was introduced to the charming ex-Ms Turkey Manolya Onur who became his third wife.

Maynolya Onur

Manolya was drawn to what she says was, “the sadness in him. He was so obviously lonely. When I came to know that his mother was our Great Pasha’s daughter, I was shocked.” They got married and on her insistence returned to India.

 

By then, fortunately for him, his mother and first wife had migrated to London to set up mansions there. For Manolya, India was a dream. She recalls how they came to India to live in unimaginable luxury in his beautiful palace.”

 

It was like a fairy tale. A palace straight from The Arabian Nights, the most magnificent jewels and clothes to wear, battalions of servants falling over you, a fleet of cars at my disposal.”

 

But for Mukarram, the nightmare had restarted within a few months. Says Manolya, “Everyday he was having his ears filled by different factions. People kept threatening him with court cases. The government was constantly encroaching on his various properties.

 

The arguments with everyone over money irritated him. After three months he could not bear it anymore. He decided to escape to Australia once again.

 

He bought this huge ranch in the outback in Australia and insisted we shift there to live among dingo dogs, cowboys, cattle and snakes. It was a nightmare.

 

When Mukarram drove out with the cattle I was completely alone. I could have died there and no one would have known we were so far from civilization.”

 

Shaking her head, she adds, “I begged Mukarram to return to the comfort and luxury of India and the respect of his people. But he loved the outback. He actually enjoyed the loneliness and the tough life.”

Manolya got pregnant and insisted she return to Turkey for the birth of their child. Mukarram now took to taking off on his own. Manolya heard through Turkish papers that he had got married a fourth time.

Jameela  Bourges

A Moroccan lady, Jameela Bourges, was his wife for a very brief period. Six months later she was out of favor.

 

I could not believe Mukarram had got hitched to her. Mukarram realized his mistake but the lady extracted her pound of flesh, $ 500,000, before she agreed to the divorce.”

Mukarram Jah -- Now lives in Turkey

Currently Mukarram lives in Istanbul with his fifth wife, another Turkish lady Orchid Kapani, (b. 1959).

 

The biggest mistake of Prince Mukarram Jah was, instead of staying in Hyderabad and sort out his problems, he turned his back on them and left the city of his forefathers.

 

Jah’s advisor and close friend, Sadruddin Javeri, who managed his estate in his absentia squandered away a huge part of his wealth. It was Javeri’s cupidity that the world famous Falaknuma Palace was sold to the Taj Group of hotels in lieu of unpaid debts. No wonder, the advisor who called himself Prime Minister of Nizams’ was unceremoniously sacked in 1997.

 

It is not that every thing is over for Prince Mukaram Jah, the eight Nizam of Hyderabad. He still posses’ huge assets in the city. What is expected from him is to stay in Hyderabad and sort out his litigations.

 

Its any irony that the man who is still being addressed in his native place as; His Exalted Highness, Sultan, Pasha, Huzoor Nizam, Mai-Bap and Sarkar and many such epithets, prefers a life of recluse in a foreign land.

 

It is indeed a sad story of wealth lost and squandered, the frailty of human vanity and status, the total inability of a man to cope with great historic changes taking place around him.


Today the Prince lives in relative anonymity in Istanbul, only making infrequent trips to Hyderabad when a crisis requires his attention.

 

Interestingly his first wife Princess Esra, who now lives in London with and two children, has after two decades of frigid indifference, started taking an active interest in the family’s Indian properties. She jets to Hyderabad.

The End