EGYPT'S FIRST LADIES
by Samir Raafat
March 2005
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1879-1919: Princess Amina Ilhami, Countess May, Sultana Melek, Princess Shuvekar Ibrahim
1919-1953: Queens Nazli, Farida and Nariman, Princess Neslishah
1955-2005: First Ladies Tahia Abdel Nasser, Jehan al-Sadat, Suzanne Mubarak
Consorts of Monogamous Egyptian Heads of State
From Khedive Mohammed Tewfik To President Hosni Mubarak
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- Khedive Tewfik (r. 1879-92) + Princess Amina Ilhami (born 24/05/1858) a cousin
- Khedive Abbas Himi (r. 1892-1914 ) + Ikbal Hanim (born 22/10/1876) a vassal (div.); + May von Torok (born 15/6/1877) Hungarian countess who changed her name to Djavidan Hanem
- Sultan Hussein Kamel (r. 1914-17) + Princess Ayn al Hayat Ibrahim his cousin (div.); + Melek Tourhan (born 27/10/1869 and married on 26 December 1886) a Circassian vassal, the adopted daughter of Khedive Ismail's third wife the Kuthcuk Hanemefendi
- King Fouad (r. 1917-36) + Princess Shuvekar Ibrahim a cousin (div.); + Nazli Abdel Rehim Sabry (born 25/6/1894) French grandfather Anthelme Seve
- King Farouk (r. 1936-52) + Safinaz "Farida" Zulfikar (born 5/9/1921) a commoner (div.); + Nariman Sadek (born 21/10/1934) a commoner (div.)
- Prince-Regent Abdel Moneim Abbas Hilmi (1952-53) + H.I.H. Princess Neslishah Osmanoglou (born 2/2/1921) granddaughter of last Ottoman Sultan
- President Mohammed Naguib (r. 1953-54) + Aicha Mohammed Labib
- President Gamal Abdel Nasser (r. 1954-1970) + Tahia Kazem-Boghdadi (born 1920) Iranian father Kazem Boghdadi and Egypto-Iranian mother ? Kassem
- President Anwar al-Sadat (r. 1970 -1981) + Ikbal Madi (div.); + Jehan Safwat Raouf (born 29/8/1933) English mother Gladys Cotterill
- President Hosni Mubarak (r. 1981 - ) + Suzanne Saleh Sabet (born 28/2/1941) Welsh mother Lily May Palmer
The last satin-and-silk harem belonged to Khedive (Viceroy) Ismail Pasha who ruled Egypt from 1863 to 1879. Heretofore, the Walda Pasha (ruler's mother) was the most powerful woman in the realm often acting as political mentor for her potentate-son. Starting with Ismail's first-born son, Mohammed Tewfik Pasha, monogamy became the rule rather than the exception for Egypt's heads of state. The role of First Lady was thus introduced in a Middle East increasingly influenced by Western culture.
This is about 12 women who in varying degrees influenced Egypt's destiny.
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In an age when motherhood gave a woman her only acknowledged career the primary role of Egypt's royal consorts was to provide an heir and spare, ensuring the perpetuity of the Mohammed Ali dynasty.
Guaranteed two sons from his sole-consort Ikbal Hanim whom he divorced later on, Khedive Abbas Hilmi took Countess May Von Torok for his second wife. Although it was said at the time that the countess was more of an affair than a traditional union, the couple were officially married in 1910 with the Grand Mufti and Poet Laureate Ahmed Shawky among the witnesses.
Fifty years later King Farouk felt compelled to remarry to secure an heir to the throne, his first wife having borne him three daughters.
ORIGINS & BACKGROUND
The last endogamous consort was Amina Ilhami, wife of Khedive Tewfik. Hers would also be the first monogamous marriage contracted by an Egyptian viceroy. Consorts who came from within the Mohamed Ali clan were naturally highborn enjoying a gilded existence from childbirth. The same can be said for Countess May who belonged to the minor Mittle-Europa aristocracy (read separate article).
Queen Nazli and Queen Farida belonged to the elitist turco-circassian ruling class. Besides being daughters and granddaughters of senior officials, they each had a prime minister for a maternal grandfather--Mohammed Cherif Pasha and Mohammed Saiid Pasha respectively. Moreover, Queen Farida was the niece of renowned artist-painter, Mahmoud Saiid.
Except for Queen Nariman all of the above consorts were of mixed or foreign ancestry.
In principal the intermarried members of the Mohammed Ali clan were of Turco-Balkan stock. Countess May on the other hand is up-and-down Hungarian. And while Queen Nazli is of French-Greek extraction through her maternal grandparents, both Ikbal Hanem and Sultana Melek were imports from the northern Ottoman provinces. Princess Neslishah meanwhile is the result of a six-century bloodline of imperial Sultans and Khans.
Of Egypt's four post-monarchy First Ladies, Tahia Abdel Nasser was the daughter of a Persian immigrant whom we find listed in the 1914 Commercial Directory as a carpet merchant at Rue Neuve (Souk al-Samak al-Kadim) which at the time was the principle carpet-selling district . The story goes that when cadet-officer Gamal Abdel Nasser asked for her hand in marriage in 1944, her father, Mohammed Ibrahim Kazem-Boghdadi allegedly sought the blessing of his sometime benefactor Abdelhamid Kazrouni Bey, the then-honorary head of Egypt's small Persian community which naturally incuded Tahia's Persian relations the Ismail Alis, the Hassan Mustafa Iranis and the Kassems all of them in the carpet trade with shops on Opera Square and in the Khan Khalili bazaar.
On the other hand First Ladies Jehan Raouf and Suzanne Sabet came from educated urban middle-class backgrounds. Both sets of parents were almost carbon copies of each other. Both their paternal grandfathers came from Upper Egypt and both Jehan and Suzanne's respective fathers pursued medical studies in the United Kingdom while in their twenties opting for British brides. As though by coincidence both brides were born in 1904 and their respective fathers were called Charles Henry!
Ditto the Sabets. At Islington, London on 16 March 1934, Saleh Sabet, a 29 year old medical student at Cardiff University, marries the 29 year old Lily May Palmer, a trained nurse working at The Infirmary on Camden Road, Islington. The daughter of colliery manager Charles Henry Palmer, Lily May grew up in Pontypridd, Glamorgan in Wales, hence the Welsh connection.
It was in Upper Egypt that Jehan's father Ahmed Raouf started his career as a Public Health Department director and it was also thereabouts that Saleh Mustafa Sabet, Suzanne's father, started off as a pediatrician.
Suzanne's great-grandfather Ali Sabet, an irrigation engineer in Assiut, had fathered several sons all of them graduates with respectable white collar jobs in the civil service (agricultural engineer, police commissioner, harbour-master, penitentiary doctor, telephone inspector, banker). It was around the time when Ali Sabet died (1935) at his Cairo home on Shubra Avenue No. 150, that his grandson was on his way back to Egypt to start a career as an MD hakim-basha in Qena where he was responsible for the town's childrens' hospital. It was also in Qena that his son Mounir was born in October 1936. Later Saleh Sabet would set up practice in the town of Minya where his daughter Suzanne was born in February 1941.
In Egypt the Raoufs and the Sabets raised their offspring in non-traditional style giving their respective daughters the benefits of a first rate western education.
Whereas the age difference between their respective mothers and fathers was almost insignificant both future First Ladies married military men more than 10 years their senior.
In a country historically known for its religious diversity where Christians make up approximately 12% of the population we note that aside from Countess May, Anglo-Egyptians Jehan Raouf and Suzanne Sabet have one Christian-born parent each.
EDUCATION & TRAINING
From Khediva Amina Ilhami to Sultan Melek, Egypt's consorts were educated at home their worldly knowledge limited to what they learned from their benign nannies and stalwart European governess'. The overall curriculum was limited to languages (French, English, German, Turkish and Arabic), basic history and rudimentary arithmetic. There was also piano, painting and sewing.
Not members of the Mohammed Ali clan, Queens Nazli, Farida and Nariman attended elementary and primary schools. Nazli Abdel Rehim Sabry first went to the Mere de Dieu School in Cairo and later to the Dame de Sion in Alexandria. Farida, whose father was a High Court judge in that coastal city, went to the Dame de Sion. French nuns supervised both these boarding schools.
It was different with First Ladies Jehan al-Sadat and Suzanne Mubarak. The former grew up on the Island of Roda attending the nearby Church Missionary Society School run by an English headmistress.
And since Suzanne's family lived at No. 15 Abdel Moneim (Garnata) Street in Heliopolis, it was normal that she enroll at St. Claire's. This was a strict girls-only Heliopolis prep school operated by Mother Mary Cecilia and a band of Franciscan sisters, where neglecting to wear straw hat and pom-poms was virtually a punishable offense.
After guaranteeing a first class education for their respective children, both Jehan and Suzanne sought and obtained university degrees.
At 46 Jehan received a much-publicized degree in Arabic Literature from Cairo University where she eventually lectured. At about the same period Suzanne Mubarak enrolled at the American University in Cairo where she obtained a BA in Political Science (class of '77) supplementing it with a Masters in 1982.
Unlike previous consorts, Suzanne Mubarak and Jehan al-Sadat benefited from several years of priming as wives of incumbent Vice Presidents. In their position as Second Ladies they had enough time to envisage their future roles, the advantage of-course is that Suzanne had Jehan for an intimate mentor.
All of the above consorts were teenage brides married off between the ages of 15-18 the two exceptions being Countess May and Queen Nazli.
Except for Jehan al-Sadat and Countess May, all of the above marriages were arranged with the alleged consent of the teenage brides.
wedding photos of Queen Farida with King Farouk (1938); Tahia Kazem-Boghdadi and Gamal Abdel Nasser (1944); Ikbal Madi (1940) and Jehane Raouf (1949) with Anwar al-Sadat;
Ikbal Madi never made it to first lady while Jehan did for 10 years
husbands wearing military atire
Aside from attending ladies-only state functions (royal weddings/receptions and opera premiers) Khedivas Amina Ilhami and Ikbal Hanim had no official public role. On the other hand their travels within Egypt by private train were increasingly reported in the dailies as were their departures to and from Egypt by private yacht. Moreover the former, nicknamed Um al-Mohsenin (mother of the givers) in view of her generosity, was directly involved with the creation of charitable foundations including the landmark Mohammed Ali Foundation in the early 1900s. A spin-off of this foundation was the Mohammed Ali Hospice or "Mubarra" as it was better known.
Every now and then an item would appear in the local papers about a princess of the ruling family donating money or land to public charity. Hence we read this item in the Egyptian Gazette dated 3 December 1909. "The Khedivah Mother has been pleased to place under her patronage the 'International Society of Alimentary Assitance to Native Patients'. Moreover her Highness has granted the Society a monthly subvention of LE 10."
The third sole-consort, Countess May, appeared in public functions disguised as a man and often played hostess to the Khedive's guests. She also visited Alexandria's hospitals during WW1 bringing solace to wounded soldiers. Countess May took a keen interest in the construction and design of certain royal palaces. More liberated than her Egyptian counterparts she received mixed company at her residence in Mostorod outside Cairo.
With the arrival of Sultana Melek, we read in the social pages that like her two predecessors she too attended performances at the opera albeit seated in a loge separated from the rest of the audience by a musharabeya.
Confined to the palace through most of King Fouad's reign, Queen Nazli was nonetheless allowed to attend opera performances, flower shows and other ladies-only cultural events. She also accompanied the King during part of his four-month tour of Europe in 1927 and was much feted in France in view of her French origins. With the introduction of parliament in 1924 the queen was among the royal attendees at parliament's opening ceremony seated in a special section of the guest gallery.
Queen Farida at photo exhibit with senate president Mohammed Mahmoud Khalil Bey to her left; Princess Nesishah at sports tournament with Regent and son
Four Egyptian First Ladies: Tahia Abdel Nasser accompanied by Fathia Rizk the Egyptian-born wife of Ghana's president Kwame Nkrumah; Jehan al-Sadat receiving honorary degree, Suzanne Mubarak addressing UN forum
King Farouk's second consort was similarly active despite the fact she was pregnant for the short time she was queen.
In view of the ambiguous situation as to who was in control of Egypt's destiny, the few official appearances by Princess Neslishah, in her capacity as consort of co-Prince-Regent Abdel Moneim, were strictly related to charity work. Like her immediate predecessors she was seen at sporting events including polo matches, the races and the international tennis tournament final. The Regency lasted ten months in all.
There are no records on hand evidencing public appearances of the first republican First Lady, Aicha M. Labib, the invisible wife of General Mohammed Naguib whom she married in August 1934. She died anonymously on 19 December 1970, fourteen years ahead of her unlucky husband.
rare appearances of Tahia Kazem: with Queen Frederika and King Paul of Greece (L); with Asian First Lady (1958)
Deciding to "reign" as First Lady, Jehan Raouf quickly broke off with the dutiful stay-at-home persona of her predecessor. She retained a full time press secretary, accepted numerous public engagements and gave willing interviews to the local and foreign media. Such was the overload that a mistake was made one day when one of her interviews inadvertently appeared in a cult magazine!
The arrival of bilingual Jehan al-Sadat on the local scene coincided with the coming of global television. Exploited by the Western media she was portrayed as the full partner of Anwar al-Sadat in his political, social and economic endeavors. "Anwar Sadat's only rival for popularity among Egyptians these days is a safe and sure ally: his wife Jehan Sadat," wrote Time magazine in 1974 under the title 'Egypt's Liberating First Lady'.
It was almost as if the American media had created the post of 'Egyptian First Lady'. Jehan became an overnight celebrity abroad and nothing appeared to have delighted the President more than to hear the international community sing her praise.
Aside from championing her husband's political views, Jehan al-Sadat took a pro-active stance regarding family planning and the emancipation of women in Egypt. To her credit Jehan spearheaded legislative bills (nicknamed Jehan's Laws by her detractors) for women's rights, which invariably set off controversies in a country swinging precariously between accelerated westernization and Islamic militancy.
During state visits abroad Jehan got her share of the limelight whether at the White House or Tehran's Gulustan palace. With the arrival of satellite television her biggest statement yet for women empowerment came during a short transit in Saudi Arabia. President Sadat and his consort descended from the presidential plane and proceeded to shake hands with a dumbfounded House of Saud welcome committee, a first in an ultra-conservative Wahabi kingdom where women are relegated to the dark ages. By that unprecedented act Jehan propelled herself onto center stage as far as Gulf women were concerned.
Notwithstanding her attempts at bettering the plight of women in Egypt and the Middle East, no good deed goes unpunished. Her conservative-minded enemies within the Arab World often described Jehan al-Sadat as a ruthless Marie Antoinette who was the real power behind the President. True or false, history will regard her as the most influential Egyptian First Lady in the 20th century.
First Lady Suzanne Mubarak took up where Jehan al-Sadat left off. At first she limited herself to charity work preferring not to attract the same kind of harsh criticism leveled at her predecessor. With time her timid appearances multiplied and soon enough the public re-accustomed itself to Egypt's First Lady becoming a daily staple in the printed and electronic media. Going the whole nine yards, Suzanne Mubarak is the first Egyptian First Lady during the republican era to directly address the nation via television.
Whereas Jehan Raouf confined her activities within Egypt, Suzanne Sabet, in addition to local activities, participated in international forums and UN sponsored conferences particularly those dealing with women and children. Later would come several well-intended initiatives such as Reading for All, a program meant to curtail widespread illiteracy while encouraging children to learn and produce; the National Council for Women; and Women for Peace, an international initiative that "seeks to enhance the active participation of women in the decision and peace making processes."
Suzanne Mubarak chairs regional conference at Sharm al-Sheik
WIDOWHOOD AND DIVORCE
As seen in the above table, Countess May, Sultana Melek, Queens Nazli and Nariman, and First Lady Jehan al-Sadat, were all second wives. The 'first' wife in each instance had already received her divorce papers and was free to remarry. This was the case with Princess Shuvekar who remarried four times and Queen Nazli who secretly concluded a morganatic marriage. Following her divorce from the deposed Farouk, Queen Nariman remarried twice. On the other hand, Ikbal Hanem, Queen Farida, Princess Neslishah and Sadat's divorcee Ikbal Madi never remarried.
After widowhood or divorce the above consorts' careers were extremely varied. If the divorced Countess May became a dilettante, an author and a self proclaimed artist traveling from one European capital to the other, the widowed Sultana Melek shuttled with her kalfas between Europe, Lebanon and Luxor. When in Cairo, the aging Sultana held an outdated a-la-Turca court in her zany Heliopolis palace opposite Villa Baron Empain.
The still attractive Queen Nazli made the best of her widowhood. After several salacious affairs in Egypt leading to a rift with her son, she moved to the United States where she was feted as a Hollywood-type queen. She died in California where she was buried a Catholic in 1978.
Following her divorce ex-Queen Farida became a reputed painter holding numerous exhibitions in Lebanon, Europe, the United States and much later, in Egypt where she settled in a small apartment on Road 14 in the suburb of Maadi. She died in 1988. On the other hand ex-Queen Nariman re-married, this time to a successful Alexandria doctor with whom she had a son. Divorced once more she remarried a retired officer in Heliopolis. She died from brain tumor complications in February 2005.
Princess Neslishah lives with her daughter in Istanbul, Turkey.
Widowed in 1970, former First Lady Tahia Abdel Nasser remained a conventional homemaker hardly heard from until her death in March 1990.
Former First Lady Jehan al-Sadat did the guest-speaker rounds in the United States accepting honors paid to her assassinated husband. Later on she received a teaching post in a prestigious East Coast university making her the first Egyptian consort to hold a regular job. A hit with America's TV breakfast shows she wrote an excellent book 'A Woman of Egypt' in which she walks the talk in a brilliantly engaging manner.
DYNASTIC LEGACY AND BITTER PILLS
heir apparent Gamal Mubarak born 27 December 1963
Except for Suzanne Sabet's son Gamal Hosni Mubarak, none of the other consorts' male progeny pursued political careers. Princess Ayn al-Hayat's only son from Sultan Hussein Kamel abdicated his rights to the throne preferring instead to become a Sufi mystic. Queen Nariman's son Ahmed-Fouad dabbed briefly in sinecures before succumbing to an emotional trauma. He now leads a retired life in Switzerland. Princess Neslishah's hopes to see her son make it to the throne of Egypt as Abbas Hilmi III were highjacked by an ambitious colonel just as it had been for her father, the Ottoman Crown Prince who saw his chances of ruling a former Empire blocked by a decisive Turkish general. Tahia Kazem-Boghdadi's three sons reportedly went the route of fat commissions and mega contracts, occasionally bailed out by their father's Libyan leader-for-life disciple. Jehan Raouf's only son Gamal al-Sadat is a part time businessman part time sinecurist.
NOTES:
- From among the wives of Egyptian heads of state between 1879 and 2005 one remains curiously anonymous. Besides being a housewife and the mother of General Mohamed Naguib's children, Aicha Mohamed Labib made no public appearances during her husband's short administration. She is therefore not mentioned in this brief study.
- During its long history Egypt has had several iconoclast consorts and several ruling God-Queens. If Nefertiti is best remembered from the first category, of the second, Queens Hatchepsut, Cleopatra and Shagaret al-Durr are excellent examples.
- Women of Egypt from different ethnic and religious backgrounds who became first ladies abroad: Princess Fawzia (King Farouk's sister) became Empress of Persia; in turn Malak Faizi and Faiza al-Tarabolsi married Abd al-Illah Ali Ibn al-Hussein Regent of Iraq; Dina Abdelhamid Oan was Queen of Jordan when she married Hussein Ibn Talal; Fathia Halim Rizk (died May 2007) an Egyptian Copt married President Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana on 31 December 1957. Aura Simha Ambache an Egyptian-born Jew became first lady of Israel as the wife of Haiim Herzog; Lili Solomon Cicurel married the head of the French government Pierre Mendes-France; Alila Lamloum, second wife of King Idris of Libya from 1955 to 1957.
Co-Queen of Libya for two years (1955-57), Alia Lamloum a daughter and granddaughter of distinguished Egyptian Bedouin notables of Libyan origin (al-Ahram 2 September 2010)
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Countess May's Ottoman passport; below: wedding certificate evidencing her Moslem name Djavidan Hanem
Ancestral trees of Queens Farida and Nariman (from Mussawar and Image magazines)
tombstone of Egypt's last Walda Pasha and first First Lady Amina Ilhami at the Khedivial Cemetery at Afifi, Cairo
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Subject: Egypt's Iranians |
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