Madhu (right) with her mother Sultana Begum

The descendant of the emperor currently ekes out a living by running a
tea stall with her mother

By Subir Bhaumik
BBC News, Calcutta

A descendant of India's last Mughal emperor has been rescued from a
life of penury in Calcutta by getting a job with the state-run Coal
India.

Madhu is the illiterate great-great-granddaughter of emperor Bahadur
Shah Zafar and has been employed to run errands in Coal India's
offices.

A letter of employment will be formally handed over to her by the coal
minister at a function in Calcutta next month.

She and her mother currently run a tea stall in the slums of Calcutta.

Rehabilitation

"It will be great to have Madhu working for us. Actually, it will be a
great tribute to the last Mughal emperor who played a key role during
the first war
of independence in 1857," Coal India Chairman Partha Bhattacharyya said.

Bahadur Shah Zafar

Bahadur Shah Zafar was the last of a long line of Mughal emperors

The move by Coal India follows sustained efforts by a Delhi-based
journalist Shivnath Jha, who launched a campaign to rescue her from
poverty.

Madhu's cause was one of several highlighted by Mr Jha and his wife
Neena in an initiative to rehabilitate descendants of the forgotten
heroes of India's
independence wars.

Mr Jha told the BBC that he first hit upon this idea when he tried to
raise funds for one of India's greatest classical musicians, Bismillah
Khan, earlier
in the decade.

"We published a pictorial biography of Bismillah Khan and raised some
funds. After his death, we institutionalised this movement," Mr Jha
said.

Last year, he persuaded India's former Railway Minister Laloo Prasad
Yadav to help the descendants of Tantia Tope, one of the leaders of
the 1857 mutiny
which many Indians say was in fact the country's first war of independence.

'Barely survive'

"Two of his great granddaughters were given employment by the
Container Corporation of India on Mr Yadav's intervention," Mr Jha
said.

Bus in Calcutta

The pair live in poverty in one of the most crowded cities in the world

In 2009 Mr Jha began promoting the cause of Sultana Begum, the
poverty-stricken widow of Muhammad Bedar Bakht - a direct descendant
of Bahadur Shah Zafar
- who died in 1980.

Ms Begum has five daughters - all are married except for Madhu, her
youngest daughter.

"My other daughters and their husbands are poor people, they barely
survive, so they cannot help us," she said. "We have been living, but
God knows how."


The tea shop run by Sultana and her daughter earns the pair a
subsistence income.

Mr Jha said that he hoped to provide the pair with more funds by
donating money raised from the sale of a book about Indian prime
ministers.

Another industrialist-philanthropist, Madhusudan Aggrawal, owner of
Ajanta Pharmaceuticals has also offered help.

"Mr Aggrawal has promised a house for Sultana and a small job for her
in a school run by his company," Mr Jha said.

If all works out, Sultana Begum and her daughter can surely look
forward to moving out of the slums of Howrah, a decrepit industrial
area.

Bahadur Shah Zafar was placed on the throne in 1837. He was the last
of a line of Mughal emperors who ruled India for three centuries.

In 1857, when Indian soldiers mutinied against their British masters,
Bahadur Shah Zafar was declared their commander-in-chief.

Mr Zafar was exiled to Rangoon after the British crushed the mutiny in
1858, where he lived for five years until his death at at the age of
87.
regards
raghu.



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