The thing about the past is that it never comes back and yet never really leaves. Shamshad Begum for instance is not just a Wikipedia note with a birthday and a death day. She is a memory for those of us who grew up with her songs. Though for all purposes, the woman who sang those songs was as invisible to us as Mubarak Begum who continues to struggle with anonymity and neglect (read more about her here…http://unboxedwriters.com/2012/09/searching-for-mubarak-begum/). As do many mascots of a certain era.Mascots we remember only when someone passes away and it is time to pen a hurried tribute. Sometimes so hurried that we mix names and people as happened with her when in 2004, several publications reported Shamshad Begum’s death, before it was established that the Begum in question was in fact Saira Banu’s grandmother and had died in 1998 !
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In Shamshad Begum’s is embedded the cultural memory of an epoch. Times of unhurried grace. She always evoked a sweetness combined with elegant sound for me. I didn’t know she was Saira Bano’s grandmother, thanks for this info and acknowledging the quiet courage of this iconic singer
Thanks niilofur, but she was’nt Saira Bano’s grandmother, It was falsely believed that that she was and had died in 1994!