Mai Bakhtawar

Mai Bakhtawar Lashari Baloch (Sindhi: مائي بختاور لاشاري; Urdu: مائی بخت آور لاشاری بلوچ, 1880 - 22 June 1947) was a peasant from the village Dodo Khan Sargani, near Roshanabad in Umerkot, Tando Bago Tehsil, Badin District in Sindh.[2] To address the widespread and deeply rooted poverty caused by the stark divide in land ownership, the Sindh Government commissioned the Hari Committee of Enquiry in March 1947 to review tenancy rights and explore agrarian reform in the province.On 22 June 1949, while most of Mai Bakhtawar's village men and many women attended a nearby Hari conference in Jhudo, the landlord, Choudhry Saeedullah, attempted to exploit their absence.[citation needed] The struggle of the Hari movement captured the public's imagination, particularly after the death of Mai Bakhtawar, who bravely fought against the powerful landed elite for her rights as a sharecropper.[e] The murder, occurring amidst the broader movement, drew significant attention to the plight of Sindh's peasants, particularly from urban areas like Karachi, raising awareness of the injustices faced by rural communities.
Information board about Mai Bakhtawar's life at the airport near Islamkot
Tando BagoBadin DistrictBritish IndiaPakistanPeasantSindhiRoshanabad in UmerkotTando Bago TehsilBritish rulepovertypatriarchal societylandlordsoppressionairportIslamkotZamindarsSindh Hari CommitteeMirpurkhasWorld War IIHyder Bux JatoiSufi Shah InayatSamaroKarachiMai Bakhtawar International AirportShaheed BenazirabadGovernment of SindhKunri TalukaBalochistanIndian statesEast PunjabiMuhammad Zafarullah KhanGovernorThe News InternationalThe Friday Times