Last Updated : Sep 25, 2020 08:00 AM IST | Source: PTI

'Would have been happier if demand was met', says 'Dadi of Shaheen Bagh' Bilkis after being featured on TIME's list

Bilkis, along with her two friends Asma Khatoon and Sarwari, was at Shaheen Bagh every day, braving a chilly winter in December 2019, the coldest in over a century.

PTI
Bilkis, the 'dadi from Shaheen Bhagh' | “With prayer beads in one hand and the national flag in the other, Bilkis became the voice of the marginalized in India, an 82-year-old who would sit at a protest site from 8 a.m. to midnight,” writes journalist Rana Ayyub. (Image: TIME magazine)
Bilkis, the 'dadi from Shaheen Bhagh' | “With prayer beads in one hand and the national flag in the other, Bilkis became the voice of the marginalized in India, an 82-year-old who would sit at a protest site from 8 a.m. to midnight,” writes journalist Rana Ayyub. (Image: TIME magazine)

Bilkis, who became the face of a women-led anti-citizenship law protest at Shaheen Bagh in New Delhi, on September 24 said she was happy to have been recognised by the TIME magazine as one of the 100 most influential people of 2020, but would have been happier had her demand been met.

The 82-year-old, along with her two friends Asma Khatoon (90) and Sarwari (75), was at the protest site every day, braving a chilly winter in December 2019, the coldest in over a century. The trio was hailed as "Dadis of Shaheen Bagh" on social media.

"When we told her that she has been declared as one of the most influential people in the world, she just said 'okay'," her son Manzoor Ahmad told PTI on the phone.

She is not as excited as the family is, Ahmad, who works as a translator, said.

related news

"I am thankful to the almighty. I would have been much happier had our demand been fulfilled...had the government listened to us and given us what we wanted (withdrawal of the Citizenship Amendment Act)," Bilkis said in a trembling voice.

"It is sad we had to call it (protest) off because of the disease (COVID-19). I was there till the end,” she said.

Ahmad said his mother had taken ill in December last year, but she continued going to the protest site.

“It was so cold and she was running a fever, despite that she went there to support other women,” he said.

Ahmad said all women in his family participated in the protest.

“We are a joint family. So, the women took turns to participate in the dharna,” he said.

The Shaheen Bagh protest demanding the government to withdraw the law went on for over a hundred days. It ended in March this year in view of the COVID-19 outbreak and a subsequent lockdown announced by the government to contain the spread of the disease.

Also on the TIME magazine's list from India are Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Bollywood actor Ayushmann Khurrana.
First Published on Sep 25, 2020 07:58 am