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  1. Rattanbai Jinnah (née Petit; 20 February 1900 – 20 February 1929), also known as Ruttie Petit, was the wife of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, an important figure in the creation of Pakistan and the country's founder.

  2. Rattanbai Petit and Mohammad Ali Jinnah: An Interfaith Marriage That Went Down in History - The Wire. TOPICS. Politics. Economy. World. Security. Law. Science. Society. Culture. VOICES....

  3. Rattanbai Jinnah (1900–1929) She belonged to the Petit family and was the granddaughter of industrialist Dinshaw Maneckji Petit. She was disowned by her family upon converting to Islam and marrying Jinnah, however it was only after the birth of her daughter, Dina, that she reconciled with her family.

  4. Dec 7, 2012 · Answer, Rattanbai Petit died on February 15th 1929. Not after the creation of Pakistan. If Jinnah wanted, he had ample time to get married after that but he did not and concentrated in freeing...

  5. Ruttenbai “Ruttie” Petit (“The Flower of Bombay”) after marriage Maryam Jinnah, “Ruttie” as she was affectionately called was Jinnah second wife. She was born to a Rich Parsi family on 20th Feb, 1900.

  6. Jul 3, 2021 · When Jinnah asked Petit for Ruttie’s hand in marriage, the former filed a writ restraining him from meeting his daughter. This did not stop the couple from seeing each other.

  7. Aug 24, 2018 · That was when Jinnah, at forty-two, married Rattanbai (Ruttie) Petit, an eighteen-year-old Parsi woman from Bombay.

  8. Dec 25, 2023 · Eighteen-year-old Rattanbai, a Parsi woman, married Jinnah in early 1918 against her father’s wishes. Jinnah, 42, was far from an ideal suitor — he was not only her father’s age but also from a different religion. “Sir Dinshaw Petit (Rattanbai’s father) had understandably been furious when his friend Jinnah proposed to his daughter.

  9. Mar 1, 2017 · The inside story of Mohammad Ali Jinnah’s courtship with the 16-year-old Rattanbai “Ruttie” Petit has taken as long as the history of independent India and Pakistan to resurface in the public sphere, with a new book by Sheela Reddy, the former books editor of Outlook magazine.

  10. About this time, he fell in love with a Parsee girl, Rattanbai (Ruttie) Petit, known as 'the flower of Bombay'. Sir Dinshaw Petit, her father and a successful businessman, was furious, since...