My friend, my sister, my mentor, my
leader, I was fortunate to be associated with her, leading a
university named after her father, of which she was the chancellor.
Having the privilege of travelling with her around the world, I wish
to share her unique leadership qualities.
What is the difference between a politician and a leader? A
politician asks for sacrifices, a leader gives one. She gave the
ultimate sacrifice for her nation. One does not need power to be a
leader. A leader needs followers, and she had plenty of them, even
when out of power. How many prime ministers, presidents and generals
can claim that? Power does not make leaders. History and followers
do.
Determined to succeed and deliver the agenda of moderation and
reform, she had the drive to put Pakistan onto the right track. Far
bolder than any male leader, she told the Afghan president hours
before her tragic assassination on December 27 that "life and death
is in the hands of Allah, and that is why I have the courage to
stare in the eyes of death without any fear."
Her star power and striking beauty made her more charismatic than
Princess Diana and John Kennedy combined. Her sophistication and
diplomacy established a large network of friends and admirers around
the world. At the World Political Forum in Italy in 2003, when she
walked into the conference hall, almost forty world leaders stood up
and applauded her. She would stop a conversation or an activity just
by walking into a room. She lectured regularly at universities
globally where she would dazzle a large audience.
Intelligent, wise, well-educated and well-read, her favourite
shopping at airports were bestsellers, autobiographies, history and
leadership books. Within minutes she would devour every newspaper on
a flight. Her photogenic memory would remember every meeting and
everyone by name. She was a genius and a decision maker. While
others would fumble for weeks strategizing party policies, she would
analyze the situation within seconds and come up with a creative
solution and new directives. When reflecting over disagreements,
time would tell she was always right. Her other interests in life
included feng shui, astrology, health and nutrition. A talking
computer and walking encyclopaedia, she had multi-tasking abilities.
Very well-organized, disciplined, and punctual, she could bring any
management guru to shame. She spent countless hours on the PC and
the blackberry. Working with her on the election manifesto, each
document was ripped apart with ink. The final manifesto is a full
credit to her creative abilities, spelling out the five Es:
employment, education, energy, environment and equality.
Empathetic, compassionate, generous and kind, she supported hundreds
of desperate individuals and families around the country, people
unknown or heard of, except through an email received. Once she
received an email from a critical patient with six unmarried
daughters, requesting a major hospital expense. With tears in her
eyes, she opened her purse and asked to see the money reached its
destination. I have witnessed tears in her eyes when talking of the
assassination of her father and two brothers, and of the plight of
the poor.
Hospitable and caring, she would remember her friends, relatives and
admirers wherever she was and send them gifts regularly. I recall
once in Germany, our attendant driver was stunned to receive the
same gift from her which she had asked him to help choose for
someone else.
A strong believer of reconciliation, she would forgive and forget.
Many have accused her wrongly of adopting this policy of forgiving
her father's killers, and recently of reconciling with the existing
setup, but for democracy she believed in healing hearts and forging
unity. She was not vengeful. One can now see this reflection in
Bilawal when in his first public address to the media after his
mother's assassination he stated that "democracy is the best
revenge".
When at home, she would exclusively dedicate her time to her
children--discussing their interests in life as well as relating her
own experiences. She would spend weekends with her family as well
and take care of her ailing mother. Spiritual and pious, she offered
prayers, did walks, practised yoga, went shopping and had a craving
for chocolate and ice cream.
She was a jewel in the crown, a royalty who ruled hearts. This
country will never be the same without her, at least for this
generation. Bibi is gone but her legacy will continue.