Articles features
A bakery worker's daughter gets her wings
By
Mohammed Shafeeq
Unlike girls of her age who dream of becoming doctors
or engineers, she wanted to be something different. Many laughed at her
dream, but today she is one among the few Muslim women in India to hold a
commercial pilot's licence.
Coming from a modest background -
her father is a bakery worker - Syeda Salva Fatima, with her sheer
determination and hard work, entered the male-dominated field and became
the first female from the poverty stricken old-city of Hyderabad to get
the licence.
Having crossed the first step she is now preparing for the second - certification on a mid-sized passenger jet.
A
resident of Sultan Shahi, a densely populated neighbourhood in the
backward old city, Salva dreamt of flying aircraft since her school
days.
"When I was in the ninth standard I used to collect
articles about the aviation industry and pictures of different aircraft.
Like almost all the girls, my friends wanted to be either doctors or
engineers, but I wanted to do something different," 26-year-old Salva
told IANS.
"I used to share my thoughts with my classmates and
they always used to ask me whether this is really possible. But in the
end, the dream came true thanks to Almighty Allah," said the burqa-clad
woman, who studied at the Aizza School in Malakpet here.
Eldest
among four children of Syed Ashfaq Ahmed, she had no clue either as to
how her dream would come true in view of the meagre earnings of her
father.
As her parents insisted that she opt for engineering, she
enrolled for coaching conducted by Urdu daily 'Siasat' for EAMCET, a
common entrance test for engineering and medical courses.
It was
'Siasat' editor Zahid Ali Khan who gave wings to her dreams. On learning
about her ambition, he offered to bear the entire expenditure for her
training.
It took a year for Salva to gather all information and
prepare herself to take the final plunge. In 2007, she enrolled in the
Andhra Pradesh Aviation Academy.
"It was my first air experience
and I was thrilled," recalled Salva, who had an adventurous nature from
her school days and was a keen participant in extra-curricular
activities and games.
Salva was also aware of the ups and downs
in her path. "People used to ask me: 'You are a girl, what will you do
by becoming a pilot? After your marriage, you will have to
be a housewife.' I never cared about these comments and taunts because my family supported me," she said.
Five
years later, she successfully completed her initial training, logging
200 hours of flying on aircraft like the Cessna 152 and 172, including
123 hours of
solo flight.
She obtained a Private Pilot Licence and Flight Radio Telephone Operator Licence, besides a Commercial Pilot Licence (CPL).
The
training was tough, especially the written exams, and she slowly but
steadily completed it. "I never came across any discrimination against
women or Muslims. Everybody was cooperative."
After obtaining her CPL in 2013, she found that this was not enough to get a pilot's job in an airline.
She
has to now undergo multiengine training and Type Rating to be able to
fly bigger aircraft like the Boeing 737 and the Airbus A-320. This
requires Rs.30 to Rs.32 lakh.
Refusing to give up, she is making all efforts to and standing by her is her husband Shakeeb, whom she married in 2013.
She
is now looking for support from the government and philanthropists to
reach her final destination. She is keen to take up a job in Spicejet or
Indigo.
Zahid Ali Khan, who along with his friends spent Rs.18
lakh for Salva's pilot training, is making all efforts to help her reach
her destination. He has written to Civil Aviation Minister Ashok
Gajapati Raju and Telangana Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao, seeking
their support.
"What is important is that a girl has achieved
this. It doesn't matter whether she is a Muslim, a Hindu or a Sikh,"
Khan told IANS.
Khan, whose newspaper is active for various
social and educational causes, believes women have an equal role with
men in this century.
"Muslim women can and should participate in
every field within the limitations prescribed by Islam. Salva can wear a
scarf without any problem and there is also nothing objectionable in
the dress which she has to wear as a pilot," he said.
(Mohammed Shafeeq can be contacted at [email protected] )














