Pakistan’s legendary author finds eternal peace in homeland

By Minahil Makhdoom

ISLAMABAD: During life, wherever a human travels across the globe but it is difficult for him/her to forget homeland where he/she spent early days of life because everything in their homeland keep their love in their hearts. This unique love even never ends after death and a few of them wanted to be buried in the soil where they walked in their childhood.
Renowned scholar, author and economist at the international level, Professor Dr. Kiren Aziz Chaudhry was one of them who wrote her will in the United States expressing a wish to be buried in her paternal village in Shakargarh, district Narowal, the village of his father Chaudhry Anwar Aziz, former minister and famous intellectual politician of Pakistan. Professor Kiren died of a heart attack on June 25, 2020, at her house in the Berkeley Hills and her body was shifted to Pakistan after removing plenty of hurdles amid COVID-19 pandemic only to fulfill her lifetime wish to be hurried in her hometown. She was laid to rest in her hometown village on
Tuesday with sorrows and tears after the funeral prayer was led by Pir of Ali Pur Shareef Syed Zafar Iqbal Shah. Thousands of people attended the funeral.
Professor Kiren was the sister of PML-N leader Daniyal Chaudhry and cousin of Member of the National Assembly Mehnaz Akbar Aziz.
Kiren Aziz had a unique impressive personality with a great love for her motherland Pakistan, its culture and its local languages despite living in the United States for decades. She had completed her PhD from Harvard and had been teaching in different
renowned universities and institutes.
Professor Kiren came a very long way from Pakistan where she born on March 17, 1959, to achieve academic excellence in the United States. Her journey culminated at the University of California, Berkeley, where she was an Associate Professor of Political
Science. There was no school in her village in her childhood and he had to travel to a nearby village school where she started her learning at the age 5 while sitting on jute runners under the trees, writing on a wooden slate with a reed pen and ink made from lamp black. She went to and from school on horseback because there was no direct road to the school.
After the family moved to Lahore, she attended Cathedral School and later at Essena, a private girls’ school. She finished her Pakistan education graduating from Lahore American High School in just three years. Her college career began at the University of Massachusetts, transferring to the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, where she received her B.A summa cum laude and high distinction in Political Science and English Literature in May 1980. She received the Senior Honors Thesis Award for best Senior Honors Thesis at University of Michigan.
At Harvard University where she did her graduate work, among several other awards she received a Fulbright-Hays Doctoral Dissertation Research Grant. In 1988-90 she was a Kukin Fellow, Harvard Academy for International and Area Studies. Shortly after receiving her Ph.D. from Harvard University she joined the faculty at the University of California, Berkeley where she
received several awards and fellowships, including a Prytanean Alumnae Faculty Award, two Mellon Grants, she was awarded an SSRC-MacArthur Foundation Peace and Security Fellowship in 1996-98, and in 2001-03, a second MacArthur Peace and Security Fellowship.
Articles and papers too numerous to mention were published in prestigious Political Science and Political Economy periodicals, all of which can be found online. But the writing achievement she prized most was her a book titled “The Price of Wealth: Economies and Institutions in the Middle East”, for which she was co-recipient of the Albert Hourani Prize, awarded by the Middle East Association of America for best book on the Middle East in 1998.
Shortly before her death her second book, Trauma and Memory in Istanbul, reached final edit stage and one of her colleagues has offered to see it through to publication by the Cornell University Press. Later in the summer of 2001, she taught at the Bogazici Universitisi Department of Political Science in Istanbul, Turkey. Her Berkeley “Post Fordism” class, which she started teaching in 2005, was her favorite. She also taught at LUMS (Lahore University of Management Sciences) in Lahore for few years where she impressed students and other faculty members with her wonderful English and knowledge about the world before she gave a shock to
them one day by speaking in Punjabi fluently and in a pure local accent that she got from her father Chaudhary Anwar Aziz. She had been advising Pakistani students to not to shun their mother languages otherwise they would lose their roots.
She was also a fluent speaker of the Arabic language and had served as a consultant to the U.S. government in economic affairs.