[2] In 1897, she became the second wife of Sayyid Mumtaz Ali Deobandi, an Islamic scholar and an alumnus of Darul Uloom Deoband.
[3][4] She learned Arabic and Persian from her new husband and was privately educated in English, Hindi and mathematics.
[6] The magazine published radical ideas about divorce with enforced alimony and to end purdah and polygamy as it existed.
[4] Her grandson Naeem Tahir compiled a biography Sayyidah Muhammadi Begum awr Unka Khandan (transl.
[10] Her daughter, Waheeda Begum, became the editor of her magazine after she died and after a few years Imtiaz Ali Taj took over.