This Article is From Oct 04, 2019

Indian-Origin Journalist Who Started Miss India South Africa Pageant Dies

A journalist for six decades, Farook Khan died on Thursday after he was in the hospital for the last three weeks.

Indian-Origin Journalist Who Started Miss India South Africa Pageant Dies

Several journalists across the world attended the funeral of Farook Khan on Friday.

Johannesburg:

Farook Khan, a prominent Indian-origin journalist in South Africa and cultural activist who received fame for his investigative reporting during apartheid, has died in his hometown Durban after battling cancer. He was 77.

A journalist for six decades, Farook Khan died on Thursday after he was in the hospital for the last three weeks.

The last rites of Farook Khan were performed on Friday.

Farook Khan, whose ancestors were from Maharashtra, achieved fame for his investigative reports in various media that he worked for, often facing the wrath of the apartheid-era government and death threats from the underworld that he exposed.

Farook Khan also started the Miss India South Africa Pageant as part of the Miss India Worldwide Pageant, which has seen hundreds of young women from the diaspora find new avenues for their careers.

In South Africa, after initial scepticism in a conservative community, Farook Khan guided hundreds of girls and women to participate in this pageant and several other cultural events that he started.

"He was my oldest and most trustworthy associate of Miss India Worldwide, from among all the countries that now participate in our events," Dharmatma Saran, founder of the organisation, said.

"Farook bhai was associated with us for 29 years and had become part of our family, hosting the international Miss India Worldwide four times in South Africa and offered to host again in 2021 to celebrate its 30th anniversary," Mr Saran added.

Farook Khan along with his younger brother Aman Khan toured across South Africa with prominent boxer Mohammed Ali during the days of apartheid.

"Then it has to be the pride in seeing all these young South African women, many of them too shy to appear on a public platform, gaining the confidence to become leaders in the community," Farook Khan had said.

"Some of them are now in top positions across the world as medical and legal professionals, engineers, town planners, professors at universities and even pilots," he said.

Hundreds of journalists, who were mentored by Farook Khan, paid tributes and scores of them attended the funeral as well.

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