Wansa
{{Short description|Yazidi princess}}
File:Mira Wansa and Meyan Khatun.png around 1935]]
Mira Khatun Wansa,Journal of Royal Central Asian Society., 1941 Wansa Ismail el-AmawyJohn S. Guest, The Yezidis: a study in survival, pg. 8 or simply Wansa (1917 — June 25, 2015) was a Yazidi princess. In 1934–1938 she was the wife of Mir Sa'id Beg. Wansa was born in Tikrit and was a daughter of Ismail Beg. Her brothers were Mua'wia, Abd el-Karim and Yezid Khan.
Biography
In 1929, she entered American School for Girls in Beirut. In 1934, she became the fifth wife of Sa'id Beg, son of Ali Beg and Meyan Khatun in the Stone Palace in Ba'adra.John S. Guest, The Yezidis: a study in survival, pg. 175 Wansa gave birth to a daughter Leyla who died after one year.E. S. Drower, [http://www.avesta.org/yezidi/peacock.htm Peacock Angel] In 1938, Said Beg attended a meeting where Wansa's brother Yezid Khan was accused of conspiracy and marked for death. When Said Beg informed Wansa, she pulled out a revolver from beneath her pillow and said "He will hear that you have died first!".John S. Guest, The Yezidis: a study in survival, pg. 183 She fired multiple times, wounding her husband. In the confusion Wansa's Armenian chauffeur Hagop assisted her to escape to Mosul and then to Baghdad, where a hiding place was found for her by Hagop's family, whom Wansa's father Ismail had rescued years before. She then moved to Aleppo.John S. Guest, The Yezidis: a study in survival, pg. 184
When The Second World War started, Rashid Ali al-Gaylani, who was a friend of Ismail, allowed Wansa to return to Baghdad and live under official protection. In 1947, Wansa converted to Islam and married a Syrian doctor. Wansa died in Cairo on 21 June 2015 in Cairo, Egypt.[https://elwafeyat.com/mushatra/18696 El-Wafeyat condolesses book]