Balvinder Saund
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Councillor
Balvinder Saund | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1952 (age 72–73) |
| Citizenship | United Kingdom |
| Alma mater | University of East London |
| Occupations | Human rights activist Councillor |
| Years active | 2001–present |
| Organization | Sikh Women's Alliance |
| Title | Member of Redbridge London Borough Council for Seven Kings |
| Term | 2006–2013 |
| Political party | Labour (until 2012) |
| Other political affiliations | Redbridge Independent Group (2012–2013) |
| Awards | BBC 100 Women (2014) |
Balvinder Kaur Saund (born c. 1952) is a British human rights activist and former politician. She has been the chair of the Sikh Women's Alliance since 2001, and has publicly called and campaigned for the rights of Sikh women in the United Kingdom. In 2014, she was named by the BBC as one of that year's 100 Women.
Saund is a community activist in Ilford, a town in East London.[1] Born into a Punjabi family, she is a member of the Gurdwara Singh Sabha London East.[2]
In 2001, the Sikh Women's Alliance was founded in Ilford by a group of Sikh men, though shortly afterwards, its leadership was transferred to Saund and four other women, with Saund serving as the organisation's chair.[3][4] Through the SWA, Saund has campaigned for greater awareness of issues including domestic abuse, honour-based violence and female infanticide within the Sikh community. She has called for a return to the gender equality espoused by Guru Nanak, the founder of Sikhism, and has said that the role and status of women in the religion has been negatively impacted by misogyny.[3] Saund has cited evidence of this in the preference within Sikh families for sons over daughters, such as through holding paaths for the births of boys but not for girls, and asking granthis to pray for sons and grandsons, and not for daughters and granddaughters.[5] Saund has called for more significant leadership roles for Sikh women beyond traditionally running langars, community kitchens in gurdwaras.[3]
Saund has stated that honour-based violence is linked to men wanting "control and subservience" from women, and has described it as "old ways of thinking [that] should be left behind".[6] Following the emergence of the #MeToo movement, Saund called for more safeguarding measures to be put in place for girls and women in gurdwaras.[3]