Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
International

Gujarat-Born 1970s Activist On BBC’s Power Women List

IANS, 15 Dec, 2016 01:00 PM
    A Gujarat-born activist who led a campaign against low pay for women workers at a UK factory in the 1970s has made it the BBC’s most influential women of the past 70 years list released on Wednesday.
     
    Jayaben Desai, known as the sari-clad leader of a two-year industrial action against the Grunwick Film Processing Laboratories in north London in 1976, was named among seven women chosen to mark the 70th anniversary of BBC Radio 4’s ‘Woman’s Hour’.
     
    “Jayaben was this tiny 4ft 8in woman in a sari who had dockers and postal workers from across the land coming to support her on the picket line,” said Ayesha Hazarika, an Indian-origin senior Labour party adviser who was part of the panel that picked the one-off Power List.
     
    “She made trade unions realise solidarity was not just for white working-class men, but spanned right across immigrants and women as well. So it was great to be able to shine a bit of light on her and her story,” she added.
     
    The repercussions of the strike are considered far reaching for British industrial relations.
     
    The list, which is topped by Margaret Thatcher — Britain’s first female Prime Minister, also includes Barbara Castle, Labour MP for Blackburn who brought in the Equal Pay Act in 1970.
     
    More controversial is the inclusion of a fictional woman on the list of seven – Bridget Jones from Helen Fielding’s ‘Bridget Jones’s Diary’ series on the travails of a British singleton, played on screen by Hollywood actress Rene Zellweger.
     
    Fielding said it was a “tremendous honour for Bridget and, of course, for me”.
     
    She said: “I hope it doesn’t mean everyone’s going to binge drink and eat Milk Tray late at night.
     
    “I also hope there was something rather more profound going on, there’s something in Bridget’s nature which is very British which is ultimately quite decent, quite kind, quite resilient, not judgemental.”
     
    The others completing the list of seven, in no particular order, include Germaine Greer, an Australian writer recognised as one of the major voices of the feminist movement; Beyonce, American singer and songwriter; and Helen Brook, who set up the Brook Advisory Centres in 1964 offering contraceptive advice to unmarried women.
     
    In deciding on the final seven names, BBC said the judges considered a woman’s body of work or her role as a catalyst for change over the past 70 years, as well as those having an impact today.
     
    The names were unveiled as part of a special ‘Woman’s Hour’ show aired on Wednesday morning and recorded at Buckingham Palace.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Some British Indian Men Consider Their Wives As 'Disposable Women': Report

    Some British Indian men are among a broader South Asian group in the UK who are guilty of mistreating and abandoning their wives in their countries of origin, a new report by a UK University has found.

    Some British Indian Men Consider Their Wives As 'Disposable Women': Report

    2 Indians Charged With Visa Fraud In New Jersey

    2 Indians Charged With Visa Fraud In New Jersey
      Harpreet Sachdeva, 26, and Sanjeev Sukhija, 35, currently on a foreign worker visas and living in New Jersey have been charged with one count of conspiracy to commit visa fraud.

    2 Indians Charged With Visa Fraud In New Jersey

    Will China Again Block Masood Azhar's Terror Listing? It Has Days To Decide

    Will China Again Block Masood Azhar's Terror Listing? It Has Days To Decide
    In March this year, China - a permanent member of the UN Security Council - had blocked an application moved by India and co-sponsored by United States, United Kingdom and France to place sanctions on the JeM chief.

    Will China Again Block Masood Azhar's Terror Listing? It Has Days To Decide

    India to boycott Saarc Summit in Islamabad, Pakistan says 'unfortunate'

    India to boycott Saarc Summit in Islamabad, Pakistan says 'unfortunate'
    India on Tuesday announced it will not attend the Saarc Summit in Islamabad in November, saying that regional cooperation and terror don't go together.

    India to boycott Saarc Summit in Islamabad, Pakistan says 'unfortunate'

    Pakistan approaches ICJ over Indus Waters Treaty

    Pakistan approaches ICJ over Indus Waters Treaty
    Pakistan on Tuesday approached the International Court of Justice over implementation of the Indus Waters Treaty, with senior Pakistani officials taking up the matter with the World Bank.

    Pakistan approaches ICJ over Indus Waters Treaty

    Uri Attack Was 'Self-generated' By India: Pakistan Defence Minister

    Uri Attack Was 'Self-generated' By India: Pakistan Defence Minister
    Earlier, Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had stated that Indian’s assertion that Islamabad was behind the Uri attack, was New Delhi’s "long-time habit".

    Uri Attack Was 'Self-generated' By India: Pakistan Defence Minister