Mejindarpal Kaur

Description

Mejindarpal Kaur is a well known name in Sikh human rights circles. She was a Senior Crown Prosecutor in the U.K before she started her full time Panthic seva in 2002 as pro bono International Legal Director of UNITED SIKHS, a UN affiliated international humanitarian, human development, and advocacy NGO. She obtained her BSc Hons (Biochemistry) from the University of Malaya and her LLB and LLM (Hons.) from the University of London. She was called to the Bar of England and Wales in 1989 and also to the Malaysian Bar in 1997. Mejindarpal started her efforts to address human rights violations of the Sikh community post 9/11. Since then she has been fighting against discrimination and for religious freedom. For example, she led UNITED SIKHS’ advocacy campaign against the French Government that had passed a law in 2004, which prohibited religious signs in state schools, and also against the subsequent ban on the wearing of a turban for ID photographs. The campaign started with a global petition against the ban that was presented to French Ambassadors all over the world. Mejindarpal also represented UNITED SIKHS in talks with the French External Affairs Ministry and the Education Ministry.
The UNITED SIKHS legal team led by Mejindarpal then filed cases against France for violation of religious freedom under the European Convention of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. These cases were filed on behalf of Sikhs through the French courts, European Court of Human Rights and then the UN Human Rights Committee (UNHRC), where they finally won their cases. The UNHRC found that France had violated the human rights of Bikramjit Singh who was expelled from school for refusing to remove his turban. The UNHRC also found that France had violated the rights of Shingara Singh and Ranjit Singh by requiring them to remove their turbans for their ID photographs. Similarly, in Belgium, Mejindarpal led a legal campaign by UNITED SIKHS against the ban of the Sikh turban in the GO schools. This legal campaign was successful when the Belgian Supreme Court held that the GO school that had banned the Sikh turban had violated the religious rights of Sikh boys. To date, Mejindarpal has responded to civil and human rights issues in many parts of the world including the UK, France, Belgium, Portugal, Italy, Australia, Ireland, Sweden, Romania, Switzerland, Kashmir, India, Canada, USA, Pakistan, Afghanistan, China and Singapore. Mejindarpal’s reputation for standing up for civil and human rights is not limited to actions against national laws and institutions. She has also campaigned for women’s rights within the Sikh community. In 2003, she ran a campaign for women’s right to do seva at Sri Darbar Sahib, Amritsar (the Golden Temple). A global online petition was started, talks were given on television and radio and at seminars in Amritsar, Chandigarh, Delhi and Maryland, USA, to raise a voice on this issue. Thus, as a civil and human rights advocate, Mejindarpal is a role model for protecting the interest of religious minorities and women. In addition to legal advocacy, this role-model also organizes media awareness campaigns for UNITED SIKHS to highlight the plight of human rights victims. She produced a documentary titled ‘Smoking Gun Recovered’ on the disappearance of the contents of the Sikh reference Library at Darbar Sahib, Amritsar during the 1984 Indian Army attack on the sanctum sanctorum of the Sikhs. She also produced a documentary on the killing of 35 Sikhs at Chittisinghpura in Kashmir to highlight the justice denied to the victims. In 2017, she produced and presented a UNITED SIKHS documentary on the Panjab river water issue titled ‘Panjab Drowning without Water’. In 2010, Mejindarpal started a UNITED SIKHS farmer suicides widow pension programme called ‘Rescue A Family’. Today, more than 100 families of the farmers who commit suicide are helped so that their children remain in school. In the same year, she also started the UNITED SIKHS STARAE scholarship program for under privileged Siklighar kids of Sultanpuri colony in New Delhi, which was the scene of the November 1984 massacre of Sikhs. Mejindarpal has a number of other interests like playing the harmonium, collecting antiques, travelling, reading and writing and she is an eco-warrior who believes that protection of the environment is the duty of each and every human being. She also loves the fine arts, but above all, she believes that ‘Seva’ (selfless service) is a sacred duty every human owes to the Creator. Her email is mejindarpal.kaur@unitedsikhs.org