Records of the Shaheed Udham Singh Welfare Centre

This material is held atBirmingham Archives and Heritage Service

  • Reference
    • GB 143 MS 2142/B
  • Dates of Creation
    • 1978 - 2003
  • Physical Description
    • 21 Files

Scope and Content

Correspondence; reports; grant application forms; financial records; case work papers; and associated material relating to the work of the Shaheed Udham Singh Welfare Centre. The majority of the material dates from the 1980s and 1990s, but there are a small number of papers with a later date. There is also a substantial amount of material relating to the Udham Singh research project, set up by the Shaheed Udham Singh Welfare Trust and Punjabi University in Patiala, India. The Shaheed Udham Singh Welfare Trust and the Indian Workers Association campaigned for the release of several government files relating to the arrest and trial of Udham Singh following his assassination of Sir Michael O' Dwyer in 1940, and worked with Punjabi University to produce a biography and a volume of original documents relating to Udham Singh's life. Copies of the government files are included in this section.

Administrative / Biographical History

The Indian Workers Association had been involved in community and welfare work since its establishment, and provided assistance to all members of the Indian community, playing a role as advisor and mediator to people in finding employment, complying with immigration regulations, completing tax forms, lodging claims for family allowance and other benefits, securing accommodation and mortgages, and getting legal representation. By the late 1970s, the Association was dealing with a number of social and welfare issues arising from the arrival in Britain of Indian migrants wives and families, and the different needs of younger Indians who had grown up in Britain. These issues included the problems of youth unemployment; the need for English language tuition; the provision of childcare and playgroup facilities; and the growing need for the provision of a conciliation service for family disputes and cases in which adult children became estranged from their parents.

In order to continue to fulfil a social and welfare role in the community, the Indian Workers Association wanted to purchase premises to use as a permanent welfare centre which would provide social and cultural facilities as well as a point of contact for people seeking advice and support. It was intended that this welfare centre would be run by an organiser or warden, with assistance from part-time paid and voluntary workers. The Association identified a property at 346 Soho Road in the Handsworth area of Birmingham, and applied to the Barrow and Geraldine S. Cadbury Trust for financial assistance in the purchase of this property in 1977. In order to receive funding from charitable trusts, the Association set up the Shaheed Udham Singh Welfare Trust to oversee the running of the welfare centre, to be called the Shaheed Udham Singh Welfare Centre, and to administer its accounts. A constitution was drawn up, and the trust was managed by a committee elected annually, consisting of six members and Honorary Officers; President, Treasurer and Secretary. The centre opened in May 1978. It was partially destroyed by fire in January 1991, and was rebuilt with the help of grants from the Cadbury Trust during the early 1990s.

The trust was funded by grants from the Cadbury Trust and the Urban Aid Programme; by subscriptions and donations from members of the trust; and by fund raising events organised by the Indian Workers Association.

Although the main function of the welfare centre was to provide advisory and welfare services, the Shaheed Udham Singh Welfare Trust also staged cultural awareness events, and campaigned with the Indian Workers Association for the release of government papers relating to Udham Singh from 1989 until the papers were finally opened in 1996 and 1997. The welfare trust was then involved in the publication of an edition of these documents, and of a book on the life of Udham Singh written by Navtej Singh of Punjabi University, Patiala in India.

The co-ordinator of the Shaheed Udham Singh Welfare Trust was Surinder Kumar Taggar until his death in 2002. The welfare centre celebrated its Silver Jubilee in August 2003.

Related Material

See MS 2141/B for other records of the Shaheed Udham Singh Welfare Centre