Eastern Eye (UK)

Narindar Sar the Tories clo

‘ENGLISHMAN OF PUNJABI EXTRACTION’ SET UP

- By AMIT ROY

NARINDAR SAROOP, a former Indian army major who died on December 19 in London at the age of 91, played a crucial role over 40 years in laying the foundation­s of the close relationsh­ip that exists today between the Conservati­ve party and voters of Indian origin.

In the 1979 general election, he was the first Asian parliament­ary candidate to represent the Tories in modern times when he stood in Greenwich in London. Saroop performed creditably, getting 12,133 votes to Guy Barnett’s 18,975 for Labour.

Margaret Thatcher, who became Britain’s first female prime minister by winning that election, commended him for putting up “such a good fight against the odds”.

She also thanked him for setting up the Anglo-Asian Conservati­ve Society in 1977 as a way of bridging what was then a yawning chasm between the Tories and the Asian communitie­s.

“The Anglo-Asian Conservati­ve Society under your leadership has proved a great value to the party. The Society must now go from strength to strength. It will be as important in government as in opposition. We must continue to build it up,” she said.

Saroop

was chairman of the society from 1977-1980 and from 1983-1987. In time, the society was replaced by the One Nation Forum and eventually, the Conservati­ve Friends of India.

In 1980, Saroop founded the Durbar Club, which organised regular dinners where cabinet ministers addressed wealthy Asian businessme­n. He ran it until 1997.

In addition, he was a councillor in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea from 1974-1982. He had tried to follow in the footsteps of Sir Mancherjee Merwanjee Bhownagree, a Parsi who served as Tory MP for Bethnal Green North-East between 1895 and 1906.

Although seven decades had passed, it was still hard in Saroop’s days for Asians to be picked for winnable Tory seats – or, for that matter, any constituen­cy at all. Although the party leadership wanted some black and brown faces in the Commons because it had become gradually aware of the power of the ethnic bloc vote, its efforts were resisted by fiercely autonomous constituen­cy parties.

Saroop was not picked for another seat, even though he tried to convince everyone he was Tory to his core with patrician leanings and positioned himself on the right of the par

ty on

issues such as law and order.

Perhaps Saroop was poking fun at himself, but he once described himself to the Daily Telegraph, his newspaper of choice, as “an Englishman of Punjabi extraction who sits on a tiger skin rug, wearing a monocle, eating chicken tandoori and humming God Save the Queen – gentlemen always hum, they never whistle”.

He maintained his links with upper-crust Tories through membership of a number of elite gentlemen’s clubs, including Cavalry & Guards Club, the Carlton, the Beefsteak and Pratt’s. He was appointed a CBE in 1982, but his abiding ambition of being elevated to the peerage, despite periodic lobbying by his friends, was never realised.

In 2014, he set out his political philosophy in a two-part article for Eastern Eye.

He revealed that the idea of the Anglo-Asian Conservati­ve Society angered Labour politician­s because they had not come up with the idea themselves and also because “they felt it was their divine right to have the ethnic vote”.

But Saroop also faced a backlash from constituen­cy associatio­ns which saw the society as a rival group. At its launch at Conservati­ve Central Office, Lady Birdwood, a known racist and troublemak­er, raised objections in remarks addressed to the shadow home secre

tary, Wil

immigratio­n and liam Whitelaw, who was alongside Saroop.

“Mr Whitelaw, I think it’s disgracefu­l that you should allow this society to be formed, let alone be here to endorse it,” raged Lady Birdwood, who claimed immigrants brought in TB and other diseases.

When Whitelaw demurred and said he was not in the chair, Saroop confronted the Dowager directly: “Lady Birdwood, your late husband would be ashamed of your behaviour today. I remember him staying with us in the Punjab while recruiting Punjabis for the Second World War. They fought gallantly for the Crown, and some of them are here today in fitness and in health. But also did you know that syphilis was unknown in the Himalayas until the arrival of British troops around 1840?”

Saroop arrived in Britain in his 50s after a career in India, first in the army and then in business.

He was born in Hoshiarpur in Punjab on August 14, 1929, the eldest son of Chaudhri Ram Saroop, of Ismaila, Rohtak, and Shyam Devi, and a great-nephew of Sir Chottu Ram, who was the pro-British founder of the Indian Unionist Party.

He was educated at the Aitchison College for Punjab Chiefs in Lahore and the Indian Military Academy, Dehradun.

Saroop served as a regular officer of the British Indian Army, the 2nd Royal Lancers (Gardner’s Horse) and Queen Victoria’s Own The Poona Horse, retiring with the rank of Major in 1952.

That year he married Ravi Gill, the only surviving child of the Sardar and Sardarni of Premgarh. This marriage, which ended in divorce in 1967, produced two daughters, Kavita (deceased) and Vaneeta, as well as a son, Vijay (deceased).

His second marriage was to Stephanie Denise, the youngest daughter of Alexander and Cynthia Amie Cronopulo of Zakynthos, Greece, in 1969.

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After leaving the army, he went to Calcutta where he joined Yule Catto, the largest investment bank in India.

“We can convert gentlemen into businessme­n,” the chairman Sir Andrew Yule assured him, “but it’s not so easy to do it the other way.”

A salary and perks amounting to £700 included free accommodat­ion and servants, membership of two Calcutta clubs and six months’ “home leave” in England every three years.

On being sent to London as a management trainee, Saroop decided to settle in Britain.

He became a senior executive and director of the multinatio­nal Davy Ashmore and Turner & Newall groups, and then worked for such firms as Grays Insurance, Capital Plant Internatio­nal, Clarkson Puckle Group, Banque Belge as well as National Grid and Coutts, while also becoming a supporter of such charities as Oxfam, Macmillan Cancer Relief and others.

In 1985 he wrote A Squire of Hindoostan, a biography of Colonel WL Gardner, the founder of his old regiment, and in 2005 an amusing autobiogra­phy, The Last Indian: The Destructio­n of Two Cultures. In the latter he recalled how he had devoted himself to “keeping fools, boredom and socialism at bay”.

On one occasion, he baffled an American immigratio­n officer by putting “Gentleman” as his occupation in his entry card.

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 ??  ?? PIONEER: Narindar Saroop; (top right) literature for his election campaign in 1979; and
PIONEER: Narindar Saroop; (top right) literature for his election campaign in 1979; and

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