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Exhibition to tell story of Punjabi princess and pioneering suffragette Sophia Duleep Singh

about 18 hours ago
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The extraordinary life of an exiled Punjabi princess, embraced by the British royal court and a goddaughter of Queen Victoria, but who would become a pioneering suffragette and challenge the very authority of the elite social circles in which she moved, is to be told in a new exhibition.Princess Sophia Duleep Singh was the daughter of Duleep Singh, the last Sikh maharajah of the Punjab.As a child he was forced to surrender his lands to the East India Company in 1849, and sign away the famous Koh-i-noor diamond, now a potent symbol of colonial exploitation and set in the crown of the late Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother.He came to England, where he struck up a close friendship with Queen Victoria, and later married the daughter of a German banker and an enslaved Ethiopian woman, with their children growing up at Elveden Hall in Suffolk as aristocrats.The powerful story of Sophia and the five women who shaped her life – her sisters Catherine and Bamba, her mother Bamba Muller, grandmother Jind Kaur and godmother Queen Victoria – is the subject of The Last Princesses of Punjab which opens at Kensington Palace on 26 March running until November.

Sophia was a devoted campaigner for women’s rights,A rarely exhibited, bound volume of The Suffragette, with an image of her selling copies at the gate of Hampton Court Palace, where Victoria had granted her a grace and favour apartment, is one highlight,Her handwritten letter to Winston Churchill reporting police brutality at the Black Friday suffragette march, where she marched alongside Emmeline Pankhurst in 1910, is another,Through banners, including from the Women’s Tax Resistance League bearing the words “No Vote, No Tax” and other campaign marches, the exhibition explores how her and her sisters’ complex heritage shaped the causes they championed, telling a global story of empire, dispossession and resistance,She was taken to court three times for refusing to pay her taxes.

Her sister, Catherine, played a quiet but powerful role supporting Jewish refugees fleeing Nazi persecution, as illustrated by a jewelled pendant, probably an heirloom from her grandmother Jind Kaur.Catherine acted as a guarantor for Jewish families in Germany, inviting them to live at her house in Buckinghamshire, and gave the pendant to an eight-year-old girl, Ursula Hornstein.The display, which opens during Women’s History Month in the 150th anniversary of Sophia’s birth, includes personal letters, photographs and objects from the women’s lives, as well as contemporary responses from British south Asian women.Items from her and her sisters childhood demonstrate their dual identity as British aristocrats and Punjabi princesses, including an ornately decorated rocking horse, and three-piece embroidered outfits worn by the children in personal photographs.Polly Putnam, curator of collections for the Historic Royal Palaces, said: “This exhibition reveals a story of courage, identity and resistance told through the lives of extraordinary women.

Presenting it within Kensington Palace – where Queen Victoria spent her childhood – gives us a rare opportunity to reflect on their intertwined histories, and to present objects that speak to both a global story and the personal stories of these women.”Mishka Sinha, exhibition historian, added: “The women of her family lived through an extraordinary sweep of history, yet each found ways to exert influence and forge their own identity.”
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Mr Motivator urges government to treat ’bed poverty’ as a national crisis

Mr Motivator is lobbying the government to tackle the number of children in the UK who have no bed of their own as Barnardo’s reveals demand for furniture from struggling families has surged by 40% in the last year.The children’s charity said beds had become“like a luxury item” as the war in Iran threatens to exacerbate cost of living pressures.Meanwhile, TV and online fitness coach Mr Motivator, real name Derrick Evans, who lives in Greater Manchester, is urging government to treat “bed poverty” as a national crisis and include it in child poverty planning.The former GMTV star said: “I have always hated the fact that it’s merged into poverty in general, which means it gets lost.“Beds can end up at the bottom of the list for families in a desperate position, and the consequences are enormous

about 18 hours ago
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Property company denies trying to mass-evict tenants before England’s no-fault evictions ban

A property company accused of trying to mass-evict tenants in the weeks before no-fault evictions are banned has denied doing so, saying it is simply implementing “routine and lawful tenancy management”.A statement from Criterion Capital, set up by the billionaire property magnate Asif Aziz, was issued in response to Matthew Pennycook, the housing minister, who wrote to the company to seek “urgent” answers about its plans.Criterion has reportedly sent section 21 notices, which give notice of proposed eviction, to large numbers of its tenants. At prime minister’s questions this month, the Labour MP Siobhain McDonagh said she knew of at least 130 such notices issued by Criterion at just one development, Britannia Point, in her south London constituency of Mitcham and Morden.In a letter to the directors of Criterion, seen by the Guardian, Pennycook said that if the company was seeking to remove tenants before the Renters’ Rights Act comes into force on 1 May, banning so-called no-fault evictions in England, it would be the actions of a “thoroughly unscrupulous landlord”

about 18 hours ago
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No new meningitis cases linked to Kent outbreak found, health agency says

No new cases of meningitis linked to the outbreak in Kent have been detected, raising hopes that it has been well contained and has not led to people elsewhere catching the disease.The number of people affected remains at 29, of which 20 are are confirmed and nine probable cases in what health officials say is an “explosive” outbreak – the biggest to occur in the UK in a generation.Two of the 20 people confirmed with the disease have died: Juliette Kenny, 18, a secondary school student, and an unnamed University of Kent student. The other 18 are thought still to be in hospital.Nineteen of the 20 confirmed cases were of meningitis B

1 day ago
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‘Not just a Jewish service’: Hatzola ambulances serve whole community, say volunteers

‘Accountants, plumbers, surveyors – whatever it might be, they’ve all got day jobs. Everyone has got kits in their car, everyone responds from wherever they are,” said Yossi Richman, on life as a trained volunteer paramedic at Hatzola, the ambulance service funded by Jewish giving.Richman also serves as a governance lead at Hatzola in Golders Green, north London, where four ambulances were attacked by arsonists in the early hours of Monday morning.The attack has left Jewish communities reeling. But alongside the concerns about community safety amid rising antisemitism, there’s a determination to protect the humanitarian civic principles Hatzola represents

1 day ago
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There must be more support for young people who are seeking jobs | Letters

Regarding Polly Toynbee’s article (Young people want to work: now there may be jobs for them, 17 March), as a young person, I believe that the government must rebuild trust in its support, or young people will continue to be held back. I am now working, but I know what it’s like to leave university and face unemployment: constant rejection, confusion and anxiety about what comes next. It is scary. But what Polly describes isn’t unusual; it’s the reality for many, and repeated rejections knock your confidence.Support on offer has struggled to keep up with the growing challenges that young people face

1 day ago
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Those who view voyeuristic nightlife videos are the issue | Letters

I was grateful for Emily Retter’s focus on the feelings and experiences of the women affected by voyeuristic nightlife content (‘They were comparing me to Bonnie Blue’: the disturbing rise of nightlife content, 18 March). Being “watched” in public is perhaps a uniquely female experience. Sadly many women can relate to being leered at from car windows or catcalled from scaffolding, with video content being the latest, depressing escalation of this kind of behaviour.What is new, however, is the scale of the audience for the content documenting such behaviour. I am struck by the lack of repercussions for the (presumably exclusively male) viewers and commenters of these videos

1 day ago
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Royal Mail owner pushes back against criticisms that service has declined

about 6 hours ago
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Crispin Odey: I can’t remember telling female employee ‘I could attack you now’

about 7 hours ago
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Baltimore sues Elon Musk’s AI company over Grok’s fake nude images

about 5 hours ago
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Protect men and boys from manosphere influencers, Labour MPs tell Ofcom

about 7 hours ago
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World Cup-winning captain Johnson urges England to think about summer break for players

about 6 hours ago
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Ben Duckett pulls out of £200,000 IPL deal in bid to save England Test spot

about 8 hours ago