
Jainti Saggar
‐
Doctor and Scotland's first racialized minority local authority councillor
Other names
Jainti Dass Saggar
Dr Saggar
Place of birth
Date of arrival to Britain
Location(s)
DD1 1DB
United Kingdom
Place of death
Dundee, Scotland
Date of time spent in Britain
1919–54
About
Jainti Saggar originally came to Britain to study medicine at University College, St Andrews in 1919. He settled in Dundee – becoming, quite possibly, the town’s first South Asian resident – and remained in Scotland for the rest of his life. After completing his medical degree, he went on to gain diplomas in ophthalmic medicine, public health and surgery. He had a keen interest in education as well as in health, serving as Chairman of the Public Libraries Committee and as a member of the committee of the local branch of the Nursery Schools Association of Great Britain. His concern for social welfare also led him into the sphere of politics. He joined the Labour Party and was elected town councillor in 1936, becoming the first Black or South Asian local authority councillor in Scotland – and in a district where there was not a single ‘Black vote’. Saggar went on to serve as a Labour councillor for eighteen years, and was instrumental in the adoption of Krishna Menon as parliamentary candidate for Dundee in 1939.
Saggar married Jane Quinn, the daughter of a bailie and a town councillor of Dundee. On his death, the Lord Provost of Dundee, William Hughes, said: ‘He was a man of compassion for everyone in need…he came to Dundee from halfway across the world but no son of Dundee had greater love for its people or worked harder in their interest. Dundee is much poorer by his passing’ (Maan, p. 128). The naming of a Dundee street and local library after Saggar and his brothers (one of whom, Dhani Ram, also worked as a doctor in the town) is further evidence of the great esteem in which he was held.
Labour Party, National Health Service.
Maan, Bashir, The New Scots: The Story of Asians in Scotland (Edinburgh: Donald, 1992)
Visram, Rozina, Asians in Britain: 400 Years of History (London: Pluto Press, 2002)
Visram, Rozina, 'Saggar, Jainti Dass (1898–1954)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2012) [http://www.oxforddnb.com/index/71/101071631/]
Image credit
Courtesy of Dundee City Archives