
Savitri Devi Chowdhary
‐
Indian cookbook writer
Place of birth
Date of arrival to Britain
Location(s)
SS15 6ET
United Kingdom
Date of time spent in Britain
1932–1996
About
Having worked as a high school teacher in her native Punjab, Savitri Chowdhary arrived in Britain in 1932 after a four- or five-year separation from her husband, Dr Dharm Sheel Chowdhary, who had come to Britain for postgraduate medical studies and recently begun work at a practice in the small Essex town of Laindon. On arrival, she found her husband had, to a large extent, adapted to English life and encouraged her to do the same. Shedding her saris for dresses and cutting her hair short, Chowdhary sought to fulfil the role of a doctor’s wife in an English town and to immerse herself in community life.
However, she also remained in touch with her Indian self, wearing saris for evening engagements, cooking curry at home and socializing with the middle-class Indian community in London. Not only did she and her husband help establish early British Hindu organizations, such as the Hindu Association of Europe and the Hindu Centre, but Savitri Chowdhary, on the encouragement of an English friend, Miss Cresswell, also became involved with the India League, attending – and occasionally speaking at – political meetings in London.
In the early 1950s Savitri Chowdhary published one of the earliest Indian cookery books with André Deutsch, subsequently giving talks on Indian cooking and making television appearances to demonstrate her skills.
Dharm Sheel Chowdhary, Sir Learie Constantine, Agatha Harrison (involvement with India League), Krishna Menon (involvement with India League, both visited India Club), Paul Robeson (visited India Club).
I Made My Home in England (Laindon: Grant-Best, n.d.)
Indian Cookery (London: André Deutsch, 1954)
In Memory of My Beloved Husband (Laindon: Grant-Best, n.d.)
Visram, Rozina, Asians in Britain: 400 Years of History (London: Pluto Press, 2002)
[Sheel] had mostly mixed with the English people, got accustomed to their way of life…He liked the various styles of dresses worn by the British ladies and the bobbed hair seemed to have a great appeal to him…I kept my beautiful saris for wearing on our days off, when we went to London to see our Indian friends and for evening wear in Laindon. After I got over the initial strangeness of English dress, I found I could move about and work more freely in that than in a sari. After a little hesitation, I consented to have my hair cut short as well. So now I was all ready to get down to my duties.
It wasn’t easy to belong to two countries…Was it possible, or even wise for a person like myself, who had been born and brought up in India, a country which had its own strong culture and traditions, to get completely absorbed in this country…?
Savitri Chowdhary, I Made My Home in England (Laindon: Grant-Best, n.d.), pp. 7, 9, 65
Image credit
© Remaking Britain: South Asian Connections and Networks, 1930s – present