Ramesh Kallidai


Ramesh Kallidai is the former Secretary General of the Hindu Forum of Britain which is the largest umbrella body representing British Hindus. Kallidai was the first Secretary General of the organisation. He has also served as a Commissioner of Integration and Cohesion to the British Government, appointed by the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government. which brought out a white paper called 'Our shared future', which laid out a new agenda for community cohesion in the UK He has acted as a formal advisor to the British Government on various platforms such as the London Criminal Justice Board, the Race Hate Crime Forum. and the Diamond Advisory Group of the Metropolitan Police. He was appointed a cultural ambassador to the London 2012 Olympics He has also presented evidence to select committees at the House of Commons and House of Lords on issues such as religious discrimination and anti-terrorism.
John Zavos, a Senior Lecturer in South Asian Studies in the University of Manchester says that the organisation that Ramesh Kallidai set up with the help of other Hindu leaders, "...has in recent years been the most active organization in projecting itself as the representative of Britain’s Hindu community, with several prominent roles on government initiatives such as the Commission on Integration and Cohesion.".
In this role he introduced different projects and raised the profile of the community in Great Britain. His initiative in partnership with the Runnymede Trust called Connecting British Hindus highlighted the question of the identity of British Hindus. The Former Secretary of State for Communities, Ruth Kelly, praised the report commissioned by Ramesh Kallidai as one that raised "important issues" between Hindu communities and the government.
As a spokesperson for the Hindu community his comments were carried by British media and Indian broadsheets regularly and he has been quoted on issues ranging from the 7 July 2005 London bombings and hate crime to the death of the Pope and the marriage of the Prince of Wales.
He has submitted written and oral evidence to the House of Commons and the House of Lords Select Committees on various matters including the Religious Hatred bills and Terrorism and Community Relations.
Several British Prime Ministers including Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, and David Cameron, have been guests of his annual Diwali reception at the House of Commons organised by the Hindu Forum of Britain. Ramesh's conferring of a Hindu name - Govardhan Brown - on the British Prime Minister made world headlines in November 2007.

Personal life

Kallidai was born in Tamil Nadu in India. From 1977 to 1982, Sri U.Ve NSS Rajan Iyengar, a Sri Vaishnava taught him the inner meanings and chanting procedures for various Hindu scriptures like the Vishu Sahasranamam, the Narayaniyam and other Vaishnava texts. He undertook panchasamskaram from HH Srimushanam Andavan Srimad Rangaramanuja Mahadesikan of the Srirangam Andavan Ashramam, an orthodox lineage tracing back to Srimad Vedanta Desikan and Srimad Ramanujacharya.
He was closely associated with the International Society for Krishna Consciousness. In 1990, he became the editor of Hare Krishna Today, a newsletter with a circulation of 25,000 people.
In the early 90s, Kallidai left a job in Air India and migrated to the UK, where he worked for the , before joining , the third largest IT service company in the world.
He came out of Fujitsu in 2014 as its Global Sales Director for their India GDC.

Involvement in British Hindu organisations

After migrating to the UK, Kallidai immediately played an active role in the campaign to save Bhaktivedanta Manor for public worship. The temple had been threatened with closure by Hertesmere Borrough Council and had led to a campaign of unprecedented scale, uniting Hindus of all denominations in the UK. Kallidai was instrumental in 1994 to set up a youth group called Pandava Sena that had a major role to play in the . Since then he has been actively involved in serving the Hindu community in the UK. He served on the Executive Committees of various Hindu bodies in the UK including the , the , Hindu Aid and the .

Community agenda

Kallidai has advised the British Government on several public policy matters by drawing evidence from community consultation exercises on issues ranging from diversity, equality, discrimination and human rights to anti-terrorism and crime.

Community consultations on public policy

Kallidai conducted various consultation exercises, stakeholder workshops, surveys and other activities with the Hindu community, and some with the all the major faith communities in the UK. These include:
He commissioned the following projects on behalf of the Hindu Forum of Britain after identifying capacity gaps in the Hindu community in the UK:
The Connecting British Hindus Research Project that was visualised, conceived and managed by Kallidai on behalf of the Hindu Forum of Britain in partnership with the Runnymede Trust. It involved 10 focus group meetings and 1000 responses to an online survey, resulting in 20 recommendations on Hindu identity and access to public services that are transforming the manner by which local government engages with British Hindus. The report gathered evidence that demonstrated that a majority of Hindus in the UK did not want to be identified as 'Asian' but preferred to be identified as 'Indian' or 'Hindu'.
He led the research for a consultation on caste discrimination in the UK and published a white paper called '', which presented evidence asserting that caste did not play any role in employment or provision of services by the Government, but only had an impact on social interactions. The paper concluded by saying that the Government should not regulate social interactions between people through legislation, but should encourage good practices through education.

Interfaith activity

Kallidai has worked on various community projects with the Muslim Council of Britain, the Catholic Bishops Conference, Churches Together in England and Wales, the Church of England, Board of Deputies of British Jews, the Office of the Chief Rabbi, the Network of Sikh Organisations, Sikhs in England, National Spiritual Assembly of Baha'is in UK, Network of Buddhist Organisations, Zoroastrian Trust Funds of Europe and the Jain Samaj Europe. He has organised many interfaith events, consultations and events and is an active contributor to the activities of the Interfaith Network of UK, where he had served formerly as an Executive Committee member.

Events and conferences

These include the Annual Diwali reception at the House of Commons; Interfaith reception for H H Karmapa Lama, a Buddhist leader; Hindu memorial service for the London Bombings at the Victoria Embankment Gardens; the Inter-faith Memorial Service for the Mumbai Bomb Blasts, Hindu-Jewish reception with the Chief Rabbi of the UK, and many others.

Media and publicity

Kallidai has run various community campaigns and is one of the most quoted community workers in the UK media. He writes profusely for various newspapers and is quoted regularly in ethnic, regional, national and international media, including newspapers, television and radio.
In 2004, he ran a campaign to get Lacey's to withdraw footwear that featured the sacred 'Om' symbol as Hindus considered offensive to step on the symbol according to Hindu rules.
After the Asian tsunami disaster in 2004, Kallidai organised several Hindu organisations under one banner called the Disaster Relief Task Force, and succeeded in sending aid to victims in India through helpline numbers broadcast by the BBC
In 2005, he ran a campaign to get Royal Mail to withdraw a stamp that many Hindu organisations felt had offended Hindu sensibilities.
After the London bombings in 2005 which killed over 60 people, Kallidai joined the Culture Secretary Tessa Jowell and the Metropolitan Police chief Sir Ian Blair in opening a memorial for the victims at the Victoria Embankment in London.
He led the Defend Russian Hindus movement in December 2005 and January 2006, to stop the Moscow government from stopping construction of a Hindu temple, which being opposed by the Russian Orthodox Church. Kallidai campaigned in the British parliament on behalf of the Hindu Forum of Britain, and with the Mayor of London with the Mayor, and the Foreign Secretary speaking to their counterparts in Russia
Asia House in London was forced in May 2006 to cancel an exhibition of paintings by renowned artist M F Hussain, after the Hindu Forum of Britain, led by Kallidai and an activist group, Hindu Human Rights protested the exhibition which portrayed several Hindu god and goddesses in the nude. Three men entered Asia House and damaged two paintings by spray-painting them, causing Asia House to cite security fears as the compelling reason for cancelling the exhibition. This led to a major controversy with many other groups citing a violation of freedom of speech, while many Hindu organisations felt that freedom of speech should not abused to cause so much hurt.
The M F Hussain exhibition closure resulted in several academics raising the subject of extreme Hindu views being peddled in Britain, and with one even suggesting that there were two versions of 'Hindutva' in the UK, the 'soft' approach of Kallidai and the Hindu Forum of Britain, and the hard-line attempts of organisations such as the Hindu Human Rights, and the HSS.
The Birmingham Post invited Kallidai to write a full-page story they published in 2007, titled 'The British way to a Hindu future' in which he pointed out that discrimination against Hindus was not addressed by the Government in the same successful manner as discrimination against Jews and Muslims.
In January 2007, he led an international campaign to get German efforts to get the use of the Swastika banned across the European Union, terming the swastika as a 'symbol of peace for thousands of years before the Nazis adopted it' and claimed that the ban on the symbol would discriminate against Hindus. Germany eventually gave up the idea of banning the symbol after an international media campaign that was reported widely in over 25 countries.
At a conference he had organised to discuss security for Hindus in partnership with the Metropolitan Police in February 2007, Kallidai alleged that many Muslim men were targeting young Hindu girls for conversion. This generated controversy with several Muslim organisations refuting the allegations made in the presence of the Metropolitan Police Commissioner at that time, Sir Ian Blair. This resulted in the Commissioner admitting at the conference that many Hindus felt neglected by the Police and the eventual setting up of a Hindu Safety Forum.
He started the first Diwali celebrations at the House of Commons which were hosted by MPs from all three major parties of the UK, and have been attended by several Prime Ministers including Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, David Cameron and recently, Theresa May. At one of the receptions, he called Gordon Brown an honorary Hindu with the name 'Govardhan Brown', which was immediately reported widely on the front pages of Indian broadsheets and several UK newspapers.
In 2007 an called Kallidai "the fundamentalist father" and stated that many of his claims of Muslim men "forcibly" converting "hundreds" of Hindu girls were based on no evidence. It also cited his defense of more controversial organisations such as the Vishwa Hindu Parishad, cited by Human Rights Watch as being responsible for thousands of deaths in Gujarat, India, in 2003.
In response the Hindu Forum of Britain clarified that the Evening Standard had not given them more than a few hours to respond despite requests for adequate time, and said that the statements in the Evening Standard were wrongly attributed to him without verifying the truth with them. The HFB said that, "While having meetings around the country, officers of the HFB have observed a high level of resentment from leaders of the Hindu communities about perceived aggressive conversion techniques. We have maintained that the resentment level is factual, and detrimental to community relations, but that we do not know the scope and extent of the problem.Therefore, during our discussions with the Police and others we have requested a formal study to understand the extent of the problem, and either bust myths to reassure the community if the problem is not real, or to deal with it if it is. When explaining to the reporter Mr Kallidai and our media spokesperson also referred to a news story that appeared in Luton, several years ago, about a flyer that had been produced encouraging the conversion of Sikhs. Even though these comments were not from Mr Kallidai, several of these were attributed to him."
After the terrorist attacks in Mumbai in 2008, Reuters quoted Kallidai as saying that there was a great concern here in Britain because of the emotional and family links the community maintained with India.
In May 2007, Kallidai led a campaign to save a bull named Shambo in the Skandavale temple in Wales from slaughter after it had been diagnosed with Bovine Tuberclosis. This campaign received unprecedented publicity all over national media and after an interim relief, the bull was finally slaughtered.

Memberships and positions

Kallidai is a member of various organisations. Some of his positions are as follows: