South Asian Sisters Speak

South Asian Sisters Speak SASS creates safe spaces for South Asian women in the UK to share their experiences.

We run conversation-style events around the themes of mental health, identity and history, and run the Brown Girl's Book Club bi-monthly.

We’re back with April’s   pick, the Women’s Prize shortlisted ‘A Guardian And A Thief’ by Megha Majumdar!This novel is s...
24/03/2026

We’re back with April’s pick, the Women’s Prize shortlisted ‘A Guardian And A Thief’ by Megha Majumdar!

This novel is set in a near-future Kolkata, India, ravaged by climate change and food scarcity, in which two families seeking to protect their children must battle each other.

In a near-future Kolkata beset by flooding and famine, Ma, her two-year-old daughter Mishti, and her elderly father Dadu are just days from leaving the collapsing city behind to join Ma’s husband in Ann Arbor, Michigan. After procuring long-awaited visas from the consulate, they pack their bags for the flight to America. But in the morning they awaken to discover that Ma’s purse, with all the treasured immigration documents within it, has been stolen.

Set over the course of one week, A Guardian and a Thief tells two stories: the story of Ma’s frantic search for the thief while keeping hunger at bay during a worsening food shortage; and the story of Boomba, the thief, whose desperation to care for his family drives him to commit a series of escalating crimes whose consequences he cannot fathom.

With stunning control and command, Megha Majumdar paints a kaleidoscopic portrait of two families, each operating from a place of ferocious love and undefeated hope, each discovering how far they will go to secure their children’s future as they stave off encroaching catastrophe.

Pick up your copy at our page (link in bio) and have a read with us!

Tickets are available via our Eventbrite page. We’re looking forward to having you as always!

Since 2018, Brown Girls Book Club has been a way to open up discussions around taboo subjects and our own varied, but of...
09/02/2026

Since 2018, Brown Girls Book Club has been a way to open up discussions around taboo subjects and our own varied, but often shared, experiences.

This month we read Arundhati Roy’s memoir, Mother Mary Comes To Me. Despite being a titan of South Asian literature, the novel deals primarily with Roy’s fraught and tumultuous relationship with her mother. We spoke about complex family dynamics, the contradictions of human nature, and how identity impacts activism.

Next book will be announced soon 🫶🏽

📚

Have you always wanted to get into journaling but never known where to start? Maybe you’re the type to fill up journal a...
12/01/2026

Have you always wanted to get into journaling but never known where to start? Maybe you’re the type to fill up journal after journal, or maybe you’re looking to get back in to writing after a long break.

Join us and award-winning writer, artist, and academic for a three week course exploring writing as a creative practice that supports your wellbeing. With each week building on the last you will develop your creative voice alongside a supportive cohort of South Asian women, as you use writing to unpack stigmas and shed light on untold stories.

This is the perfect way to bring a new practice into your life, or enhance the skills you already have. You can join from anywhere as the sessions are all online, just make sure you can commit to a minimum of 2 sessions 🤎

✍🏽 Sign up with the link in our bio
🎟️ £15 + booking fee

We’re so happy to announce that we’re back with our first book club pick of 2026, Arundhati Roy’s debut memoir ‘Mother M...
06/01/2026

We’re so happy to announce that we’re back with our first book club pick of 2026, Arundhati Roy’s debut memoir ‘Mother Mary Comes To Me’! It was one of 2025’s most anticipated releases so we thought only right to sit down and discuss it together.

The memoir is both an incisive yet unravelling look into the relationship of Arundhati Roy and her mother, Mary. Even as her life departs from Mary Roy for many years, her mother remains the spectacle that is central to every story in Arundhati Roy’s life. Her mother is a force of bravery, cruelty, tenacity and determination, which creates a memoir that looks at what it means to be a mother, a daughter, a woman, a child, a citizen, a wife, with humour and cutting vulnerability. It asks the question of what kind of interior is created when the world remained captivated by Arundhati’s brilliance, whilst her mother provided a childhood - later adulthood - where rage and love were just the same.

Pick up your copy at our page (link in bio) and have a read with us!

Tickets are available via our Eventbrite page. We’re looking forward to having you as always!

28/11/2025

Tix are still available for our next winter social 🗣️🗣️🗣️

Join us to close out the year with a cosy evening of yapping, snacking, games & crafts with our community (more details on this to come 👀)

If you’ve never been to a SASS event before this is the perfect way to try things out. There are no expectations and plenty of friendly faces looking to make new connections 🫶🏽

🎟️ Tix are £10 - get yours from the link in our bio

As the end of the year approaches we’re gearing up for one of our favourite new traditions: the SASS End of Year Social ...
11/11/2025

As the end of the year approaches we’re gearing up for one of our favourite new traditions: the SASS End of Year Social 🌟

Since our first winter social in 2022 we’ve loved closing out the year with an evening of fun, games, and yapping — so we’ve made it into a yearly tradition!

Our community is built on the idea that our shared experiences, traditions, and culture as South Asian women creates a common ground. And while our traditions tie us to our culture, they aren’t static and there’s no reason why you can’t create your own.

Join us to continue our tradition with an evening of board games, crafts, snacks, and chats with like-minded South Asian women. You might make a new friend or see some familiar faces. 🫶🏽

Let’s celebrate this year’s milestones, new friendships formed, and traditions old and new! 💛

🗓️ Friday 12th December,
🕗 7pm - 10pm
📍Damsel Collective, Shoreditch
🎟️ Tix are £10 via

As we’ll be chatting to the author in just over a fortnight, it’s only right that our   pick for October is A Splinterin...
06/10/2025

As we’ll be chatting to the author in just over a fortnight, it’s only right that our pick for October is A Splintering by Dur e Aziz Amna!

In a village in rural Pakistan, Tara is waiting and watching. The smell of dung and dust hangs over her world.

She is desperate to leave the petty life of the village and escape the iron grip of her violent, unpredictable brother. Marrying into the middle-class allows her to escape to the capital, but she soon finds that life as a respectable housewife is not sufficient either. She wants what the rich mothers at her children’s school have. She wants what their husbands have.

But can she truly shake her past? And what of the menacing spectre of her brother, a reminder of the threads that tie her to the life she left behind and the constant loom of patriarchal violence?

Set against a hypnotic, oppressive backdrop of political aggression and natural disaster, A Splintering traces the class and gender struggle of a woman stuck between province and metropolis, between motherhood and ambition. Disquieting and utterly gripping, it is an extraordinary achievement by Dur e Aziz Amna, an exploration of a complex and unforgettable character who will risk everything to carve out a life of her own.

🗓️ Thursday 30th October
⏰ 7 - 9pm
📍 The Anson Room, St Margaret’s House, E2 9PL

Pick up your copy at our page (link in bio) and have a read with us!

Tickets are available via our Eventbrite page. We’re looking forward to having you as always!

Join us for an evening of conversation with one of the most exciting voices in contemporary fiction: Pakistani-American ...
05/10/2025

Join us for an evening of conversation with one of the most exciting voices in contemporary fiction: Pakistani-American author Dur e Aziz Amna, as we celebrate her new novel A Splintering.

🗓️ Tuesday, 21 October 2025
🕖 7:00 - 8:30 PM
📍 Stanfords, Covent Garden
🎟️ Tix from £8 (includes a drink!)

Tracing rich themes of violence, class, and ambition the novel follows Tara as she pulls against the restraints of rural village life. Set against a backdrop of political unrest and environmental catastrophe, Tara’s journey to the metropolis throws into sharp relief the cost of breaking free.

03/10/2025

Back for another Storytelling with SASS ‼️‼️💥

Our theme for this event was food, so naturally we had some delish Bengali snacks for the evening AND the best chilled chai.

Food often becomes a quick stand-in for culture writ large - so what does that mean for us? It can be a conduit for memory, a living archive, a form of resistance, and a method of connection.

Which food traditions connect us with our culture and which ones can we do without? What kind of power hierarchies are we pointing to when we cook/eat in a certain way?

We were joined by three amazing pannelists who are all South Asian women working as chefs to help us unpack this massive topic and of course we brought a few of you up on stage to share your thoughts as well 💓

See you at the next one! ###

Food is so evocative, and often central to our ideas of identity, culture, and tradition.As part of the Power of Food Fe...
06/09/2025

Food is so evocative, and often central to our ideas of identity, culture, and tradition.

As part of the Power of Food Festival we’re hosting an evening of storytelling focused on food and its powerful role in our memories and relationships.

Get your tix from the link in our bio! 🍉

🗓️ Thursday 26 September
📍The Gallery Café, St. Margaret’s House
🕥 6:30pm - 9:00pm

We’re starting the evening with a conversation segment, opening up a conversation on sustainability, labour, and representation through the voices of South Asian women in the food industry. 

Following the panel, we’ll invite you to take part in an open mic session, sharing your own stories, recipes, or reflections on food and its meaning in your life. We’ll close the evening by sharing food together, provided by and

IN CONVERSATION WITH

💛 Kirtbir of is a London-based chef and supper club host bringing Punjabi food to new people and new spaces. 

With Didi Supper, Kirtbir is on a mission to show the depth and versatility of Punjabi food, using recipes passed down through generations, honouring the traditions of home cooking, and embracing the balance of nourishment and indulgence that defines Punjabi meals.

💛 weaves together dishes and stories from founder and head chef Punam Vaja’s childhood. Through a series of supper clubs, pop-ups and brunches, each menu is a celebration of the rich background that forms her identity; a first generation born British-Indian with roots in Gujarat, Mumbai and East Africa. The food evokes nostalgia and familial warmth that harmonises tradition and innovation.

💛 Gabriella is a British Sri Lankan chef and founder of , a supper club and pop up that celebrates food of her heritage.

What began as home dinners with friends and family has grown into sell out evenings across London. Through her cooking Gabriella explores how food connects us to memory, identity, and community.

Still basking in the magic of our August book swap with  ☀️📚Thank you to everyone who showed up with open hearts and ful...
01/09/2025

Still basking in the magic of our August book swap with ☀️📚

Thank you to everyone who showed up with open hearts and full tote bags. You made the space vibrant and thoughtful, and we had lots of good book chat in the sunshine 💛

Like us, you may have seen the alarming news that 25 books have been recently banned in Jammu and Kashmir by Modi’s gove...
11/08/2025

Like us, you may have seen the alarming news that 25 books have been recently banned in Jammu and Kashmir by Modi’s government. Whilst Indian government officials claim this is due to the “secessionism” and “false narratives” encouraged in these books, we understand this to be a continuation of the ongoing censorship in Jammu and Kashmir, which seeks to strip the region of its autonomy and statehood.

One of the books that has been banned is Arundhati Roy’s ‘Azadi’, which is why we have chosen it as our August pick. In this series of nine electrifying essays, Roy challenges us to reflect on the meaning of freedom in a world of growing authoritarianism. Each essay centres India and questions how the world’s largest democracy has fallen from grace and into the arms of fascism. Roy writes about Hindu nationalism, Kashmir and of the dangers and freedoms of being a writer. Azadi, is an Urdu word, derived from Persian, and literally translates to freedom. It is the chant that has echoed in the massive demonstrations both historically and presently in Kashmir.

We will be co-facilitating this discussion with members of our community from Kashmir. We hope you’ll join us to reflect, ask questions, discuss, listen and learn.

Pick up your copy at our page (link in bio) and have a read with us!

Tickets are available via our Eventbrite page. We’re looking forward to having you as always 🧡

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7 Mercer Walk, Covent Garden
London
WC2H 9FA

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