Parminder, our honorary Sikh chaplain, ‘humbled’ to receive MBE
Parminder Kaur Kondral (pictured), who supports patients at our hospitals as a volunteer honorary chaplain, has been awarded an MBE in the Queen’s delayed Birthday Honours.
Parminder is the National Coordinator of the UK Sikh Healthcare Chaplaincy Group and has worked with the group since 2012. The MBE recognises her services to the Sikh community.
She said: “I am truly humbled to receive this MBE. It makes me feel proud of what I have achieved in my lifetime so far. Without the ongoing support from my husband and family, none of these accomplishments would be possible.
“The work I do with hospitals, hospices and healthcare centres across the UK means I am able to support people sometimes in very difficult situations. It is my honour to be able to do this.”
As well as her work with our Trust, Parminder has links with Saint Francis Hospice, Romford, St Luke’s Hospice, Basildon, St Joseph’s Hospice, Hackney, the John Howard Centre, London, as well as Haven House and Richard House children’s hospices.
In the 2012 London Olympics, Parminder was a community advocate, as well as a games maker, and in 2014, she won a Redbridge Asian Women’s Achievement Award.
Parminder, who is married to Sajit Singh, and has three children and a granddaughter, is an executive member of the Sikh Women’s Alliance and works in the adult health and social services care centre in Barkingside.
The 64-year-old also sits on faith committees across Barking and Dagenham, Havering and Redbridge.
- Michele Elliot, our divisional director of nursing for emergency care and anaesthetics, also received an MBE in the honours for her work during the Covid-19 pandemic. Read her story.