RĀJINDER KAUR, DR (1931-1989), journalist and politician, was born at Amritsar on 10 February 1931, the daughter of the famous Akālī leader, Master Tārā Siṅgh. She was educated at Khālsā College, Amritsar, Pañjāb University, Chaṇḍīgaṛh, and Camp College, New Delhi, and attained the degrees of M.A. (Philosophy), B.T. (Bachelor of Teaching) and Ph.D. (Philosophy). Her doctoral thesis was on "The Sikh Concept of the Godhead." She taught at Khālsā College, Amritsar, for one year during1958-59, but left teaching to enter journalism and politics. She edited for three years the Punjabi daily Parbhāt published simultaneously from Jalandhar and Delhi, and the monthly Sant Sipāhī from Amritsar. She was president of the Istrī Akālī Dal, women's wing of the Shiromaṇī Akālī Dal, and was also active in the fields of education and social welfare. She was a member of the New Delhi Municipal Committee for two years from 1977 to 1979 during which period she chaired its social welfare sub committee. She had also been a member of the Delhi Sikh Gurdwārā Management Committee since 1975, and was a co-opted founder member of the Sikh Education Society (Punjab) which ran Khālsā colleges at Qādīāṅ, Baṅgā, Chaṇḍīgaṛh and Saṭhiālā. She also served for two years as a member of the Court of the Delhi University. She was a member of the National Committee on Women and the Advisory Committee of the Amritsar Municipal Corporation. In April 1978, Dr Rājinder Kaur was elected to the Rājya Sabhā, the upper house of Indian Parliament. In 1980, she participated in a seminar for Religion and Philosophy held at Wembley Conference Centre, London, and in 1982 she attended World Conference of Religious Workers on Disarmament in Moscow.

         Dr Rājīnder Kaur fell at Baṭhiṇḍā to the bullets of unidentified assassins on 5 February 1989.

Major Gurmukh Siṅgh (Retd.)