SWAS Launch — a moment, not just an event.
After months of planning, on Friday 25 July 2025 we officially launched SWAS CIC.
We began with taking SWAS — breath. Something so simple, yet so profound. Breath connects us. It is identity before name, before nation, before religion, before language. And in that shared breath, we find each other.
We heard a captivating poem by Maryam Sophia about South Asian histories. Our host for the panel discussion was Narinder Sidhu, a pioneering former Police Officer and host of the podcast Behind the Badge and the Bindi — where she explores her experiences as the first Sikh woman to serve in her borough, while shining a light on the often-overlooked voices of South Asian women.
We kept hearing stories from South Asian social workers and allied professionals — stories of invisibility, of being spoken over, of being met with silence when trying to advocate for our communities.
We heard from practitioners tired of seeing assessments that missed the bigger picture. From those watching support fall flat because it didn't land in culturally attuned ways. We heard about safeguarding responses that didn't feel safe. About schools that didn't understand our children. About services that saw parts of us — but not the whole.
And we heard how heavy it is to carry all this, especially when it feels like you're carrying it alone, even in diverse spaces. So, we made a space.
The panel — the five women at the heart centre of SWAS — spoke about how and why SWAS came about.
SWAS is that space. A collective of South Asian social workers and allied professionals coming together with purpose — to reflect, to speak, to be heard, and to lead change from the inside out.
It was more than an event — it was a moment. Conversations that were raw and real. Words that touched hearts. Poetry that carried pain and power. Art that reminded us who we are — and what's possible.
We sat in stillness at the end of the night — reading the reflections on our Tree of SWAS, watching vlogs, holding messages shared across the room, decorating our triangles at the craft table. And in that stillness, we felt deep gratitude: for the energy each person brought into the space, for the courage to speak unfiltered truths, and for the collective hope that change is possible.
SWAS is open to South Asian social workers and allied professionals of all genders. This is your space — a place where your experience is valid, your culture is not a footnote, and your voice matters. Take SWAS with us.