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Gulnahar Alam is the Executive Director of Andolan - (Organizing South
Asian Workers) a not-for-profit, membership-based group that organizes and
advocates on behalf of low-wage, immigrant South Asian workers in New York.
Nahar Alam has been an organizer in the United States and Bangladesh for almost
20 years. Nahar works towards a vision in which all workers are treated with
respect and their rights are enforced. She has been organizing South Asian
immigrant workers in New York City since 1993 through several grassroots
Asian-Pacific Islander community organizations. Nahar is an ex-domestic worker
and a domestic violence survivor. She works directly with workers and lawyers on
Andolan’s cases, and gives presentations and trainings to workers, law students
and other organizations serving the community. A key component of her work is
community outreach and coalition building. Nahar represented Andolan at the
World Conference Against Racism in Durban, South Africa in 2001. She also helped
develop the Streetwise Cultural Diversity Curriculum for the New York Police
Department in 2001. Nahar has received the Susan B. Anthony Award from NOW
(1996), an award from the Petra Foundation (1998), the Union Square Award from
the Fund for the City of New York (2001), and the Sneha Award for work in
fighting for the rights of Domestic Workers in the U.S. (2002). She was also a
Revson Fellow at the Columbia University during the 2003-2004 academic year,
where she focused on gender studies. Nahar was instrumental in founding Andolan
in 1998 as a community group focusing on organizing low-wage South Asian women
workers.
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