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South Asian Activism Shatters Image Of Affluence
By Raj Jayadev
Date: 11-06-00
Immigrants from India and Pakistan have played a very
important role as innovators and engineers in the growth of the
computer
industry, and many have enjoyed considerable rewards. But a far less
prominent image of South Asians is beginning to make itself known as a
force to be reckoned with. PNS correspondent Raj Jayadev is the Silicon
Valley/Digital Divide editor for YO! Youth Outlook, a monthly newspaper
Silicon Valley's South Asian community has two
strikingly
different faces.
There is the increasingly familiar image of a rising, highly educated,
affluent and politically connected group. Last September, for example,
President Bill Clinton raised $1.4 million for the Democratic National
Committee at two Indian American fundraisers on one evening here.
Two days later, however, over 300 Indian and Pakistani cab drivers
practically shut down South San Jose with a procession protesting the
mugging death of driver Daljit Singh. The significant number of South
Asian blue-collar workers--there are about 600 cabbies in the
Valley--and
their activism seem to have attracted little public attention.
The drivers converged at 9 a.m. in caravan to accompany the body of
their
fallen brother to a crematorium in Fremont, 25 miles away. The drivers
purposely picked that time to cripple the cab-dependent San Jose
Airport
and make their statement stronger.
"We wanted to raise political awareness about how dangerous our job is,
and the lack of police protection," said Saranpal Baines, a driver and
an
organizer of the street action.
The drivers put together the procession in only two days. Ron Lind,
organizing director for United Food and Commercial Workers Union Local
428 (UFCW), said, "It is surprising to see how strongly the rich sense
of
social justice from India is manifesting itself here in Silicon
Valley's
working class."
Baines is aware of the more prominent side of the South Asian profile
("Indians are contributing lots with all the engineers and doctors")
but
thinks his work is also worthwhile: "I am successful at bringing my
people to the union. That is my big contribution."
In 1998 Indian cab drivers joined with Ethiopian and Somalian cabbies
who
had faced years of police harassment and unfair company rules, and
started to look for a union that would represent them.
"We wanted a union that had good relations with city council since most
of our issues deal with the police and regulations," says Baines. After
sitting down with various unions they chose UFCW local 428.
Within a year over 150 South Asian cabbies had joined the union and
created a "Taxi Task Force" of city officials, drivers, and company
representatives to address industry issues. Dalijt Singh's death
brought
even more drivers into the union and heightened the demand for better
police protection.
The cabbies are not the only South Asian activists here. Young "desis"
(American-born Indians) organized a community fair last August for
low-wage high-tech assemblers, cabbies, and other blue-collar South
Asians and their families. The event was sponsored by the Asian Pacific
American Labor Alliance and the Service Employees International Union
Local 715.
"We saw a big hole--even Asian low-income service centers never thought
about the South Asian population," says organizer Ravij Bajaj.
"Everyone
just thinks if you're Indian you're a dot-com millionaire. We looked at
how other immigrant communities of color began organizing and we came
up
with the fair as our first step."
The fair featured free health examinations, immigration and citizenship
information, as well as legal guidance in South Asian languages.
Narinder
Singh, who drives for Yellow Cab, offered instruction on stress
reduction
through meditation in Punjabi.
Bajaj says that the groundbreaking aspect of the event was bringing
people together to talk. "We wanted to do more than just provide a
service, we wanted to pose questions. What are our issues at work? What
role do unions play in our community? What does community power mean
for
us? The fact that we held it at a union hall was very symbolic."
South Asian-Americans have targeted abuses within their own community
as
well.
A row of sari-clad South Asian women recently stood in front of
Pasand's,
a popular Indian restaurant in Sunnyvale, with signs reading, "No
Justice, No Peace," a slogan borrowed from the civil rights movement.
Pasand's owner, Laki Bali Reddy, who owns restaurants and apartment
complexes all over the Bay Area, is being tried for smuggling underage
Indian immigrant women into the country, and abusing them.
The action was controversial; it pitted activists against
conservatives.
"Some people felt that publicly criticizing Reddy was an act of
disloyalty to our community," says Nithya Ramanathan of Alliance of
South
Asians Taking Action. "I just kept thinking, if we don't take a stand
for
Indian folks, who will?"
The Pasand protest, the fair, and the taxi driver action received
little
attention from either mainstream or South Asian media. The San Jose
Mercury News covered Daljit Singh's murder extensively, but did not
send
a reporter to the cab procession.
Hina Shah, an attorney at the Asian Law Caucus and an organizer, says,
"While it is exciting to see all the coverage of Indian Americans
becoming part of the political establishment, it is also important to
acknowledge that Indian Americans are organizing on the grassroots
level."

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