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Distant Tragedy Unifies Indian Americans
By Raj Jayadev
Date: 02-07-01
The Indian community in the United States divides along
established lines of religion and class, but also very sharply between
generations. But all these rifts disappeared as members of each group
realized, in the aftermath of the terrible earthquake in their
homeland,
that they shared a strong common bond. PNS contributor Raj Jayadev is
the
Silicon Valley editor for YO! Youth Outlook, a publication by and about
Bay Area youth published by Pacific News Service.
The work we do and the money we collect for the earthquake victims in
Gujarat may appear futile and horribly inadequate. But in trying to
help
out in a time of despair, Desis (Indian Americans) have bridged
internal
differences once thought irreconcilable.
The taxi cab driver has finally connected with the dot-com CEO who sat
in
the back of his cab without saying a word for months. The families who
attend the Hindu temple in Fremont, California now share a bond with
the
Sikhs going to the Gurudwara 30 miles away in San Jose -- both are
sending prayers back home.
Most inspiring are the relationships growing between the generations of
the desi community. I am what some Indians elders call an ABCD --
American Born Confused Desi. I am unsure how much of me is Indian, and
how much is American. I have typically Dravidian dark skin and sunken
eyes, I speak some Kannada (Southern Indian language), and I love spicy
food. But I was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin (The Cheese State), I eat
meat, and I suck at math.
But that's an ABCD -- constantly in a state of cultural schizophrenia.
Uncertainty, a question mark identity, is typical among younger desis.
In
our zeal to fit in to this country, we have run fast and far from the
restrictions of the old Indian customs. The older generation, unable to
understand our withdrawal from traditional culture, has cast us off as
lost in our Western ways.
This has left Indian America in a vulnerable state. Despite our much
lauded success in business, technology, and education, we are so
entrenched in our generational positions we cannot communicate with the
intimacy of other communities.
Attempts to unite the old and new world have been painfully forced and
ineffective, but the Gujarati earthquake has united us as family. Part
of
the reason is that almost all desis, young and old, are
either immigrants or first-generation American. This means we all have
relatives -- even if known only through pictures, letters and poor
phone
connections -- in India.
Any conceptual distance younger desis might have had from India quickly
vanished when news struck. "Did you call Aggie (grandmother)?" I asked
my
father, when I heard of the quake. We rarely talk to one another about
India -- the one he knows from memory, the one I know only from
imagination. He told me that everyone was safe and not to worry.
We exchange reports from our very different Indian circles. He tells me
his Kannada speaking group is considering canceling their annual
meeting
and sending the money they would have raised to the relief efforts. I
show him e-mails from the young desi listserv I follow -- they give
notice of reliable organizations my father's group could contribute to.
We compare ways of getting aid across the Pacific to Gujarat. Below the
surface of our conversation, hidden, was my attempt to find insight
into
how to deal with the disaster. My privileged American life gives me no
way to understand what "natural catastrophe" really means.
Other young desis are obviously having similar intergenerational
conversations. When we talk over coffee about the earthquake, we use
the
proverb-filled language of our mothers and fathers, casually translated
to English. "Only God knows why." "The most important thing we can do
now
is pray."
In turn, people in the older generation, less structured and organized
in
their networks, look to young desis for direction in aid delivery.
The professional associations formed by their sons and daughters have
become community support groups. American Physicians of Indian Origin,
South Asian Public Health Association, Alliance of South Asians Taking
Action, and other desi organizations have become trustworthy vehicles
to
send relief to Gujarat.
As desis have searched for comfort and guidance from one another, we
have
proven that we are more than just parts of a whole. We are generations
who can come together as a community.

Pacific News Service,
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tel: (415) 438-4755.
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