Archive for October, 2007

Jindal’s change of religion

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

Can attributing popularity/fit- in motives to Bobby Jindal’s conversion be blamed on spotty internet
connection too? In fact, that’s a double whammy for Tharoor. First, he incorrectly claims that Louisiana
is primarily Roman Catholic and that Bobby Jindal converted to fit-in. In fact, if that were one of the
motives for Mr. Jindal, he probably would have chosen one of the Baptist/Protestant denominations.

Mr. Jindal also takes a rap from Mr. Tharoor for changing his name after a white kid in the Brady
Brunch. For goodness sake, the guy was 4 year old then. Mr. Tharoor’s criticism for anything American
started in his article on Baseball and Cricket and has reached illogical extremes in this one.

Rohit, I almost agree with your analysis that this all is happening because the US opposed his candidacy on
the UN (I think though that your analysis was done tongue in cheek – assigning motive without evidence
but that’s a befitting reply to his article, isn’t it?).

A comment from SAJA:
I just don’t get it – Bobby Jindal continues to draw flak from Indian commentators because of his religious conversion – Mr. Tharoor joins the chorus as well. On top of it, he gets his facts wrong that white Louisiana is mostly Roman Catholic (like most southern states in the US, it is predominantly protestant – in this case 70%).

I am waiting to see how these luminaries will react if an Indian Catholic/Christian makes it this big in the US. In any case, it doesn’t look like that Bobby Jindal gives a damn to these feelings – he seems to be comfortable in his skin; it is these commentators who are a dime a dozen who cannot get over the spurning of their “Indian-ness” (as defined by them) by Mr. Jindal.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Should_we_be_proud_of_Bobby_Jindal/articleshow/2495846.cms
Should we be proud of Bobby Jindal?
28 Oct 2007, 0000 hrs IST

 

The election of Bobby Jindal as governor of the US state of Louisiana has been greeted exultantly by Indians and Indian-Americans around the world. There’s no question that this is an extraordinary accomplishment: a young Indian-American, just 36 years old, not merely winning an election but doing so on the first ballot by receiving more votes than his 11 rivals combined, and that too in a state not noticeably friendly to minorities. Bobby Jindal will now be the first Indian-American governor in US history, and the youngest currently serving chief executive of an American state. These are distinctions of which he can legitimately be proud, and it is not surprising that Indians too feel a vicarious sense of shared pride in his remarkable ascent.

But is our pride misplaced? Who is Bobby Jindal and what does he really stand for?

There are, broadly speaking, two kinds of Indian migrants in America: though no sociologist, i’ll call them the atavists and the assimilationists. The atavists hold on to their original identities as much as possible, especially outside the workplace; in speech, dress, food habits, cultural preferences, they are still much more Indian than American. The assimilationists, on the other hand, seek assiduously to merge into the American mainstream; they acquire a new accent along with their visa, and adopt the ways, clothes, diet and recreational preferences of the Americans they see around them. (Of course, there are the in-betweens, but we’ll leave them aside for now.) Class has something to do with which of the two major categories an Indian immigrant falls into; so does age, since the newer generation of Indians, especially those born in America, inevitably tend to gravitate to the latter category.

Bobby Jindal is an assimilationist’s dream. Born to relatively affluent professionals in Louisiana, he rejected his Indian name (Piyush) as a very young child, insisting that he be called Bobby, after a (white) character on the popular TV show ‘The Brady Bunch‘. His desire to fit in to the majority-white society he saw around him soon manifested itself in another act of rejection: Bobby spurned the Hindusim into which he was born and, as a teenager, converted to Roman Catholicism, the faith of most white Louisianans. There is, of course, nothing wrong with any of this, and it is a measure of his precocity that his parents did not balk at his wishes despite his extreme youth. The boy was clearly gifted, and he soon had a Rhodes scholarship to prove it. But he was also ambivalent about his identity: he wanted to be seen as a Louisianan, but his mirror told him he was also an Indian. The two of us won something called an ‘Excelsior Award’ once from the

Network of Indian Professionals in the US, and his acceptance speech on the occasion was striking — obligatory references to the Indian values of his parents, but a speech so American in tone and intonation that he mangled the Indian name of his own brother. There was no doubt which half of the hyphen this Indian-American leaned towards.

But there are many ways to be American, and it’s interesting which one Bobby chose. Many Indians born in America have tended to sympathise with other people of colour, identifying their lot with other immigrants, the poor, the underclass. Vinita Gupta, in Oklahoma, another largely white state, won her reputation as a crusading lawyer by taking up the case of illegal immigrants exploited by a factory owner (her story will shortly be depicted by Hollywood, with Halle Berry playing the Indian heroine). Bhairavi Desai leads a taxi drivers’ union; Preeta Bansal, who grew up as the only non-white child in her school in Nebraska, became New York’s Solicitor General and now serves on the Commission for Religious Freedom. None of this for Bobby. Louisiana’s most famous city, New Orleans, was a majority black town, at least until Hurricane Katrina destroyed so many black lives and homes, but there is no record of Bobby identifying himself with the needs or issues of his state’s black people. Instead, he sought, in a state with fewer than 10,000 Indians, not to draw attention to his race by supporting racial causes. Indeed, he went well beyond trying to be non-racial (in a state that harboured notorious racists like the Ku Klux Klansman David Duke); he cultivated the most conservative elements of white Louisiana society. With his widely-advertised piety (he asked his Indian wife, Supriya, to convert as well, and the two are regular churchgoers), Bobby Jindal adopted positions on hot-button issues that place him on the most conservative fringe of the Republican Party. Most Indian-Americans are in favour of gun control, support a woman’s right to choose abortion, advocate immigrants’ rights, and oppose school prayer (for fear that it would marginalise non-Christians). On every one of these issues, Bobby Jindal is on the opposite side. He’s not just conservative; on these questions, he is well to the right of his own party.

That hasn’t stopped him, however, from seeking the support of Indian-Americans. Bobby Jindal has raised a small fortune from them, and when he last ran (unsuccessfully) for governor in 2004, an army of Indian-American volunteers from outside the state turned up to campaign for him. Many seemed unaware of his political views; it was enough for them that he was Indian. At his Indian-American fundraising events, Bobby is careful to downplay his extreme positions and play up his heritage, a heritage that plays little part in his appeal to the Louisiana electorate. Indian-Americans, by and large, accept this as the price of political success in white America: it’s just good to have “someone like us” in such high office, whatever views he professes to get himself there.

So Indians beam proudly at another Indian-American success story to go along with Kalpana Chawla and Sunita Williams, Hargobind Khorana and Subramaniam Chandrasekhar, Kal Penn and Jhumpa Lahiri. But none of these Indian Americans expressed attitudes and beliefs so much at variance with the prevailing values of their community. Let us be proud that a brown-skinned man with an Indian name has achieved what Bobby Jindal has. But let us not make the mistake of thinking that we should be proud of what he stands for.

 

Fokana and media

Thursday, October 25th, 2007
Dear editor,
You and all the malayalees in the world know, we 30 some people were legally elected as officials for  Fokana 2006-2008 . Can any body say NO by crossing their heart? Due to some technical problem, and egoistic hatred personal rivalry among few leaders and our bad luck made us  scapegoats in this drama.
I know very well, media visual or printed, can make or break an organization, person or even a nation. But over and above there is a truth and one should honor that truth. When some people in a community violates the honesty and truthfulness, the media can play a good roll to correct them . They should not encourage them by publishing  misleading artcles.
T.S.Chacko and his group is trying to mislead and confuse our malayalees . Please refrain from publishing the lies. I am working hard day and night to conduct a convention in Houston. About a quarter of million and many people’s effort are at stake.
 I am in constant touch with that group to find a solution. I am making some progress and the articles published in your column is destroying that possibility for a reconciliation. If this continues I have no way to find a solution. So my suggestion is please don’t publish such news up to 17 Th. of November. At the same time please make use of your wisdom to find a solution and support the general council meeting. Let them make a decision. I assure you I will abide by their verdict and I will make sure all the members who got elected with me also will do the same. At this time I hope Mr. Chacko and his followers will attend the general council and will work with us forgetting the past.
Sincerely,
Sasidharan Nair

Bishop’s should keep quiet

Wednesday, October 17th, 2007

Ever since the LDF came to power, the Kerala Catholic community began a campaign against it. Trichur archbishop even mentioned of a ‘Vimochana Samaram.’

The reason was the move of Education Minister MA Baby to control the self financing colleges. He acted without much thinking, it seemed. Every one knows that Kerala needs more professional colleges. But the government has no money. So Kerala students went outside paying huge amount to get a professional degree. In such a scenario, the self financing coleges offered education in Kerala itslef for money. Of course a business.

Is that good or bad? We need to discuss further. But the Marxists have a glorious tradition of sabotaging anything new. They were against the tractors once. then they were against the computers. now they are against the nuclear deal with America. Well, they never say ’yes’ to anything.

The current controversy is about a dead man, Mathai Chacko, former MLA from Thiruvambadi. Thamarassery bishop Mar Chittilappally says Mathai Chacko recieved some rituals from the church when he was on death bed.

Was it wrong? Is it a news? Not at all.

Has the bishop got any authority to reveal about the  sacraments? No. he has no authority. He has a duty to keep such things as sacred and keep inside the church only.

Any Catholic has a right to avail the church services. He may be in any political party. The church authorities shamelessly produced marraige certificate etc to prove their point. What a shame.

But Mathai Chacko’s wife denied that they were married in a church. It means the documents, the church produced were fraud. If so, it is a crime.

All people know that communism in Kerala is only a political party. People join them for their economic ideology, not for its materialist philosophy. So the Marxists will go to Sabarimala and get married in Church. Nobody found any problem with it till now. EK Nayanar’s ashes were immersed in sea.

The bishops should think of the situation before this government came to power. The RSS was virtually ruling and Oommen Chandy government cold not do anything against them. As a result of the growth of RSS, Muslim fundamentalism too grew. Christians, as usual timid, spoke of peace.

That situation has changed with the new government in power. Yet the RSS was daring enough to attack a poor pastor and wife in Wayanad. Such attacks will grow once this government falls.

 

Thampi Chacko to go to court

Saturday, October 13th, 2007

Latest Malayalam Pathram reports that Thampi Chacko will go to court to challenge the election of officials through tele-conference. He says the action was a challenge to the legal system in America.

Election for a post that became vacant because of  death or other reasons may be okay through tel-conference. But reinstating all the officials whose elections were held invalid by a court has no merit, he says. The ‘elections’ were conducted in a few minutes time, he notes.

As per the report, the trustee board is the true body. After elections were invalidated, only six members left in the trustee board. They have the power to co-opt three more members. They co-opted Raju Zacharia, Alex Thomas and Matson Kokura. Only that body can take a decision and not George Koshy, he notes.

He also questions the motive of George Koshy, who has not presented the accounts of the New Jersey convention.

But he says that he is still ready for a compromise and reconciliation.

Anand Jon: What can we do?

Monday, October 8th, 2007

The prosecution charged fashion designer Anand Jon, 33, with a 59-count indictment. 20 women, two of them minors, accused him of raping them. The allegations are as old as 2002 and as recent as this March.

He is currently in jail without bail.

It is really pathetic to see the plight of his mother and sister. They believe in the innocence of Anand. They want the community to support Anand at this difficult situation.

What can we do?