singh > kaur

i’ve often stated (usually for no obvious reason) that little boys in patkas are the most adorable thing ever…but little girls in pigtails are precious too. or are they?

New Delhi, Sep 12.(PTI): The Sikh community has the lowest sex ratio of 893 females per 1000 males well below the national average of 933.
…As regards the disparity of the absolute and relative number of males and female population in the society, expressed in terms of sex ratio or number of females per thousand males, the Hindus recorded 931 and were slightly below the national average whereas sex ratio among Muslim was 936.

my only consolation after such sadness? “my” team is doing just fine:

The sex ratio among the Christian population grew handsomely from 994 in 1991 to 1009 in 2001, it said adding, for the Buddhist and the Jains, the sex ratio remained almost the same as 953 and 950 respectively.

obviously it’s the vegetarian diet

gujarat’s most literate citizens are Jains:

The largely business-oriented community, which has a population of around 5.25 lakh in Gujarat, has a staggering 87.08 per cent literacy. This is much above the total literacy figure of 58.86 per cent in the state.
Among the Jains, 88.59 per cent men and 85.52 per cent women are literate. In comparison, there is 58.16 per cent literacy among Hindus, 61.89 per cent among Muslims, 67.70 per cent among Christians, 74.27 per cent among Sikhs, 55.30 per cent among Buddhists and 61.04 per cent among other faiths

as for hindus, those pesky scheduled castes blew it for ya:

The literacy figure among Hindus is higher than only that of Buddhists, who are largely converts from Dalits. Literacy rate of Hindus is bogged down by the low level of literacy among Scheduled Tribes, who constitute nearly 15 per cent of the Hindu population in the state. For example, the figure in largely tribal Dahod district is barely 36 per cent.

We’re all Dravidians ;-)

GNXP isn’t everyone’s cup of tea (the material there attracts controversy like flies to cow theetum) but Razib’s got some interesting material on the mtDNA of Desi’s – Gene Expression

There is a important new paper (you can view the full PDF if you follow the link) out that surveys the genetics of South Asians viewed from the angle of mtDNA, that is, the direct female lineage. If you follow this stuff, you won’t be surprised to find out that the authors conclude that

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Pat Oliphant’s outsourcing toon

OutsourcingCartoon2.gif

Sigh. This editorial cartoon by Pat Oliphant (9/8/04) just ran in the New York Times and the Washington Post, among other papers. Using an emaciated, half-naked beggar sitting next to a cow to represent Indian high tech: it’s Temple of Doom all over again (thanks, S.K.).

Let Universal Press Syndicate know how you feel: content@uclick.com. Takes only 30 seconds. I just wrote in.

For a funny, thinly-disguised take on outsourcing, check out ‘Dilbert’ on the fictional country of Elbonia.

messing with the press is BAD p.r.

what on earth is wrong with our intelligence? this is disturbing, to type the least:

The US military in Afghanistan has apologised for detaining a BBC World Service reporter and interrogating him at its Bagram air base near Kabul. Kamal Sadat, an Afghan who also worked for Reuters, was taken from his home in eastern Afghanistan by US soldiers late on Wednesday.
…Mr Sadat is a well-known reporter in Afghanistan for the BBC’s Pashto and Dari language services.
Based in the province of Khost near the Afghan-Pakistan border, he has worked for the corporation for almost two years.
…Speaking after his release, the reporter said he was never told where he was.
He said he was kept in a small, windowless cell, blindfolded most of the time and interrogated by an American official about his work.

if this is a “well-known” reporter, why are we behaving like this? oh, right. it’s because we probably don’t have any pashto or dari speakers paying attention to such figures. i’m no expert, (have a field day with that admission in comments, why don’t you) but that seems like poor “strategery”, to me.

if indeed that WAS the case, then honestly, is it THAT hard to ring up the beeb and ask, “yo, is this terrorist a reporter like he says he is? oh, word? all right-y then…our bad.”

it’s fine to be vigilant, but please, do your homework. breaking down someone’s door, displaying menacing behaviour towards their innocent family members and confiscating the tools of their trade…that’s a fine way to treat a journalist who works for the largest press-outfit of our most beleaguered “ally”.

arun and li-iz sittin’ in a tree…

liz hurley has a little naan in the tandoor (that sounds so much better when it’s “bun in the oven”, doesn’t it??) :

Hollywood bombshell Liz Hurley is expecting her second baby, with Indian boyfriend Arun Nayar, News of the World reported.
The model is expecting a sibling for her son Damian in February, it said.
Liz and Arun have been dating for 18 months following her split from Damian’s father Steve Bing.
A source close to Liz was quoted as saying: “Unlike Bing, Arun is happy at the thought of a new baby.”

via hindustan times and a bunch of gossip columns 😉 Continue reading

Mohini isn’t the only Desi Olympic medalist

I am surprised to not see too much floating around in the blogosphere on 17 year-old British Desi Amir Khan’s success in winning a silver medal at the recent Athens Olympics in Boxing. The BBC has published an in-depth piece on Amir, who is of Pakistani descent, and his biographical information. It makes for an interesting read.

Now, Britain’s youngest Olympic boxer since Colin Jones in 1976 is firmly in the spotlight. That Khan is his country’s only fighter makes the glare even brighter. But if he is feeling the strain, the graduate of Bury Amateur Boxing Club is keeping it well hidden. “I don’t feel any added pressure. I’m just going to box like I normally do,” he said. “All the media attention I’m getting is brilliant, it’s everyone’s dream at my age. All my mates are buzzing about it and everyone from school and college is proud of me. “I’m only 17 and it’s an experience for me. At the next Olympics I’ll be a lot more mature, a lot stronger and I’ll also have a lot more pressure on me because I’ll be tipped for gold.” Refreshingly self-aware, Khan also realises the significance of his Pakistani background and what his appearance in a British vest could do for race relations. “Asians are thin on the ground in British teams and it’s a big thing for me to get a medal,” he said. “I hope it could push a lot of Asians into sport and show that, with the support of your family, as an Asian you can get anything you want.”

And in other Amir Khan news, the BBC has announcedthat the 17 year old silver medalist will be the youngest contestant ever to feature in the BBC sports show Superstars, which is being filmed in Spain this month. Continue reading

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Asif Mandvi on His Faith and His Craft

The NYT ran an interesting profile of Asif Mandvi, one of the first desi actors to make it into mainstream this past weekend.

Mandvi’s first lesson on the racism that can come with living in a community where you are different should have prepared him for his second. As a small Indian-born schoolboy in the working-class town of Bradford, England, he was often taunted and chased home from school by “the white boys.” The experience, fading over time, rushed back to him after the attacks of 9/11, which produced a backlash that made him, as a Muslim, again feel the sting of being “an outsider.” But Mr. Mandvi, an actor, has reacted to what he sees as the current assault on Islam – born of indiscriminate fear and suspicion – by identifying with those who are attacked rather than those who are doing the attacking. “I never heard the word ‘jihad’ until it came out of the mouth of an American television reporter,” he said, “and I was raised Muslim. I was never interested in being a political artist, but all this has forced me to become a more political artist. And it has made me a better artist. I want to do work that is honest, work that allows people to see another dimension of life.” To that end, Mr. Mandvi, who says he is in his 30’s, is turning his one-man show, “Sakina’s Restaurant,” for which he won an Obie Award, into a film. “Sakina’s Restaurant” is a comedy that chronicles life in a family-owned Indian restaurant, which in the movie will be set in Jackson Heights, Queens. “I think it is possible to portray Muslims without having to set them against the backdrop of a post-9/11 world,” he said. “This is the story of an American family that happens to be Muslim.”

Wouldn’t it be great if we could return to this frame-of-mind?

Click here to read the full story.

Maybe a single tea is long enough to know

You’re on the phone with your grandmother, and she wants to know when you’re going to produce grandchildren for her and how on earth you can be “dating” the same person for 2 years without any marriage plans. You tell her that these things take time, that people are complicated, and it’s hard to know where this is going. You feel morally superior as she clucks disapprovingly. You think, I’m a modern person, and I have science on my side.

Or do you? Well, today the BBC reports that:

People decide what kind of relationship they want within minutes of meeting, a study in the Journal of Social and Personal Relationships said. “It’s almost a self-fulfilling prophecy. We make a prediction about what kind of relationship we could have with a person and that helps determine how much effort we are willing to put into developing a relationship.” The results were the same for people who talked for three, six or ten minutes. Prof Ramirez said: “That tells you things are happening very quickly. People are making snap judgements about what kind of relationship they want with the person they just met.”

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‘Shaft’ meets ‘Sholay’

Screen Daily has some interesting details on yet another Mira Nair project (thanks, Brimful!)

[Nair] recently acquired the remake rights to an Indian “blockbuster” and has sold them on to an as yet undisclosed Hollywood studio. “It will be the first time there has been a reverse, when Hollywood will buy Bollywood. I’m going to remake it in an African-American context.”

Blockbuster in an African-American context? Maybe Shaft meets Sholay! I can see it now: Will Smith channels Amitabh, Martin Lawrence does Dharmendra. Don Cheadle sneers as Gabbar Singh, Mya dances over rough-cut bling. Instead of ‘Mehbooba Mehbooba,’ we get ‘Girls Dem Sugar.’ And all the motorbike scenes are filmed on a wicked Japanese racer.

I think the reverse is even funnier, Indian ripoffs of Hollywood films. But I hear that’s been done.

Mira, no charge for the treatment. Just send me a couple of points off the back end.