About Abhi

Abhi lives in Los Angeles and works to put things into space.

Are Indians the new Japanese?

What do I mean? Well anyone that has traveled abroad extensively or even within the U.S. knows that no matter where you go, you will encounter a flock of Japanese tourists with cameras slung around their necks. Rediff.com points to trends showing that soon Indians may be the ubiquitous tourists:

But why are countries going all out to attract Indians? “They spend money,” says Edward Chew, spokesperson of the Singapore Tourism Board. Last year, Indians were the highest spending travelling community in Singapore with an average daily spend of S$200-300.

They beat the Japanese who till the year before last were the highest spenders. Singapore recorded 309,383 arrivals from India last year of which 34 per cent were leisure travelers. However, because of SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome), 2003 was a bad year for tourist traffic. In 2002, 375,000 Indians visited Singapore, which was an increase of 10.5 per cent over 2001.

The fact that Indians splurge on shopping, of course, makes them the favourites of various countries. But shopping isn’t the only thing they spend heavily on.

Great. Not only are we stereotyped as convenience store clerks and cab drivers but now this new potential caricature as well.

Speaking English causes lung cancer in Asian women

About two months ago I participated in a half-hour telephone survey about my smoking history and habits. The survey was specifically targeted for Indian Americans living in California, and I believe it was run by one of the UC campuses. The questions ranged from whether I had ever chewed paan, to how accepting I would be of my eventual offspring dating someone of another race. I do not know for sure if this new study reported by OnlyPunjab.com is associated with that same survey or not, but the results are worth examining:

California’s Asian Americans smoke at a lower rate than the state’s population as a whole, but the better an Asian California woman’s English, the more likely she is to smoke.

“Because one of every three Asian Americans in the United States lives in California, these findings have significance well beyond the borders of our state,” said Moon S. Chen, Jr., professor of public health sciences at UC Davis School of Medicine and Medical Center and principal investigator for AANCART, an $8.5 million project funded by the National Cancer Institute.

Why is it that the more assimilated (I correlate this only with English fluency) an Asian woman, the more likely she is to be a smoker? This is particularly curious when considering the following:

Researchers also found an intriguing relationship between English fluency and smoking rates. “Among Asian American males, high English fluency speakers had significantly lower smoking prevalence when compared to low English fluency speakers — 17 percent versus 25 percent. But the pattern was completely the opposite for Asian women,” Tang said. “Those with the highest English fluency were significantly more likely to smoke than Asian women with lower English fluency — 11 percent versus 4 percent.” English fluency has often been used as an indicator for acculturation in ethnic research.

The original press release can be found here.

Surfer girls rock!

A South African film titled, “Surf and Bhoondi” has just won the 2004 Hartley-Merrill National Screenwriting Prize here in the U.S. From iAfrica.com:

‘Surf and Bhoondi’ tells how a young Indian girl has to overcome family pressure and fight racism at the hands of white surfers in order to ride the waves. Set in South Africa, the film deals with issues of change within the one-million-strong Indian community and their relationship with other communities.

It also looks at the bond between father and daughter and how that has also changed for modern Indian families. In public the father is puts on the face of a modern liberal man in the new South Africa, while at home he struggles to maintain his orthodox values.

Sounds very Whale Rider-ish. I hope to check it out.

An Indian-American soldier’s perspective

Georgia’s Khabar Magazine, profies Irfan Kalvert, an Indian-American soldier who served in Iraq:

So what inspired Irfan to join the Army when most of his peers in the community were planning medical or IT careers, if not envisioning a successful entrepreneurship? “Even though I was making $4000 a month as a young man starting out, I wasn’t happy with just making money. After September 11, I realized that we must do something to better the world, and I wanted to help. I wanted to experience new things, go out there and make a difference. I was 25 at the time and thought about all the men and women who have stood up for what they believed in, and about those in the armed services who gave up their freedom and even their lives ? for our freedom, for our way of life. The choice was clear.”

And so began IrfanÂ’s life as a soldier two years back. His Iraq tour-of-duty started on February 18th of this year. After a couple months of orientation in Kuwait, he entered Iraq on March 15th. His unit was assigned the challenging task of taking over the Iraqi National Guard (ING) post at Samarra, about 70 miles north of Baghdad.

In particular, he talks about one mission when things went very badly and his infantry unit suffered serious casualties. What went wrong?

[Khabar]:How did this attack happen? What went wrong?
[Kalvert]:We had general after general coming to see us because it was such a big deal, since we had people die inside a secured compound. Our battalion commander had informed his superior officer that the compound was secure, and it turned out it was not. Basically what we did wrong was that we had the ING running the gate while we were doing security for everything else. We always had an armored Humvee parked in front of our door where we slept in the building. On the day of the attack, it was not parked there for some reason. There had to be a leak from inside the ING people that gave it away.

These are the same 120,000+ ING soldiers whose numbers are increasing and who are being trained to take the burden away from U.S. forces (according to Bush during the debates). What does Kalvert think of the war in Iraq?

[Khabar]: Do you concur with the reasons America went to war?
[Kalvert]:Yes. I believe that if we hadnÂ’t gone over there they would have eventually come over to fight us. We are not fighting just Iraqis ? there is an influx of people from other countries who have come just to fight against us.

You shouldn’t grab ass in the U.S.

Apparently Indians don’t get sexual harassment training at IIT. The Washington Times reports on this growing public concern:

For example, we have many Indians who say, “Can I make a move?” when they mean they would like to take leave of someone. But if that is uttered in the US, to a lady, it could be taken for a sexual request,” says Dholakia.

That’s not funny. When I use that line women usually just walk away from me. I have always wondered why.

Savitha Nayak and Sunil Dholakia, who train employees of multinational corporations in soft skills such as dealing with conflict, negotiating and communicating, say they have added the basic dos and don’ts of interacting with the opposite sex to their curriculum.

Someone sign me up.

Dangers of the H4-B

India NewEngland sheds light upon an issue that links a partticular immigration status to domestic abuse:

The study’s author, Boston University School of Public Health Professor Anita Raj, says current U.S. immigration policies preventing women on spousal visas from working and self-petitioning for change of status may constitute human-rights violations.

“H-4B visa holders are legal residents of the U.S. who are being denied the right to work and the right to self-petition for legal permanent residency in the U.S.,” Raj said. “These policies violate basic human rights and must be changed for the U.S. to demonstrate a commitment to eliminating policies that increase women’s risk for violence.”

The study, released this month, determines that abusive husbands use immigration-related abuse – threats of deportation, refusal to file for change of visa status and withholding of immigration paperwork – to exert extraordinary personal and economic control over their partners.

There seems to be so many immigration loopholes that can be exploited in unconcionable ways. Since this one affects the South Asian community, I thought I’d point it out.

“I don’t want to imply that if you’re on an H-4 visa, you’re going to be abused,” Raj said. “If you are in an abusive relationship and you are on an H-4 visa, you are at so much greater vulnernability for abuse.”

Leslye Orloff, director of the Immigrant Woman Program at the women’s right organization Legal Momentum, is leading a national effort to secure legal protections for immigrant victims of domestic violence, sexual assault and human trafficking.

Orloff said Raj’s research proves for the first time that it’s not just U.S. citizens or permanent residents who use control over a partner’s immigration status to lock their victims in abusive marriages.

The girl who wept stones

No, that is not the name of my newest novel. You think childbirth is painful? Imagine passing stones through your tear ducts. From The Independent:

A 15-year-old girl called Savitri been admitted to hospital suffering from tiny stones that emerge from the corners of her eyes. Doctors say they have never seen anything like it, and they cannot explain it.

At the girl’s village in Jharkhand, they have two explanations. Either she is possessed by an evil spirit, or she is an incarnation of a goddess. But for Savitri, the condition is anything but a blessing. Before the stones emerge, she suffers from excruciating pain in her head. Tiny stones emerge from her ears, nose and mouth as well.

There are verses in the bible that fortell events like this in the End Days. With Nov. 2nd fast approacing, I am afraid.

Savitri and her family are desperate for a cure. Her bedside at the Rajendra Institute of Medical Science has been overrun by reporters, but the family say no one has been able to offer medical help.

Where is Dr. Sanjay Gupta with his house calls when you need him?

World’s smallest…dog?

tinydog.jpg

I SWEAR its not a rat. From NBC10:

Her name is “Tiny.” How tiny is she? A mere 7.2 inches long.

If Guinness authorities confirm the measurement next week, she could be confirmed as the world’s smallest dog.

The dog is owned by an Indian couple, both doctors, who filed for the record after looking at a Web site that showed a 7.4 inch Chihuahua from Slovakia as the world’s smallest dog.

Dog lover’s can view a clip of Tiny here. Personally I would have named her “Killer” or “Cujo.” Continue reading

Have a passport? You are probably a Democrat.

What’s with my provocative title? Remember a while back when I posted this entry about a group called Democrats Abroad trying to register expats in India so that they could vote absentee in the U.S. election? Well its not just India. Several articles recently have followed this phenomena. I covered this on my own blog a few weeks ago but the issue keeps surfacing in the media so I thought I would bring it to the attention of SM readers. Here is an excerpt from Newsweek:

With polls projecting a tight race, Americans abroad know just how much their votes could count. A recent tally of two Democratic Web sites, OverseasVote2004.com and OverseasVote.com, shows that 75 percent of the total number of voters has registered in the last 10 weeks, and more than 40 percent of those voters are from swing states. Although they did not give the exact figures, Republican organizers outside the U.S. claim the number of voters signing on with Republicans Abroad in Europe has skyrocketed 400 percent since 2000. The number of chapters of Democrats Abroad has risen from 33 to 70 since the beginning of this year. “Based on our figures, 5.3 percent of overseas voters are from Florida [and] 4.4 percent from Pennsylvania. Washington, Michigan and Ohio all tie for about 3 percent,” says Americans Overseas for Kerry’s Jim Brenner, who is based in Boston. Ironically, the real battleground states of this election could end up being countries like Canada, France and Mexico.

Slate magazine however, recognized another angle to this new movement which is quite interesting:

While Americans who go abroad to kill people vote Republican, Americans who go abroad to do just about anything else vote Democratic. This is the logic behind the unprecedented effort to get out the vote among U.S. civilians overseas, and the reason that effort is overwhelmingly Democratic.

How have they formulated this dubious theory? Continue reading

Phonebanking for Kerry

My college roommate Tushar, asked me if I would start an LA phonebank operation for John Kerry. Basically I would get a bunch of fellow Dems together and we would use our unlimited weekend cell phone minutes to call likely South Asian voters in Florida. We would plead Kerry’s case and get them to turn out to vote. A very smart strategy I think. Usually with me the ends justify the means. Bush must be defeated at all costs. Yet in this case, its hard for me to commit time to a candidate that I am not crazy about. I haven’t yet taken him up on his request, but I may still. From India West as reported by New California Media:

Last weekend, from both the east coast and west coast, phone calls went into the homes of registered South Asian voters in Florida with a simple message from callers: Vote for John Kerry.

With pollsters predicting a razor-thin election still too close to call, and Florida once again a toss-up state, the calls may well have a decisive impact. The Kerry supporters hope to reach 20,000 registered South Asian voters in Florida before they are done.

In what could be a first for the community, young South Asian supporters of the Massachusetts senator are getting involved in the nitty gritty of grass-roots campaigning in a U.S. presidential campaign.

“We think for the first time in the history of American politics, it was a phone bank targeted specifically to South Asian American voters, and phone calls made by South Asian Americans,” Tushar Sheth, a 28-year-old New York-based attorney, told India-West.

If anyone does want to be involved in a phonebank operation you can get information at SAKI2004.