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.

Raghubir Singh photo exhibition

The Sepia International photo gallery in Manhattan (how apropos) is hosting a Raghubir Singh retrospective through Dec. 30. Singh, an Indian photographer who worked in brilliant color, did for the humble Ambassador what Austin Powers did for the Mini.

“Unlike people in the West, Indians have always intuitively seen and controlled colour… My artistic sense was shaped early by the culture of the Rajputs of Rajasthan.”… it was the dazzling colours of his native state, its hawelis… clothes… and sand dunes that impressed and inspired the budding artist.

Singh eventually settled in the U.S. and was awarded one of India’s highest civilian awards, the Padma Shri, for his photography in 1983. He passed away in 1999.

Our own Seshu has more.

The leaning “towers” of the Taj Mahal

India’s most famous tourist attraction turns 350 this year, and quite understandably, it’s tired:

Earlier this month, two Indian historians warned the Taj Mahal may already be tilting and could crumble or sink if the government did not pay immediate attention to its ecological setting.
“Dangerous tilts in its minarets, first noticed in 1942 and mentioned in various reports, have continued to increase over the years,” Ram Nath, a former head of history at Rajasthan University, told the Hindustan Times.
“They are caused by the dry river bed.”
Another historian, Agam Prasad Mathur, said the dry Yamuna river bed must once again be filled if the monument was to be saved.
“Yamuna used to be full of water to maintain the monument’s balance and absorb tectonic shocks. Now that the river bed is dry, the Taj is exposed to the elements,” he said.

Mughal emperor Shah Jahan constructed the Taj in memory of his favourite wife, Mumtaz Mahal, who died during childbirth. According to the BBC article that was linked above, this threatened “symbol of love” attracted over three million tourists to Agra last year.

A Legend is laid to rest.

Weep

Koose Muniswamy Veerappan’s funeral took place on Wednesday, at a family burial plot in Moolakudu, Tamil Nadu.

The BBC’s Sunil Raman says the police decided not to bury Veerappan in his native village in neighbouring Karnataka state fearing trouble from the large crowds that had gathered there.
“We have been orphaned,” cried the bandit’s wife, Muthulakshmi, as she clung to her teenage daughters Prabha and Vidya Rani at the funeral.

The following sentence made me pause, and wonder if something similar would’ve occurred in this country. Though the gesture was touching, I think not:

The bandit’s elder brother was allowed out from a life term in jail for aiding Veerappan to attend the rites. He laid a garland as he was closely guarded by police.

I’m also insanely curious about why he was buried vs cremated. Would anyone more knowledgeable care to edify a girl who gets curious about the most pointless things? If so, please leave a comment. 🙂

Though some professed relief about the bandit’s demise, others experienced an opposite set of emotions; said Ravi, a man who went to view Veerappan’s body before its burial,

“God will punish those policemen. Veerappan was a good man and he helped the poor,” he told the BBC.

Medical Tourists

Quick MSNBC article on a topic we’ve covered before – MSNBC – India draws ‘medical tourists’

NEW DELHI – Three months ago, Howard Staab learned that he suffered from a life-threatening heart condition and would have to undergo surgery at a cost of up to $200,000 — an impossible sum for the 53-year-old carpenter from Durham, N.C., who has no health insurance. So he outsourced the job to India. …Total bill: about $10,000, including roundtrip airfare and a planned side trip to the Taj Mahal.

Arundhati Roy to be Awarded the Sydney Peace Prize

The Sydney Morning Herald reports that Booker Prize winning Author Arundhati Roy will be awarded the Sydney Peace Prize on November 3. Roy will deliver the City of Sydney Peace Prize lecture on the same date, while also launching her newest book, “The Chequebook and the Cruise Missiles: Conversation with Arundhati Roy.”

While many disagree with Roy’s politics and her foray into journalistic activism, I have to admit her ability to move minds through her amazing prose is quite impressive.

As a result of her activism, she is now probably better known for her critiques of the coalition of the willing in Iraq, for criticising the giant US corporation Enron for exploiting and sacking Indian workers, and her critique of globalization, which she has called “a process of barbaric dispossession which has few parallels in history,” than for her prize winning novel, “The God of Small Things.”

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 fairest of them all

Hijra heaven: The title of Miss Gay Universe, a pageant that’s quite a drag, has been won by Miss Gay India Lidia Zaray (thanks, ‘Me’). India’s hijra community always provides stiff competition, and this year it duct-taped the traditional cross-dressing powers into submission.

And so India turns out another beauty, emphasis on the queen. If you overlook the Adam’s apples, these ladies can sashay. But Zaray is brown, not Snow White. If Zaray had assistants, they’d be called Hairy, Lazy, Cheap, Nerdy, Pious, Chubby and Doc. And their parents would want them all to be just like Doc.

For future reference (?), here’s how international queens gussy up:

Shaving is only the beginning of the female process, which also involves applying duct tape to produce cleavage and many layers of pantyhose for leg tone and shape. Pads, made of foam or rubber, are added to instantly create the illusion of hips and buttocks. Other tricks involve using necklaces or feather boas to elongate the neck and hide the Adam’s apple, high heels for longer legs – and then there’s makeup. Foundation, powder and blush are used to contour the masculine shape of the face. “There’s a reason why we call it painting our face,” a drag queen named Jamie says.

Giuliani would’ve been proud.