ISNA’s High Profile 54th Annual Convention to be Rolled Out in Chicago

By Ashfaq Syed

The Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) will be holding its 54th Annual Convention from June 30 – July 3, 2017, at the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center in Rosemont, Illinois.

ISNA Convention is one of the largest Muslim gatherings in the United States and Canada, where Muslims and guests from other faith communities have a platform to network, exchange ideas and listen to renowned speakers. This year’s theme, “Hope and Guidance through the Qur’an,” will largely center on how faith can inspire the community to bring positive change in response to challenges and injustices of all forms.

The highlights of the Convention are: 200 Renowned Speakers, Round Table Discussion, Interfaith Reception, Qiraat Competition, Career Fair & Carnival, Community Recognition Luncheon, Young Professionals Luncheon, Meet the Author, Largest Bazaar in US with 550 booths, Film Festival, Enlightening Entertainment, Health Fair, Art & Photography Exhibit, Matrimonial Banquets, , Basketball Tournament, Children’s Program & Babysitting, etc

The three-day Convention will unite both Muslim and interfaith individuals, families, businesses and non-profit organizations for a full schedule of lectures, discussions, debates and entertainment.

“ISNA’s Annual Convention is more than simply a coming together of the Muslim community,” said Azhar Azeez, ISNA President. “Our goal is to unite people across different faiths and backgrounds in the spirit of peace and better understanding. We hope the convention will be used as platform and catalyst for social change”, he added.

ISNA has invited a rich list of speakers, scholars, community leaders and public servants to address Convention attendees. Linda Sarsour, co-chair of the National Women’s March, will be the keynote speaker during the Community Service Recognition Luncheon which will honor Dr. Sayyid M. Syeed for his lifelong dedication to serving the community, building interfaith relationships and social justice advocacy.

Complementing the main ISNA offering of programs, there are conferences being hosted by the Muslim Students Association of the U.S. & Canada (MSA National) and the Muslim Youth of North America (MYNA).

ISNA is the largest and oldest Islamic umbrella organization in North America. Its mission is to foster the development of the Muslim community, interfaith relations, civic engagement, and better understanding of Islam.
Those who want to register their names to participate in the Convention and to have more details about it, are advised to visit its website: http://www.isna.net/54th-annual-isna-convention/ CONTACT:Faryal M. Khatri, ISNA Communications Coordinator, (317) 373 – 0246, fkhatri@isna.net

Sikh Foundations 50th Anniversary Gala and Conference

The Sikh Foundation International celebrated its 50th Anniversary fom On May 5th through 7th, 2017. Guests from all over the world including Canada, United Kingdom, Europe and India gathered to celebrate and commemorate 50 years of service of the Sikh Foundation. The celebration began with a glorious Gala on May 5th at the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco, California, attended by 240 guests. Twenty students were offered free attendance and could mingle and network with guests. It was a marvelous evening that began with a tour through the Sikh Art Exhibit – SAINTS AND KINGS: ARTS, CULTURE, AND LEGACY OF THE SIKHS (the exhibit will continue through June 25, 2017).

The tour was followed by cocktails and a stunning dance performance by the Dholrhythms Dance Company. An exotic Indian dinner, was served in the elegant Samsung Hall which was decorated in the most exquisite and tasteful decor.

Canada’s Defense Minister Harjit Singh Sajjan, the keynote speaker at the Sikh Foundation’s 50th Anniversary gala held at the Asian Art Museum May 5, said Indian Americans must focus on the potential of the next generation. “Every time I look at child, instead of just looking at what state that they’re in, wow, what could this person be if they had the opportunity?” stated the defense minister.

Sajjan stated his belief that every child is born with a gift, and must be mentored to find their special talents. He said the Sikh Foundation’s 50th anniversary celebrations were important, because “we need to look at the past to look at where we’re going to be in the future.”

Sajjan noted that the Sikh Foundation was already working hard to mentor youth. “I’m really looking at you for all of your leadership. “How do we work together to make a difference in this world? If we focus on the youth, we really can do so.”

Dignitaries from around the world attended the celebrations, which honored the foundation’s first 50 years and also welcomed the next chapter. Founded Dec. 20, 1967, by Narinder Kapany — a pioneer in the field of fiber optics — the Sikh Foundation is a cultural organization that works to promote and preserve Sikh art, heritage, education, culture, and religion.

The organization’s objectives include passing on the Sikh heritage to Sikh youth and the community’s growing diaspora, and contributing the Sikh perspective to global concerns.

In its 50 years, the foundation has published numerous books and articles, established Sikh studies chairs in colleges and universities, and organized art exhibits around the world. The foundation represents the first “concerted effort of Sikhs worldwide,” and its work, in particular the Sikh Research Journal, has created a “mindshift” about Sikhs and Sikh culture in the U.S. and around the world, Sonia Dhami, the Sikh Foundation’s executive director, told India-West.

The Sikh Foundation honored Satinder Kaur Kapany, Narinder’s late wife, at the event. Kiran Kaur Kapany, their daughter and foundation trustee. The dinner also featured a musical performance by the Raj Academy, a violin and tabla performance by Raginder Singh and Shobit Banwait, a sitar and tabla performance by Tej Anand and Jasprit Singh, and a second dance performance by the Dholrhythms dance company.

Commenting on the foundation’s future endeavors Dhami said: “How will Sikh Studies evolve to take on the challenges of the future? How will the arts appeal to future generations? How can the connection with our past heritage be maintained? These are some of the questions we think about as we celebrate 50 years of the Sikh Foundation and continue in our mission to inspire, educate and engage communities around the world,” she said.

Hindu temples quietly joining the sanctuary movement, leaders say

After Shaanti Bhavan Mandir in Queens, New York, declared itself a sanctuary for undocumented immigrants March 19, garnering significant national attention, leaders in the Hindu community say they are gaining more support within and outside the congregation.

The New York Times wrote, “But spearheading that effort is proving more difficult than they had hoped. Last Sunday, no other temples turned up at a meeting intended to encourage others to become sanctuary congregations. Even within their own temple, only a few undocumented immigrants have come forward to begin talking about their status, though more worship there, members said.”

“I’m positive it’s the fear,” said Davanie Singhroy, who is helping lead the temple’s efforts. “No one wants to come forward for fear they are making themselves more visible.”

The struggle at Shaanti Bhavan Mandir mirrors the larger problem that the National Sanctuary Movement, a coalition of some 800 houses of worship, has been having in attracting participation from immigrant congregations of all faiths, its organizers said.

Though Shaanti Bhavan is the first Hindu temple in the country to declare itself a sanctuary, they say, some other Hindu temples, especially in the Indo-Caribbean community,  are helping those who feel vulnerable.

Since its announcement as a sanctuary, members of Shaanti Bhavan’s congregation have begun “quietly” talking to other members of the community who need help, according to activists. At this time, it is those with Green Cards who are eligible to get citizenship but don’t know how, are being helped, said Viswanath.

“We are taking a moral stand that nobody should be deported. It is very much driven by our religion and spiritual tradition — Manav Seva  – that we should join to serve those most in need,” Viswanath emphasized. New York’s New Sanctuary Coalition is helping organize future workshops for the Indo-Caribbean temples, she said.

Hindus urge New Jersey online retailer to withdraw Lord Shiva & Ganesha leggings

Upset Hindus are urging Ventnor City (New Jersey) headquartered online retailer Zayze Activewear for immediate withdrawal of various leggings carrying images of Hindu deities Lord Shiva and Lord Ganesha; calling it highly inappropriate.

Distinguished Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada today, said that Lord Shiva and Lord Ganesha were highly revered in Hinduism and were meant to be worshipped in temples or home shrines and not to adorn your legs, crotch and hips. Inappropriate usage of Hindu deities or concepts for commercial or other agenda was not okay as it hurt the devotees.

Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, also urged Zayze Activewear and its CEO to offer a formal apology. Hinduism was the oldest and third largest religion of the world with about 1.1 billion adherents and a rich philosophical thought and it should not be taken frivolously. Symbols of any faith, larger or smaller, should not be mishandled, Rajan Zed noted.

Zed further said that such trivialization of Hindu deities was disturbing to the Hindus world over. Hindus were for free artistic expression and speech as much as anybody else if not more. But faith was something sacred and attempts at trivializing it hurt the followers, Zed added.

Products of Zayze, which claims to be “high end line of activewear”, include capris, jackets, leggings, shorts, sports bras, tops, tanks, mens tights, onesies, outfits and bike shorts. With tagline “Where Fit, Fashion, and Function Come Together”, Zayze states: “You can be sexy and active at the same time.” Its description of “Shiva Geometry Compression Legging” ($ 89) says: “Shiva, the auspicious one, adorns the leg”.

Ventnor City (New Jersey) headquartered online retailer Zayze Activewear has removed all leggings carrying images of Hindu deities Lord Shiva and Lord Ganesha and apologized, after upset Hindus complained calling these “highly inappropriate”.

Zayze Activewear CEO Shayna Gross, in an email to distinguished Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, who spearheaded the protest, wrote: “It is with our sincerest apologies that we have removed our Lord Shiva and Lord Ganesha leggings from our website and have halted all sale and production of these images in future lines…We at Zayze have a deep appreciation for diversity and consideration for differing beliefs and it was never our intention to offend anyone. Please accept our sincerest apologies.”

In Hinduism, Lord Ganesha is worshipped as god of wisdom and remover of obstacles and is invoked before the beginning of any major undertaking.  Lord Shiva, along with Lord Brahma and Lord Vishnu, forms the great triad of Hindu deities. There are about three million Hindus in USA.

Indian students obtain highest number of F-1 visa OPT approvals: Study

Students from India with 72,151 Optional Practical Training (OPT) approvals, ranked among the highest with Chinese students getting 68,847 approvals, accounted for more than half (57%) of all those who were approved for OPT and found jobs from 2012 to 2015.

According to Pew Research, a growing number of high-skilled foreign workers find jobs in the United States under a program known as Optional Practical Training (OPT), which allows foreign graduates from U.S. universities to work in the country on a temporary basis. According to a study released on May 1, the Pew study analyzed U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement data received through a Freedom of Information Act request.

Other top countries included South Korea (14,242), Taiwan (7,032) and Nepal (5,309). Unlike other U.S. visa programs, OPT has no cap on the number of foreign graduates who can participate. OPT is not subject to congressional oversight, though the program, which was created in 1947, can be changed by a U.S. president. The study shows India and Iran have the highest shares of OPT employees with STEM degrees.

Graduates in STEM fields accounted for at least 70% of OPT approvals from India, Iran, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka from 2012 to 2015, according to Pew’s analysis of USCIS data. Of the 72,151 from India employed under OPT, 84% had STEM degrees, the highest percentage of any origin country. Iran (79%), Bangladesh (74%) and Sri Lanka (70%) also had high shares of STEM graduates. Among those from China, 54% went to STEM graduates.

The Pew data from USCIS showed the federal government approved nearly 700,000 OPT applications in fiscal years 2008 through 2014, almost as many as those getting the H-1B visas now under review by the Trump administration.

Data from fiscal 2008 to fiscal 2014, show 768,214 H-1B visas were awarded, compared with 696,914 OPT approvals. Many of those working in the U.S. under the OPT program go on to apply for H-1B visas to stay longer in the U.S., Pew says.

The total number of foreign graduates using OPT may continue to increase in subsequent years, Pew predicts, as more than 1 million foreign students studied at U.S. higher educational institutions in the 2015-16 school year, a record high, according to Pew.

U.S. college graduates with F-1 visas for foreign students may apply to OPT, and those approved may work in the U.S. for up to 12 months in their field of study. However, those in STEM fields (Science, technology engineering, and mathematics) field may work in the U.S. for longer – up to 36 months, an expansion made during the Obama administration.

Interestingly, only 4 percent of those employed under the OPT program from 2012 to 2015, worked at the ten largest tech companies in the Fortune 500.

Ground-Breaking Ceremony of Hare Krishna Temple in Naperville

Chicago IL: Sunday May 21st marked the Bhumipuja or ground-breaking ceremony of ISKCON Naperville. The temple is currently an old building that was acquired by ISKCON about 7 years back. As the popularity of the temple grew in the area, the devotee & visitor base expanded considerably and the existing facilities are stretched to its limit, which led to a plan for a major expansion of the temple. The ground-breaking ceremony marked the beginning of this project. The Hare Krishna movement, International Society for Krishna consciousness (ISKCON), is a global community connecting to each other, the world around us, and God through service and the reciprocation of love.  ISKCON, founded by His Divine Grace Srila Prabhupada, has temples all over the world numbering over 650 temples, 65 eco-friendly farms with 12+ million followers. Naperville temple is one of the latest additions to this global community.

The event was a huge success attended by approximately 1,000 people including ISKCON leaders, devotees, Greater Chicago residents, and various elected officials including Naperville mayor Steve Cherico. The event included a special vedic ceremony including fire sacrifice, and speeches by prominent personalities followed by lunch. Mayor Steve Cherico has been very supportive of the temple and is excited about this project. “The ISKCON temple brings a great element of diversity to the Naperville community” he said, in his speech at the event. He also said “Programs like ISKCON are what makes Naperville a better place”.

ISKCON Naperville temple is currently involved in various community programs. With the expansion of the temple several new programs will be added. One of ISKCON’s popular programs is instruction of the profound messages of the Bhagavad Gita, one of the greatest philosophical and religious dialogues known to man, a holy book of the vedic culture existing for thousands of years. Currently the temple offers this spiritual education for children and adults at the temple as well as in smaller personalized settings within the community known as Bhakti Vriksha programs.  Other popular programs include the vegetarian Prasadam (sanctified food) service which is a free Sunday feast offered to all visitors at the temple and it will be further expanded after the commercial kitchen is built in the new temple. The new temple will offer classes in devotional dance, music and art centered on Krishna. There are also plans to offer sessions in health and well-being, Yoga & meditation. The temple will also have facility to expand our winter and summer programs that are currently offered to children. Leadership and management training programs are planned to engage the youth in various services. The addition of all these programs will be a great gift to the Naperville community and to all visitors of the temple.

The total cost of the temple expansion is approximately $4 Million of which around $600,000 has been pledged so far. This will allow the project to be completed in phases.  Donations of any amount are welcome. ISKCON Naperville can be reach

Peter Brook: ‘Mahabharata’ Is Part of World Heritage

Peter Brook, no stranger to challenges, is known for his groundbreaking productions of ”Marat-Sade” and ”A Midsummer Night’s Dream” and more lately his version of Bizet’s ”Carmen” at the Vivian Beaumont Theater. But for the 60-year-old director, his production of the Indian epic represents a culmination of a lifelong search for theatrical expression of mankind’s greatest dramas and deepest dilemmas.

In his colossal French-language adaptation, of the ”The Mahabharata,” Brook, synthesizing all his previous theatrical inventions, did nothing less than attempt to transform Hindu myth into universalized art, accessible to any culture. This vast enterprise was undertaken by Mr. Brook with a team of close colleagues: the writer Jean-Claude Carriere (who collaborated with Mr. Brook on ”Carmen” and is known for writing such films as ”The Return of Martin Guerre” and ”Danton”), the set and costume designer Chloe Obolensky, the lighting designer Jean Kalman and a company of 21 actors from 16 countries, plus five musicians, under Toshi Tsuchitori’s direction, who play dozens of Oriental and African instruments.

They all visited India – some, including Mr. Brook, several times -and closely studied Hindu scripture, costume, art and music. But the total concept – artistic and philosophical – is that of Mr. Brook.

Although parts of ”The Mahabharata” have been used in Indian dance, song and the ritual Kathakali drama, this is the first time the whole epic has been adapted for the theater. An immense work, 15 times the length of the Bible, believed to have been written in Sanskrit between 200 B.C. and A.D. 200, ”The Mahabharata” is the longest single poem in world literature. Consisting of 18 volumes and 90,000 couplets, it is a compilation of the myths, legends, wars, folklore, ethics, history and theology of ancestral India, including the Hindu sacred book, the Bhagavad Ghita. Revered in India but little known in the West, ”The Mahabharata” is to South Asians what the Bible along with the Iliad and the Odyssey are to us.

Thirty years after he mounted the hefted production of the ancient Indian epic “Mahabharata” for audiences world-wide, renowned British stage director Peter Brook – who, it wouldn’t be an exaggeration to say, is inarguably one of the most influential theater personalities of our time – returns with an intimate new interpretation and staging of this timeless tale. But this time, through his poignant new drama, “Battlefield,” Brook takes audiences on a theatrical journey to post-world war uncertainties; how after winning the monstrous battle, King Yudhishtira surveys the battlefield and seeks to find a just way to rule.

“Mahabharata is a really great, great work which we know contains almost everything but that also contains the worst in human kind,” Brook, now, 92, who is currently in San Francisco, Calif., where “Battlefield” will be staged at the American Conservatory Theater’s Geary Theater through May 21, told the media. “All the different phases of human history, they were all in the Mahabharata. In India, even today there isn’t a politician who doesn’t end his speech with somehow using a quotation from the Mahabharata and the Bhagwad Gita. It continually comes back in India today and I think it’s natural for us to feel that not just India, this is a part of the world heritage…at a time the world needs the wisdom the king from old, old ancient India gave.”

In the first of the four yugas, Brook stated that “India was rapidly at the peak of the first yuga when the rest of the world, Europe everywhere were just struggling to try to find a great sense to meaning to life.” Winning a war, Brook said, comes with a greater responsibility.

The 70-minute drama, which is in contrast to the nine-hour production Brook staged in 1985, followed by a film version directed by him in 1989, sticks to minimalism and maximum use of space onstage, to convey the point. Reiterating that “Battlefield” “isn’t a spectacle,” Brook said that they were “trying to take a short path and bring the story to life as intensely as possible, for that you need concentration and you take away what’s not necessary.” “Battlefield” is adapted and directed by Brook and his collaborator Marie-Hélène Estienne.

Modi should ensure religious freedoms: U.S. lawmaker

Expressing concerns about “incendiary” speeches made by Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, a senior American legislator of India origin said Prime Minister Narendra Modi must “use his position” to ensure “religious freedoms” in India.

In an exclusive interview to The Hindu, U.S. Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal, who was part of a visiting Congressional delegation, spoke of increasing concerns over “rhetoric” in India, but also over hate-speech in the U.S., where immigrants have faced a series of attacks.

“Just as we are critical of our government for attempts to suppress religious freedom, we want to make sure that there is religious freedom around the world,” Ms. Jayapal said, accusing Mr. Adityanath of using “rhetoric around [minorities], calling for [minorities] to be killed; a number of places where he has been incendiary… we do think that is counter to everything Prime Minister Modi has said.”

According to Ms. Jayapal, the concerns had been shared by her Indian-American constituents, and other delegation members. When asked if her comments and those of the delegation amounted to interference in India’s internal democratic processes, Ms. Jayapal said, “It would be an over-step if we said, ‘don’t appoint this person’. That’s not what we are saying. What we intend to say is that [PM Modi] has tremendous power as leader of India and he should use that power to stand up for everybody to practice their religion.”

Ms. Jayapal was part of an eight-member bipartisan delegation of American lawmakers led by House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi. The group included the Co-Chair of the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission that releases an annual review of countries. The Congressmen met with Finance and Defence Minister Arun Jaitley and Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar on Wednesday, and with Mr Modi on Thursday, for discussions on areas of “security, economics and values” where both countries shared concerns.

“The Prime Minister exchanged views with the delegation members on the bilateral partnership and other issues of mutual interest,” a release from the PMO said after the meeting.

In its statement, Ms. Pelosi’s office said the delegation had “exchanged views on our security cooperation and the terrorist threat, India’s leadership addressing the climate crisis, and our mutual priority of respecting the human rights of all people in our countries.”

Ms. Jayapal said the delegation, that had earlier met with the Dalai Lama and members of the Tibetan ‘government-in-exile’, was very appreciative of India’s continued hospitality to the Tibetan spiritual leader and accused China of “exerting pressure” on countries including the U.S., and Nepal against him.

“I’m proud of my birth country India for its support to them, and for making it clear that no economic considerations will be allowed to overshadow this issue,” Chennai-born Congresswoman Jayapal said, referring to the Chinese government’s protest over the delegation’s visit to Dharamshala on Wednesday.

Ms. Jayapal, who immigrated to the U.S. and took on citizenship several years later, is a former human rights activist who has worked on immigration reform as well as countering anti-immigrant sentiments in the U.S.

New York Indian Film Festival showcases major ethnic movies from India

For the first time, New York Indian Film Festival (NYIFF) showcased movies from almost all major states in India. Indo-American Arts Council President & Executive Director Aroon Shivdasani welcomed guests to the opening night screening to what has been described as “the Sundance of Indian film festivals”. Presented by the Indo-American Arts Council, the film festival took place from April 30 to May 7 in New York City.
NYIFF is considered the oldest, most prestigious film festival of its kind in the United States, screening premieres of films made from, of, and about the countries in the Indian subcontinent in all different genres.
Konkona Sen Sharma has been named the best director for her directorial debut “A Death in the Gunj” and the best actress for “Lipstick Under My Burkha” at 2017’s “#NYIFF2017 Awards Winner Best Director is Konkona Sensharma @konkonas @chhabs @aroonshiv,” the official account of NYIFF announced on Twitter.
Sen, 37, won the award for directing the drama thriller which stars Kalki Koechlin, Vikrant Massey, Jim Sarbh and Tanuja. The film also features one of the last performances by veteran actor Om Puri, who passed away in January this year. “#NYIFF2017 Awards Winner Best Actress is @konkonas @chhabs @aroonshiv,” the account read.
She received the top honor for her performance in Alankrita Shrivastava’s “Lipstick Under My Burkha,” a film which explores women’s sexuality. Alankrita also congratulated the actress for her win at the festival on the microblogging site. “Yay! @konkonas wins the best actress at @nyindianff for @lipstickmovie #lipstickundermyburkha,” she wrote.
K Kaladharan won the best actor for Malayalam film “Ottayaal n Paatha” (“A Narrow Path”) and Shubhashish Bhutiani’s “Mukti Bhawan” was declared the best film at the 17th annual film extravaganza. “An Insignificant Man” won the best documentary and Malayalam film “Kammatipaddam” was honored for the screenplay. Onir’s film “Aaba” was declared the best short film at the festival.
Director Alankrita Shrivastava’s controversial new film “Lipstick Under My Burkha”, which had earlier been refused a certification by India’s Central Board of Film Certification, opened the 17th Annual New York Indian Film Festival (NYIFF) to much anticipation and fanfare. The gala premiere was held on the evening of April 30th at Village East Cinema in Downtown Manhattan.
Produced by Prakash Jha and starring Konkona Sen Sharma, Ratna Pathak, Aahana Kumra and Plabita Borthakur, the film tells overlapping stories of four women as they try to break out of their repressive lives in a conservative society.
The title comes from a Muslim college student who secrets lipstick under burkha, as she aspires to audition for a pop music competition at her school. The other characters include a young, married beautician having an affair; a photographer; an oppressed, entrepreneurial mother and homemaker selling household items door-to-door and a middle-aged widow who conducts a romance by phone.
Although “Lipstick Under My Burkha” was censored by the Central Board back in January, as being among other things “lady-oriented”, director Shrivastava said that their decision was successfully appealed to the Film Certification Appellate Tribunal. “They have found that the decision of the Central board was wrong and have overturned it,” she confirmed. Shrivastava also anticipates that the release date of film will be announced in the next few weeks, which might mean the film could be in theaters over this summer.
Shrivastava reiterated that even though there are constitutional guarantees of women’s rights, the status of many women is still very repressed. Kumra commented, regarding how there are so few good roles for female actors, that “You don’t get these types of scripts every day!”
Much-talked about “Lipstick Under My Burkha” did receive somewhat mixed reviews from the premiere’s attendees. Noted cookbook author Madhur Jaffrey thought the film showcased women’s issues and was “wonderfully directed”. On the other hand, filmmaker Kawa Hatef, showing his short film “Aarsa” later in the Festival, thought that while “Lipstick” raised important issues, it had “missed its mark technically”.
Village East Cinema was an ideal venue for “Lipstick Under My Burkha”s New York debut and will host the NYIFF features. Of vintage Moorish design, with an analog marquee and staggered balcony seating, the theater gives the effect of being in an old-style movie palace.
Among the 250 audience members sharing the experience were such glittering luminaries as writer Salman Rushdie, Pepsico CEO Indra Nooyi and actor Rahul Bose. The red carpet was literally rolled out at the theater for the dignitaries, as well as the film people who were presenting the results of their efforts later in the Festival.
 “It’s a lovely festival, we love the people in the Festival, they always have a wonderful program!” commented Meenu Gaur, director of “Jeewan Haathi” (“Elephant in the Room”)

Gujarat and Maharashtra Day celebrated at Times Square

The second annual show which went over two hours saw a terrific turnout, to celebrate the foundation of the two states, Gujarat and Maharashtra Day, here on the iconic Times Square on Sunday April 29. Last year, at the inaugural joint celebrations of Maharashtra Day and Gujarat Day at Times Square, a heavy downpour made the event a bit muted, as revelers and tourists made a beeline for cover.
A sizeable crowd thronged around cultural performances and free workshops. Times Square rang with the sounds a band of Dhol Tasha Lezhim artists, dressed in colorful traditional attire, who also attracted passers-by from around the world to stop and watch their performance. Maharashtra Day commemorates the formation of the state when the earlier Bombay State was divided on May 1 1960.
This year, the cultural festival saw 60 performers. There were 200 invited guests from Tristate area and Philadelphia. In India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi greeted Gujarat and Maharashtra on the eve of their Foundation Day on May 1, speaking via video conference to the members of diaspora.
“I congratulate the citizens of Gujarat and Maharashtra. Both the states have striven to reach the heights of progress continually, contributed to the development of the nation and a number of great people have born in both states have continuously inspired us,” Modi said in his monthly radio address ‘Mann Ki Baat’.

Surati’s Holi Hai at Jersey City waterfront

The Holi festival 2017, organized by Jersey City’s nonprofit Surati for Performing Arts on April 29, celebrated the essence of spring. Held in the waterfront area of Exchange Place under perfect weather conditions, the 9th Festival of Colors saw its largest turnout this year, with attendees engaging in throwing of bright colored powders, listening and making music, dancing, enjoying food, drink and cultural performances.
As per reports, Jersey City officials estimated an attendance of almost 8,000 people at the event. This year the festival was presented by &TV, the City of Jersey City, Hudson County Office of Cultural and Heritage Affairs and Jersey City Cultural Affairs.
The festivities began at noon and continued up to 8 PM. The event drew people from across the Tri-state. Some of the noted guests included Consul General of India in New York Riva Ganguly Das, the Mayor of Jersey City Steven Fulop, representatives from the office of Assemblyman Raj Mukherji, and Dr. Sudhir Parikh, publisher of Desi Talk and recipient of India’s Padma Shri award. “We are thrilled to see such a large crowd this year and are thankful for our supporters. Holi is a special festival and we are glad to be able to bring this spirit to Jersey City with dance, music and theatrical performances by different community groups,” Rimli Roy, founder and artistic director of Surati, said.
There were cultural performances by children from the community and Surati students, followed by live music, stand-up comedy and plenty of dance performances. Among them was a thought-provoking theatrical performance by actresses from In Full Color, founded by playwright and director Summer Dawn Hortillosa; some live bands, including a stellar performance by the acoustic band Eventually Epic with vocals by Sachin Premasuthan, that play across a spectrum of musical genres ranging from classic rock to Bollywood beats. The Beacons- a student live band who will soon be travelling to India to raise funds for a cause, also performed.
he Surati touring company opened the show with a medley of classical and folk dance forms to fusion music. There was live music from various communities and genres, solo performers such as the violinist Swapna Patel, vocals by Vidya Jatin Parekh, jazz choreographed by Surati company dancer Paloma De Vega, signature Bollywood routines choreographed by Surati dancers Abhishek Singhania, Reba Browne and Alisha Desai, veena by Gopanand Srinivasarao, vocals by Sujoy Haldar and Indian classical Kathak dance by Milini Vithanalage. Stand-up comedy by Ramki Muthukrishnan added mirth to the event.
A highlight was Surati’s modern dance rendition of Rabindranath Tagore song-dance genre with Western classical ballet, a tribute both to Holi and the Nobel Laureate’s 156th birthday. The performance was a favorite of all those who attended, according to organizers.
Other performing arts schools participating included Navatman from New York City, performing traditional Bharatnatyam, as did students from Calai Chandra School of Bharatnatyam. Children from other local dance schools and community groups also participated.
The Master of ceremonies was actress Nayana Parsatoon and DJ Thomas with Bushwick Sound by Carlos. The after-party began at 4:30 pm with the live band kicking off the mood for DJ and dancing.

Inimitable India on show at the Rubin Museum of Art

Sixty nine remarkable photos showcasing India’s colorful culture are on exhibition at the Rubin Museum of Art in New York City, entitled ‘Henri Cartier-Bresson: India in Full-Frame’, through September 4, 2017.
Disputed borders, refugees, charismatic leaders, assassinations—the India of the mid-century does not sound so distant from the world today. It was a time and place captured expertly and in great depth by the pioneering photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson (1908–2004).
In 1947 Cartier-Bresson co-founded the internationally renowned cooperative photographic agency Magnum Photos. Later that same year he undertook his first trip to India as part of a three-year stay in Asia. At the time, India was undergoing a massive political transition, having gained independence from British colonial rule and been partitioned from Pakistan. In January 1948 Cartier-Bresson traveled to Delhi to meet with one of the key players in that transition, India’s great leader Mahatma Gandhi. It would be one of Gandhi’s final meetings before the leader’s assassination at the hands of a Hindu nationalist on January 30.
The resulting photos of Gandhi’s last day of life and the events surrounding his funeral, which helped catapult Cartier-Bresson to international fame, are part of a selection of 69 photographs from the photographer’s travels to India shared in the exhibition. They reflect his abiding interest in the people and sites of India, including some examples of his “street photography” style that has influenced generations of photographers. Together they illustrate a master photographer’s perspective on transformative moments in Indian history.
Henri Cartier-Bresson traveled to India five times, starting from 1947, as part of a three-year stay in Asia, after he co-founded the internationally renowned cooperative photographic agency Magnum Photos. Over the course of two decades, he captured through his lens India’s people – the rich and the famous, the poor, marginalized and ostracized; momentous political and social occasions, like arguably nobody else has ever done.
The exhibition makes one thing amply clear: Cartier-Bresson (1908-2004) was as much at ease in delineating India’s mind-boggling diversity and crowds, its humongous, proud culture, stark poverty and pathos – without his subjects losing dignity, as in the company of such illustrious men and women as Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, Edwina Mountbatten, the Maharani of Baroda – who looks resplendent in diamonds that once belonged to Napoleon, and Ramana Maharshi, capturing some startling private moments.

INOC celebrates Punjab victory in New York

Indian National Overseas Congress, USA (INOC) held a Celebration meeting in Richmond Hill New York to congratulate newly elected President of Punjab Pradesh Congress Sunil Kumar Jhakar. Mr. Jakhar was elected thrice from Abohar Constituency of Punjab (2002-2017).
INOC,USA (Punjab Wing) welcomed the Congress High command’s decision in selecting such a dynamic candidate with the hope that under his leadership Congress Party  will be  strengthened even more supporting Chief Minister Captain Amarinder Singh’s administration.  To thank the High Command and to show their jubilation over Sunil Jhakar, Sweets & Laddoo were  also distributed among the participants. George Abraham, Chairman, Mr. Mohinder Singh Gilzian, President & Mr. Jasvir Singh (Punjab Chapter President) were also present at the meeting.

NRIs laud International Basketball Federation decision to allow headgear

The International Basketball Federation’s decision to allow players to wear headgear, is being praised by Indian-Americans as well as U.S. lawmakers who have for years pressured the body to do so. Basketball’s international governing body has approved a new rule that will allow players to wear headgear that complies with their religious faith. The Switzerland-based body, known as FIBA, says the rule will take effect in games from on Oct. 1.

The federation announced May 4, in Hong Kong, that the Federation of International Basketball Associations (FIBA) in their first-ever Mid-Term Congress, unanimously ratified the FIBA Central Board’s decision for a new rule that will allow players to wear headgear. Representatives from 139 National Federations attended that congress, according to a press release.

The organization laid down certain rules for the headgear, saying the guidelines were developed to minimize the risk of injuries as well as preserve consistency of the color of the uniform. It will come into effect as of 1 October this year.

The pressure built up when two Sikh players were told by referees that they must remove their turbans if they were to play in FIBA’s Asia Cup in 2014. Following the Asia Cup incident, Congressmen Joe Crowley, D-N.Y., and Ami Bera, D-California, led multiple letters signed by dozens of Members of Congress urging FIBA’s board to end its discriminatory policy against players who wear turbans.

The federation began the process of review and revision of the rules with an ultimate eye toward a final decision after the 2016 Olympics. “The decision from the International Basketball Federation to allow Sikhs and other players to wear articles of religious faith while competing is welcome news,” Bera and Crowley said in a joint statement following the latest FIBA decision. An aide to Congressman Crowley told News India Times the lawmaker worked “very closely” with numerous organizations to get this ruling from FIBA. “We are very thankful to the Sikh community in the U.S. for working with us to make this happen,” the aide said.

In September, more than 40 U.S. lawmakers, led by Bera and Crowley, sent yet another letter to FIBA, reiterating their demand for a change in policy. Sikhs in the U.S., including the Sikh Coalition, a U.S. based advocacy organization, have run a concerted campaign to change the rules that required them to remove their turbans in international competitions. In addition to Sikhs, changes to FIBA’s policy will also allow hijabs or other religious headgear to be worn by players.

The Sikh Coalition called it a “game changer. FIBA is sending a very clear message to the rest of the world that diversity and tolerance matter in sport,” said Sikh Coalition Senior Religion Fellow Simran Jeet Singh is quoted saying in a press release. “If implemented appropriately, ending this discriminatory policy opens the door for millions of young people to practice their faith and pursue their dreams,” Singh added.

The vote ends a ban that was put in place 20 years ago for safety reasons. FIBA introduced a two-year testing phase in 2014 for headgears before making the vote to lift the ban. “I think we came out in a good place, at the right place,” said USA Basketball CEO Jim Tooley, who is on the FIBA executive committee, in an Associated Press report. “I think it’s a good step for FIBA to put this issue kind of behind it and go from there.”

The new rule, which will take effect at the start of October, requires headgear to be black, white or the same dominant color as the uniform for all players. It cannot cover any part of the face, have no opening or closing elements around the face and/or neck, and have no parts that extrude from its surface, according to the AP report.

Sri Balaji Temple Chicago celebrates Millennium of Sri Ramanuja Acharya

This year marks the millennium, 1,000th birth anniversary (Sahasrabdi) of the legendary Sri Ramanuja Acharya.  Hindus around the globe celebrated this memorable event by paying tribute to the great Acharya who worked tirelessly, and selflessly for the betterment of humanity.  Sri Venkateswara Swami (Balaji) temple of greater Chicago conducts Religious functions in an authentic style with a team of dedicated and well trained priests from Tirupati.  The Temple management with profound dedication celebrated this auspicious occasion in a grand manner on April 29, and April 30.  The Celebrations included Religious and Cultural activities with enthusiastic participation from youths as well as adults from the community.  An estimated 1,000+ devotees from Chicagoland area and neighboring states as well as territories that are far like California participated in the two-day celebration to pay tribute to the spiritual master.

Sri Ramanuja Acharya was born in 1017 AD in a small town called Sri Perembudur, near Chennai, and lived for 120 years.  He was a spiritual leader with strong intellect who mastered the Vedas and other Hindu scriptures at a very young age.  He was a visionary who systematically expounded philosophical truths and synthesized Jnana (knowledge) and Bhakti (devotion) into a philosophy called Visishtadvaita.  He was a leader and a social reformer who broke barriers and worked for the betterment of everyone without regard to gender, creed or caste.  He perceived God as the Super Divine that is all-pervasive, all-inclusive, all-potent, and all merciful.  He had the vision that everyone should be able to reach God and attain moksha (salvation), through utmost love for God through Saranagati (self-surrender), and Bhakti (devotion).  Sri Ramanuja Acharya enlightened this path through his teachings and practices recorded in his nine-spiritual works in Sanskrit.  He introduced several religious practices to complement the established Agama worship procedures in temples.  These practices are followed even today at all Vaishnava temples including major temples like Tirupati.

The Religious programs for the Millennium celebrations at Sri Venkateswara Swami (Balaji) temple was conducted by the team of Vaishnava priests with overflowing devotion and enthusiasm.  The religious program highlights included abhishekam for Sri Balaji (Utsava Murthy) and Sri Ramanuja Acharya; Homam (Havan) for the Acharya; Utsavam (ceremonial procession) for Sri Balaji and Sri Ramanuja Acharya; Vedic Chants, Prabandha and Stothra Parayanams rendered by Parayana Gosti lead by the temple priests; Bhajans by a team of devoted Ladies.  To commensurate the special Millennium celebrations, several devotees joined hands and made an offering of “Kireetam” (crown) for the great Acharya.

The cultural programs featured youths and adults from the temple devotee community.  The program highlights included a drama in English by youths depicting key events of the life of Sri Ramanuja; Music concert capturing devotional hymns; Bhajans and Quiz contest by temple youths; Villu Patu(bow song)  and Kolattam (Musical play and dance with sticks) presented by youths.

The celebrations concluded with the grand finale Drama in Tamil “Ettram Thantha Ethirajar” featuring selected milestones of the life of Sri Ramanuja Acharya.  The two-hour play was showcased by a cast of 44 people.  The play was directed by Sri Sekar Chandrasekar and produced by Sri Narayan Thirumalai.  This was followed by a dance program by Natya Dance Theater called “Ramanujar Kanda Pokkisham” choregraphed by Sri Hema Rajagopalan.  The musical dance program captured the works and Bhakti of Alwars, the saints, as seen through the eyes of Sri Ramanuja Acharya.  The program concluded with Dr. Prabhakar Gupta Garla, Chairman of the temple thanking all the Devotees, Temple staff, Priests and the Volunteers that poured their hearts to make the function a grand success.

The Millennium celebrations of Sri Ramanuja Acharya at the temple was blissful with our Devotees immersed in devotion and excitement.  The event was complemented with Annadanam, servings of scrumptious lunch and dinner for everyone for both days.     The feelings of the participants can only be captured like this …” This is a remarkable event that we will remember forever”

Let us cherish Sri Ramanuja Acharya’s teachings every day as his legacy lives on.  Let us pay tribute to this Legend on this auspicious millennium 1,000th year birth celebrations and remember him for all the sacrifices he made for the enlightenment of humanity.

Peter Brook has another magnificent adaptation of epic, Mahabharata

Following the stunning success of The Suit, which played to standing ovations and sold-out houses at American Conservatory Theater (A.C.T.) in 2014, legendary director Peter Brook returns to A.C.T. with Battlefield. Thirty years after Brook’s groundbreaking adaptation of the Indian epic The Mahabharata, the director has created an intimate new interpretation and staging of this timeless tale in perhaps his finest work. A newly crowned king surveys a post-war battlefield-his army has won him the crown, but at what price? Written almost 2,500 years ago, the Mahabharata’s magical story of finding tranquility in the midst of war and destruction has striking connections to modern times, and has inspired some of Brook’s most beautiful images and most transformative theatrical moments.

Press night will be held on Wednesday, May 3, 2017. Single tickets (ranging from $20-$105) are available at the A.C.T. Box Office at 415.749.2228 or online at www.act-sf.org. Ticket prices are subject to change without notice. The cast of Battlefield features Carole Karemera (through 5/16), Jared McNeill, Ery Nzaramba, Sean O’Callaghan, and Toshi Tsuchitori (musician). Karen Aldridge joins the cast beginning 5/17.

Says Perloff: “One of the seminal experiences of my theater-going life was experiencing eight hours of Peter Brook‘s The Mahabharata at Brooklyn Academy Of Music in the early 1980’s. The depth and breadth of Brook’s vision astonished me–both his ability to see the world from an epic, grand perspective and at the same time to render every emotional detail and every psychological gesture absolutely specific and totally human.

Peter Brook‘s work was what introduced me to theater to begin with, and I still go back to his brilliant little book “The Empty Space” whenever I want to remind myself about why we do what we do. Bringing Battlefield to the Geary for our 50th Anniversary season is a gift come true and a reminder of the essence of theater and why it continues to matter.”

Adapted and directed by Peter Brook and Marie-Hélène Estienne, the creative team for Battlefield includes Toshi Tsuchitori (Music), Oria Puppo (Costumes), and Philippe Vialatte(Lighting).

In connection with Battlefield, A.C.T. will offer numerous InterACT events-presented free of charge-that will give patrons opportunities to get closer to the action while having an entire night out at the theater. Visit act-sf.org/interact to learn more about subscribing to these events throughout the season: Titled “Battlefield,” the new drama explores the uncertain future of a post-world war, and will be staged at the American Conservatory Theater’s Geary Theater in San Francisco, Calif., through May 21.

In the 70-minute drama, which is adapted and directed by Brook and his collaborator Marie-Hélène Estienne, a newly crowned king surveys a post-war battlefield — his army has won him the crown, but at what price? Written almost 2,500  years    ago, the Mahabharata’s magical story of finding tranquility in the midst of war and destruction has striking connections to modern times, and has inspired some of Brook’s most beautiful images and most transformative theatrical moments. For tickets and more information, visit www.act-sf.org or call on (415)749-2228.

NESSP launches GoFundMe campaign as for largest Sai Temple in North America

CHELMSFORD, MA (April 19, 2017) — New England Shirdi Sai Parivar, which is nearing the completion of North America’s largest Sai temple this summer, announced that it has launched GoFundMe campaign to raise $500,000. As of April 19, 2017, NESSP has raised $25,235 on GoFundMe.

The two-story, 40,000-square-foot temple is being built on a 28-acre site in Groton, MA. The temple currently operates out of a 7,200-square-foot rented facility in Chelmsford, MA, and will relocate to the new facility when it is completed this year in summer.

NESSP acquired the land for $1.14 million and plans to spend an additional $10 million to complete the new complex. As of now, the temple has raised over $7.5 million, and currently aims to raise $500,000 for the completion of the Phase 1 and the grand opening.
When completed, the new temple will be largest Sai Temple in North America.

There are many options and ways to donate to this great cause. For more information on how to donate, visit www.BostonSaiTemple.org.

The first phase of construction of the temple complex includes a temple building, a kitchen, a big dining hall and few community rooms. The second phase will include three residential units for priests and a 500-seat auditorium.

The temple will be will be open to everyone and people can hold weddings, ayengetrams and other community and cultural events. The temple complex will provide a great venue for poojas, learning and weddings where havans in open can be held and barat (wedding party) can come with horses and full festivities like in India.

Reading, MA-based NM Construction Corp.as a general contractor. The project architect is Braintree, MA-based BD Nayak Architects. Both have extensive experience in building religious institutions in New England.

Founded in 2006, New England Shirdi Sai Parviaar (NESSP) is a non-profit organization. Its mission is to promote the philosophy of Shri Shirdi Sai Baba and to accordingly support religious, spiritual, cultural and charitable activities. NESSP was formed by devotees who share their love for Shri Shirdi Sai Baba and are inspired by His teachings. For more information, visit www.NESSP.org

To support this great landmark, please visit NESSP’s fundraising page at https://www.gofundme.com/SaiTempleShrine

Catholic priests meet Yogi, request freedom to worship without fear

A delegation of bishops from Catholic churches of Uttar Pradesh met chief minister Yogi Adityanath here on Friday and requested him to ensure safety of their places of worship. The meeting assumes significance in the backdrop of a recent incident in which right-wing Hindu Yuva Vahini (HYV) activists brought a prayer service at a church in Dathauli area of Maharajganj district to a halt, alleging that the pastor was converting Hindus to Christianity.

The HYV, set up by CM Yogi Adityanath in 2002, had also filed a complaint against the pastor Yohannan Adam. “We requested the chief minister to ensure the safety and security of our places of worship, and the freedom to worship without fear,” said Fr Gerald John Mathias, Bishop, Catholic Diocese of Lucknow, after the meeting.

Bishop Mathias said that certain issues related to schools and local administration were also taken up during the meeting, which lasted for about 15 minutes. “Our meeting with the CM was a courtesy call. It was a cordial meeting. We offered our hearty congratulations and best wishes on his elevation to the position of the chief minister of UP, and assured him of our prayers for the success of his service as the CM of the biggest state of the country,” he said.

Rev. Mathias claimed that the chief minister asked them to continue their services to the poor and the needy in various fields, including education, and practice their faith without fear.  “The CM assured us of strict action against those who take law into their own hands,” he said.

Right wing organisations have been at loggerheads with Christian missionaries, accusing them of converting people to their faith through coercion and allurement. Several Hindu groups have conducted ‘ghar wapsi’ (return to Hinduism) of such people.

Earlier this year, HYV activists had attacked the Full Gospel Church in Gorakhpur, accusing its priests of religious conversion. The delegation also included Archbishop Albert D’Souza of Agra, Bishop Thomas T of Gorakhpur, Bishop John Vadakel of Bijnor, Bishop Raphy Manjaly of Allahabad, Bishop Ignatius D’Souza of Bareilly and Bishop Eugene Joseph of Varanasi.

Telugu Association of Greater Chicago celebrates Ugadhi and Sri Rama Navami

Chicago IL:  TAGC-Telugu Association of Greater Chicago (i.e. the first Telugu association in North America) has celebrated Ugadhi and Sri Rama Navami at the Naperville Community Church known as Yellow Box, Naperville, IL 60540. The event was a grand success with an overwhelming response from the Telugu community with over 1,350 guests (Both events) as per membership committee chair Mamatha Lenkala. TAGC conducted Ugadhi & Sri Rama Navami event Cultural programs with local talent followed by ‘Musical night’ program by singers from India.

The Auditorium was well decorated with welcome banners while the stage was decorated with the TAGC logo, thanks to the decoration committee chair Swetha Janamanchi and her team. TAGC membership committee welcomed guests with a smile.

TAGC President Mr. Ramachandra Reddy Ade started the program with Lord Ganesha prayer, along with the cultural team and Board of Directors. In the Ugadhi & Sri Rama Navami cultural event, around 300 participants performed a variety of entertainment programs and shows, which attracted the audience with great attention. The program highlights include Sri Rama Navami theme songs, Maya Bazaar theme songs, Fusion on Lord Shiva, Ugadhi theme skit and Retro couple theme (hits of Tollywood stars from 1970 to 2015), and etc. TAGC President thanked & congratulated Cultural Committee Chair Sujatha Katta, team, and volunteers who worked tirelessly for more than a month to make the event a flawless execution and a memorable event for the Telugu Community in the Chicago land and mid-west areas.

TAGC President and team welcomed the chief guest Sri O.P. Meena. He expressed & invited TAGC members and families to the upcoming Yoga day. TAGC President Ramachandra Ade, Past President Pradeep Kandimalla, Youth committee chair (2016) Venkat Gunuganti and Sri O.P. Meena honored youth members with PVSA certificates for those who volunteered and qualified for year-2016.

TAGC-DF team conducted a special raffle for a great cause during the event and collected funds which will be donated to Aakshya Vidya charitable trust whose mission it is to educate poor people in slums.

President requested guests to honor a moment of silence in loving memory of TAGC founding members Sri. Madhava R Bobbili and Sri. Baburao Javvaji.

“Music does bring people together”- with this motto, TAGC brought singers Anjana Sowmya, Damini Bhatla, Narendra Doddapaneni, Yazin Nizar from India who performed a live concert. The musical night rocked and energized guests in the auditorium with continuous nonstop entertainment for over 3 hours.

Food committee Chair Uma Avadutha with team & volunteers did a wonderful job in serving dinner for such a mass crowd in the allocated time. Tasty dinner was served with a variety of food items co-sponsored by Hyderabad House restaurant Management from the Schaumburg & Naperville locations. Ugadhi pachadi was offered during the dinner.

TAGC President Mr. Ramachandra R Ade thanked the Executive Committee, Board of Directors, and volunteers who have worked for weeks in planning and preparations to make this event memorable. He also thanked all the participants, their parents, teachers, and the guests for their enthusiastic show of support throughout the evening. He also conveyed his gratitude and thanks to sponsors for giving back to the community and requested TAGC members to make use of services provided by sponsors.

Times Square filled with Turbans celebrating Turban Day

Thousands of people wearing Turban filled the iconic Times Square on April 15, to celebrate the second annual Turban Day, a colorful event hosted by Sikhs Of New York, an organization founded by Sikh youth. The event also comprised of the celebration of Vaisakhi, the harvest festival, with raising awareness about Indian-Americans of the Sikh faith who have felt particularly vulnerable post-9/11. The National Sikh Campaign also launched its “We are Sikhs” media blitz at the same event, and the U.S. Congress released a “proclamation” declaring April 15, 2017 as “Turban Day” and “Sikhs of New York Day”, an initiative led by Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-NY.

The four-hour event, held as part of Vaisakhi celebrations, was aimed at spreading awareness among Americans and other nationalities about the Sikh religion and its articles of faith, especially the turban, which has often been misconceived and misidentified as being associated with terrorism particularly in the years since the 9/11 terror attacks. During the event, a proclamation by Congressman Gregory Meeks of the 5th Congressional District of New York declared April 15, 2017 a  ‘Turban Day’, lauding The Sikhs of New York for its dedication in educating other communities about the Sikh faith

Entertainers at the event included Top Naach, a Bhangra group from Virginia; American Sikhs, an instrumental band from the 3HO Foundation in Los Angeles; The Lost Strings of New York, and mandolin player Gagandeep. A Bhangra workshop was also held.

Times Square filled with Turbans celebrating Turban Day“Last year we tied about 3,000 turbans in Times Square and we hope that it will be 7,000 this year,” said Chanpreet Singh, the organization’s founder. “We started Turban Day in 2013 at Baruch College to promote and educate people about the Sikh religion and identity. We are spreading awareness about the Sikh turban and culture. The turban is the crown of each Sikh and represents pride and valor. Turban Day provides an opportunity for those that do not wear a turban to experience a turban and learn about its significance first hand.”

The organization, which has about 600 members, also will be unveiling a new video on Turban Day that is designed to show Sikh people come from all walks of life. The video, which features physicians, businesspeople and even a gymnast, is posted online at Facebook.com/SIKHSOFNY.

“When you see a person in a turban, feel safe,” said Jill Jagjeevan Kaur Ruitenberg, President & CEO of Ruitenberg Lind Design Group of Jamesburg, N.J. and a practicing Sikh featured in the video. “When you see a person wearing a turban they are Sikh. Sikhism is its own religion founded in India over 500 years ago. It is not derived from any other religion. Part of their beliefs are to help and protect people around them, even at the risk of their own lives. They believe in equality for everyone.”

This was the second time that  Turban Day was held at Times Square. It attracted people from as far as Los Angeles and Alberta, Canada, many of whom volunteered to tie the turbans. Governor Andrew Cuomo’s head of Immigration Affairs Jenifer Rajkumar, attended the event.

Close to 500 volunteers helped wrap turbans on those wanting them. Though the event was to start at 12 noon,  people of various ethnicities and cultures lined up from 9:30 am to wear their turban, Chanpreet Singh, 24, founder of Sikhs of New York, told Desi Talk. Turban Day was an opportunity for those that do not wear a turban to experience it and learn about its significance first hand, organizers said.

The four hour Times Square event was live streamed. “Some 400,000 people saw it live. And over 24 hours since the event took place, half a million people have seen the video on our Facebook site,” said Chanpreet Singh, founder of Sikhs of New York.

The impact of the event can be measured not just by the large attendance, but also from the reactions of the crowds, something that was gauged by the volunteers and from posts of those who came to enjoy the entertainment, Singh said. “Our three hash tags, #IamSikh, #IamaSikh, and #Turbanday, each had close to 200 photos posted within 24 hours of the event,” said Singh. a financial analyst with cosmetics giant Estee Lauder, who founded Sikhs of New York while a student at Baruch College in 2013.

“This is a youth initiative of a post-9/11 generation,” Singh said. “I started it mainly because of discrimination I faced at high school. I wanted to make a change,” he said. When distributing informative pamphlets did not appear to be making a difference, the organization began Turban Day. It has been held at Madison Square Park for three years before coming to Times Squate in 2016. “The crowd was a mix of many cultures from different parts of the world and around the United States. That’s one of the reasons we chose Times Square,” he added. They are already planning next year’s Turban Day, which Singh says, will increase from 8,000 to 12,000 turbans, he estimates. That is four times the number (3,000) that were tied at the first Times Square Turban Day in 2016.

Radio Zindagi announces 3rd annual, multicultural, large scale festival – ‘The Ganesh Utsav

APRIL 22, 2017-Fremont, CA – Radio Zindagi and its proud partners , Visitors Coverage &  Star TV & Life OK have announced their 3rd annual, multicultural, large scale festival – ‘The Ganesh Utsav 2017’. The three-day event will commence on Sep 1st at 10am and continue until 11pm on September 3rd 2017.

The big news this year is that Radio Zindagi has tied up with Bay area’s premium theme park and favorite family entertainment destination ‘The Great America Parkway’ as the location for the Ganesh Utsav 2017. The Pavillion and Redwood Amphitheatre areas of the park will be reserved for the festival. The Redwood Amphitheatre will feature the 15 foot hand crafted & hand painted Ganesh idol in all its finery and magnificence flanked by LEDs and laser lighting.

With a seating capacity of 8,500 the Amphitheatre will provide the perfect spot for visitors to relax and admire the idol and pay their respects as well as watch the entertainment and cultural performances and activities planned for the event.  Whereas, the Pavilion area of the park will host booth and food vendors and kids entertainment & activities.

Radio Zindagi announces 3rd annual, multicultural, large scale festival – ‘The Ganesh UtsavTo top that The Great America Parkway will be offering a huge discount on tickets to all the Ganesh Utsav visitors. The regular $69 tickets to the park will be available for purchase at $29 only.

“This year Ganesh will bring an element of fun and adventure along with the regular festivities, “ said Mr Praveen Suggala, CEO and Founder of Radio Zindagi. “ The management at Great America Parkway has been very kind and they have come with this special package for all the attendees. So I would encourage the entire Bay area community to make use of this opportunity and keep your labor day weekend free for a fun and adventurous day at the park and in the company of Lord Ganesh. We promise you an excellent time.”

Two grand stages, one for Ganesh idol and the other for performances will be erected as well as designated areas for food and activities. The event will feature daily aartis and darshan and other festivities such as cultural programs, dance and music performances, fashion show, fancy dress competition for kids, Marathi style lezhim and grand finale performances along with contests and raffles. There will be DJ dance and music after 9pm for all the party lovers and dance enthusiasts.

Radio Zindagi announces 3rd annual, multicultural, large scale festival – ‘The Ganesh UtsavThere will be a variety of vendor booths such as clothing, jewelry, decoration for a great shopping experience and various food booths with sumptuous Indian vegetarian fare. The largest 24 x 7 South Asian Radio Programming network with frequencies in Sf bay area, NJ, NY, CT, Washington, MD and VA. The channel provides listeners with a broad range of South Asian Music, Entertainment, Wellness, Travel, Food, Fashion, Art, Culture, and Ideas. Radio Zindagi shows are based on a wide array of Bollywood music, film reviews, biographies, latest news, women’s hour, informative talk shows unique to the Indian culture like the one based on Astrology and Vastu.

A multi lingual station, Radio Zindagi caters to the entertainment needs of our niche sub community languages too. Apart from Hindi and English, we host shows in language like Punjabi, Telugu, Tamil, Gujarati and Bengali.

Event details include, Ganpati Sthapna on  Sep 1st, with Darshan from 10am-11pm every day; Cultural Programs/Performances/Booths all the days of the festival. For more information and for sponsorship, contact: spponsors@radiozindagi.com; For Booth opportunities, contact: booths@radiozindagi.com; For volunteer opportunities, contact volunteers@radiozindagi.com; And to to participate in kids contests, contact contest@radiozindagi.com.

Chaitra Navratri celebrated with Bhajans at Hari OM Mandir

“Jai Mata Ki” “Jai Mata Ki” This was the chanting that echoed from the walls & in the Congregation Hall of Hari Om Mandir on Saturday, April 1st, 2017!!! A Vishal Mata ki Chowki was held to celebrate the auspicious Chaitra Navratri, on the Fifth Day of the Nine Day series celebrations. Bunty Bawa from California, came to make this event extra special. His energetic & powerful singing made the event an especially memorable one. Amidst Dhol (drums) and ringing bells, Bunty Bawa was welcomed into the Hari Om Mandir, fully packed with devotees waiting anxiously to hear his popular Bhents.

Navratri (nine-night) festival celebrated over nine days and nights, dedicated to the nine embodiments of Goddess Durga. It is one of the important religious festivals in India, celebrated twice a year, with great pomp, affection and zeal all over India. The devotees worship the Nine Incarnations of Goddess Durga till nine days to seek blessing of Maa Durga. It is believed that people who worship Maa Bhagwati, by fasting and chanting mantras during Navratri, will be blessed with prosperity, health and wisdom in their life.

After starting with the recitation of Ganesh Vandana, Bunty Bawa started singing his popular Bhents one after the other…..His NON STOP singing and loud clapping knew no bounds. He enthralled the audiences with his amazing voice and choice of Bhents. Such was the aura of his melodious singing that the congregation felt transported into Mata Vaishno Devi Durbar and started singing, clapping, dancing along with him.

To add to the ambience of the occasion, the Mandir was beautifully decorated with Chunris, Bells, Kalash, Flowers, and Garlands etc. The whole atmosphere was charged with Devotion and Blessings from Maa Durga seemed to be actually showering from Above!!!

Everybody was all praise for Bunty Bawa…his enthusiastic singing and his devotion….People are already looking forward to his program in the next Sharad Navratri in the months of Sept/Oct.

For the first time ever, besides the unprecedented attendance in the Mandir, the entire program was streamed LIVE on Facebook, and hundreds of Devotees were logged in, who also enjoyed the program sitting at home. Several Messages poured in, congratulating the Mandir Management on the tremendous success of the Program. The pious evening culminated with a sumptuous Dinner / Prasad which was equally relished by one and all.

Births of Hindu babies to decline, while Muslim babies to overtake Christians by 2060: Pew Study

Hindus will witness a “dramatic” drop-off in births between 2055 and 2060 due to declining fertility in India, which is home to 94 percent of the community’s global population, according to a new Pew research study.
The Pew Research Center study also said that the number of babies born to Muslim women is expected to overtake those born to Christians worldwide within two decades, making Islam the world’s largest religion by 2075. Beyond 2015, Christian and Muslim mothers are expected to give birth to increasing numbers of babies through 2060.
But Muslim births are projected to rise at a such a faster rate that by 2035 the number of babies born to Muslim mothers will narrowly surpass the number born to Christian mothers. Between 2055 and 2060, the birth gap between the two groups is expected to approach 6 million (232 million births among Muslims vs. 226 million births among Christians).
By contrast, the total number of births is projected to decline steadily between 2015 and 2060 for all other major religious groups, said the study, which was released April 5.
“The drop-off in births will be especially dramatic for Hindus, who are expected to see 33 million fewer births between 2055 and 2060 than between 2010 and 2015, due in large part to declining fertility in India, which is home to 94 percent of the global Hindu population as of 2015,” according to the study titled ‘The Changing Global Religious Landscape’.
Between 2010 and 2015, an estimated 68 million babies were born to unaffiliated mothers, compared with 109 million to Hindu mothers.
Islam is already the world’s fastest-growing religion, according to the study, with the Muslim population increasing by more than 150 million people between 2010 and 2015.
Between 2015 and 2060, the global Muslim population is expected to grow by 70 percent, while Christianity is projected to grow by 34 percent – at which point the two religions will have similar numbers, the report said.
That baby boom will largely be driven by regional trends in age and fertility, according to Alan Cooperman, director of religion research at Pew.
“It’s really a geographic story,” he was quoted as saying by the New York Times.
From 2010 to 2015, Christian women gave birth to 223 million babies, about 10 million more than were born to Muslim women.
But the Pew report predicts a reversal of that pattern by 2060, when Muslim mothers are projected to give birth to 232 million babies, about six million more than their Christian counterparts.
Some 62 percent of Muslims live in the Asia-Pacific region with large populations in Indonesia, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Iran and Turkey, Pew researchers said.
The report’s findings are drawn from the same projections behind a 2015 Pew report that found that the world’s Muslim population will match its Christian population by 2070 and surpass it in the decades that follow.
Both rely on data collected over several years from more than 2,500 global censuses. The projections take into account trends in mortality, fertility, age, migration and religious switching.

Indian fair in New Jersey highlights culture, crafts and cuisine

Indian art and handicrafts, costume jewelry, traditional dresses, Indian cuisine, and an array of classical and Bollywood dance groups were highlights of a two day South Asian festival at the New Jersey Convention and Expo Center here. The India Fair, held April 1 and 2 attracted thousands of people from the tri-state area and beyond, organizers estimate.

The purpose of the event was to bring together the community, various businesses under one roof, promote local talent, diversity, art, culture and heritage in New Jersey, a press release from Business NJ LLC, the organizer of the annual event said. The event was managed by Royal Events and Entertainment.

Fair goers also got a chance to meet Bollywood actress Genelia Deshmukh, who graciously mingled with her fans and posed for photographs. Over 1,000 performers from the tri-state area from several dance schools participated in the two-day cultural program that was coordinated by Arun Anand. Local singers as well as winners “Sa Re Ga Ma Pa” 2016 entertained the attendees with both popular songs and yesteryears classics. Musical attractions, radio and television artists, and non-stop entertainment with live band dominated the cultural show. ndian cuisine – vegetarian and non-vegetarian – was also a major attraction at the fair. Banks, insurance companies, mortgage companies, long distance calling companies, and real estate companies were among the many businesses that participated in the fair.

Kabir Bedi honored by World Heritage Cultural Center

Kabir Bedi, the famous Bollywood star was presented with the World Heritage Cultural Center’s first Lifetime Achievement Cultural Award for his long, distinguished career in the arts. The awards ceremony was held April 5 at the TV Asia studios in New jersey. TV Asia Chairman H.R. Shah was also honored with WHCC’s Community Excellence Award. The evening was hosted by WHCC Board members Jyoti Soni and Victor Cruz.

Kabir Bedi has performed in film, television, and theater and is best known for roles in “The Bold and the Beautiful”, “Octopussy”, the Italian pirate series “Sandokan” (Sandokan), and over 60 Bollywood films including “Khoon Bhari Maang.” Kabir Bedi first film is Hulchul released in 1971. Some of the famous films in which Kabir Bedi acted are Hulchul (1971), Anari (1975), Nagin (1976), Aakhri Kasam (1979), Police Public (1990), Dil Aashna Hai (1992), Yagaar (1992), Kshatriya (1993), Salaami (1994), Kohram (1999), Kranti (2002), Maine Dil Tujhko Diya (2002), Talaash (2003), The Hero (2003), Rudraksh (2004), Asambhav (2004), Kismat (2004), Main Hoon Na (2004), Bewafaa (2005), Chakravyuh (2012). He has received several film awards, including Star Foundation Award in 2012.

The WHCC also announced plans for a new 30,000 square foot building, intended for the culturally diverse Brewster, New York, or Newtown, Conn. area, close to New York City. The facility will include an outdoor amphitheater and indoor theater, music recording studio, world library, lecture hall, class and conference rooms, event space including a grand ballroom, a WHCC press release said.

Founded in 2009, the WHCC has led more than 75 events with over 900,000 attendees in major U.S. cities. “There is a growing unmet need for real, in-person cultural connections,” founder Sattie Persaud said. “The new center for WHCC will enable us to meet that need for more people,” he added.

The center focuses on sharing cultural knowledge and creating a common ground for any culture in the world to interact. It also encourages those from other countries to keep their cultural heritage alive and celebrate and share their way of life through arts and food. It helps break down cultural barriers through education and community events. The new WHCC facility is the first of many planned across the country aimed to help communities to embrace diversity. WHCC plans to raise $200K by June 30 to purchase land for the center, with an intention of raising up to $6 million for the center’s completion.

Largest Sai Temple in North America near completion

CHELMSFORD, MA (April 4, 2017)– New England Shirdi Sai Parivaar, which is nearing the completion of North America’s largest Sai temple this summer, today announced the launch of its final nationwide campaign to raise $500,000.

“We are very excited that we are nearing the completion of this giant project, and we would like to thank our donors from around the country,” said Mahender Singh, president of New England Shirdi Sai Parivaar, known as NESSP. “We have received an overwhelming response from Sai devotees from across North America. Now, we have launched our final fundraising campaign before the completion of the temple this summer.”

The two-story, 40,000-square-foot temple is being built on a 28-acre site in Groton, MA. The temple currently operates out of a 7,200-square-foot rented facility in Chelmsford, MA, and will relocate to the new facility when it is completed this year.

NESSP acquired the land for $1.14 million and is spending an additional $10 million to build the new complex. As of now, the temple has raised over $7.5 million. When completed, the new temple will be largest Sai Temple in North America.

The first phase of construction of the temple complex includes a temple building, a kitchen, a big dining hall and few community rooms. The second phase will include three residential units for priests and a 500-seat auditorium.

The temple will be will be open to everyone and people can hold weddings, ayengetrams and other community and cultural events. The temple complex will provide a great venue for poojas, learning and weddings where havans in open can be held and barat (wedding party) can come with horses and full festivities like in India.

NESSP has brought in Reading, MA-based NM Construction Corp. as a general contractor. The project architect is Braintree, MA-based BD Nayak Architects. Both have extensive experience in building religious institutions in New England.
About NESSP

Founded in 2006, New England Shirdi Sai Parviaar (NESSP) is a non-profit organization. Its mission is to promote the philosophy of Shri Shirdi Sai Baba and to accordingly support religious, spiritual, cultural and charitable activities. NESSP was formed by devotees who share their love for Shri Shirdi Sai Baba and are inspired by His teachings. For more information, visit www.NESSP.org.

Hempstead town celebrates Pakistan’s Republic Day, Lahore Resolution

2017 marks the 77th anniversary of the resolution and the third flag raising by the Hempstead town on Long Island, NY. “America’s largest township is proud of its diverse family, and we are happy to celebrate the myriad of cultures and traditions that make Hempstead Town a great place to live and raise a family,” said Santino.

“Flying the Pakistani Flag alongside the American Flag is a wonderful symbol of unity and inclusion.” March 23 is a national holiday in Pakistan which celebrates both the Lahore Resolution of 1940 and Republic Day (1956). The Lahore Resolution called for the creation of an independent state. This led to the creation of Pakistan, which celebrates this occasion with the national flag being hoisted on public and governmental buildings at dawn.

Hempstead Town Clerk Nasrin Ahmad presents a citation to members of the Pakistani American Society of NY during the Flag raising ceremony celebrating Pakistan Republic Day and the Lahore Resolution. Pictured from left to right are Rafi Fazli, Mohammad Bin Moghni, Dr. Safdar H. Chadda, Clerk Nasrin Ahmad, Magbool Malik and Fazluz Haq Syed.

OHMKara concludes tour of Gujarati literature, humor and poetry in NJ

OHMKara successfully concluded ‘Seven states, seven cities’ tour of Gujarati literature, humor and poetry program, “An evening with Ankit Trivedi”, in the US from February 26 to March 12. This was the fourth consecutive year where OHMKara organized a Gujarati literature and poetry program in their sincere efforts to promote Gujarati language, heritage and culture outside of India.

OHMKara team member Dr. Tushar Patel welcomed the renowned poet, writer, columnist, TV and stage anchor Ankit Trivedi who performed in the wonderfully choreographed and his exceptional poetry style mesmerized the audience in Houston, Rochester-NY, Chicago, Cleveland, Maryland, Connecticut and New Jersey.

Trivedi performed for more than two hours in his superb language and poetry and covered various current topics and discussed typical life style and common practices of Gujaratis which kept the audience engaged and entertained throughout the evening in a delighted mood.

OHMKara, under the visionary leadership of Pinakin Pathak and team members Dr. Tushar Patel, Nishil Parikh, Kalpana Mehta, Deepak Trivedi and Ashish Mehta once again worked as one team, one mission and organized flawless events throughout the country.

OHMKara is now getting ready for one of the biggest Gujarati music concerts with sugam, lok sangeet, drama and poetry all in one, an experience like never before with renowned artists from India in 10 cities in the US in August and September.

More than 15,000 Gujaratis enjoyed the musical journey which was organized by OHMKara with renowned Bollywood singer Parthiv Gohil, two living legends of Gujarati music Gurang Vyas and Purushottam Upadhyay, renowned poet Ankit Trivedi and Margi Hathi, along with several young and versatile singers and musicians from India. The shows were held in Chicago, Cleveland, Dallas, Houston, Austin, Atlanta, New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Detroit and Maryland. OHMKara and their team under the leadership of Chairman Pinakin Pathak believes in promoting and bringing Gujarati heritage, language and literature via musical or poetry evening outside of India since its inception in July 2013.

The tour concluded with a grand finale event held March 12 at TV Asia Auditorium in Edison, New Jersey, where more than 300 people attended. TV Asia Chairman and CEO H.R. Shah was felicitated by team OHMKara with a shawl and Ganesh statue to recognize H.R. Shah’s three decades of community service to promote Gujarati language, culture, heritage and art in the world via television and other media and his recent selection to receive the Padma Shree.

Bihar-Jharkhand Association of North America hosts Holi celebration

Approximately 350 people from the tri-state area attended Holi celebrations hosted by the Bihar-Jharkhand Association of North America at Royal Albert’s Palace in Fords, New Jersey, March 26. Members mingled with each other and enjoyed regional cuisine, raffle, fashion show, and musical and dance performances. b JANA President Anjali Prasad, in her welcome address, talked about the achievements of the organization and its interest in expanding their charity work.

p rasad mentioned that this was the third consecutive year that BJANA has partnered with Smile Train to sponsor free cleft lip surgeries for the poor in Bihar and Jharkhand. BJANA will donate to the Community Food Bank, NJ, this November, Prasad said.She also also talked about a keen interest in contributing to the ‘Adopt a Village’ initiative under the Swachha Bharat initiative to improve sanitation facilities in the villages of Bihar and Jharkhand.

BJANA committee members also welcomed Hirshvardhan Singh, who recently joined the gubernatiorial race in New Jersey.

Vatican greets Jains, seeks collaboration for peace

Jains, whose religion is based on non-violence, are celebrating the 2,615th birth anniversary of Tirthankar Vardhaman Mahavir.  The Vatican sent greetings to people of the Jain religion for their annual festival and sought their collaboration in creating a non-violent society.

The message from the Vatican-based Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue accorded the “warmest felicitations” to those celebrating the 2,615th birth anniversary of Tirthankar Vardhaman Mahavir, who give Jainism its present-day form.

The annual festival called Mahavir Jayanti, is the biggest in their calendar, and falls on April 9 this year. Mahavir is the 24th and last tirthankara (teacher) of the Jain religion, which bases itself on the principle of non-violence.

“Violence, with its many and varied forms, has become a major concern in most parts of the world,” said the greetings from the Vatican. The Indian bishops’ office released it to the press on March 28.

“So, we wish to share with you on this occasion a reflection on how we, both Christians and Jains, can foster non-violence in families to nurture peace in society,” it said. “Causes of violence are as complex and diverse as its manifestations. Not so infrequently, violence stems from unhealthy upbringings and dangerous indoctrinations,” said the message signed by Cardinal Jean-Louis Pierre Tauran, president of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue.

“Today, in the face of growing violence in society, it is necessary that families become effective schools of civilization and make every effort to nurture the value of non-violence,” the message said. “As believers rooted in our own religious convictions lets shape families into ‘nurseries’ of non-violence to build a humanity that cares for our common home and all its inhabitants.”

Acknowledging that non-violence is the “sheet-anchor” of Jainism, the message said, “It entails that we respect and treat the other, including the ‘different other,’ as a person endowed with inherent human dignity and inalienable rights. Avoidance of harm to anyone in any way is, therefore, a corollary to our way of being and living as humans.”

The message to the Jains is “a very good initiative and we all, irrespective of religion, should join hands to bring peace in the world,” said Bishop Raphy Manjaly of Allahabad, executive member of Indian bishops’ Office for Dialogue.

“It is always good to make an intervention via all people of good will. Whenever the humanity is in threat, people should step in and raise voices,” he told ucanews.com on March 29. The Vatican sends such greetings during various religious festivals including one for the feast of Diwali, or Deepavali, also known as the “festival of lights,” India’s most popular Hindu festival.

Jainism, born as a non-Brahminical religious movement in 6th century B.C. in India, has some 5 million followers among the country’s 1.2 billion people. They celebrate the anniversary by walking in processions, singing hymns, praying and sharing food.

Jains believe that one can attain nirvana (perfect bliss) only through tapas (austere life), which includes fasting and mortification; reverence to superiors in knowledge, faith and character; and rigid control of the senses, speech and intellect.

Indian American woman & son found in ‘pool of blood’ in NJ

An Indian American software engineer and her young son were found dead in their Maple Shade, New Jersey, home, in what police are saying is not a hate crime. Sasikala Narra, 38, and her son Anish, 6, were found by Narra’s, husband N. Hanumantha Rao, in the bedroom of their home on March 23rd.  An autopsy was conducted later on March 24 to identify the murderer.

Bewley said he could not reveal whether there was evidence of forced entry. He also would not state if the husband, Hanumantha Rao, was a person of interest in the ongoing investigation. “No charges have been filed. We’re investigating multiple people at this time, including the neighbors,” he said.

Bewley emphatically stated that the case was not a hate crime. “We have no reason to believe that this is a hate crime based on Indian origin,” he said, adding that that theory was developed early on, and he wanted to dispel that line of thinking. Asked what evidence the police had to prove the fatal stabbings were not motivated by hate, Bewley said simply: “We’re still investigating these crimes.”

Indian-American community leader Prasad Thotakura claimed that Mr Rao allegedly found his wife and child “in a pool of blood” and “with their throats slit”. But in India, Ms Sasikala’s mother, Krishna Kumari, told news agency ANI: “We suspect that they have been murdered following an affair of my son-in-law with another woman there.”

Rao and Sasikala both were software professionals and had lived in the US for 12 years. She worked from home and reportedly picked up her son from school last afternoon before they headed home.

The killing was raised in the Indian Parliament last week. “This is a serious matter. This is very dangerous. Just two weeks back, two Indians were killed and now two more people have been killed. Prime Minister Narendra Modi must take (it) up with the President of America,” said Congress Rajya Sabha member T Subbarami Reddy.Hanumantha Rao – also known as Hanu Narra – had not returned India-West’s calls by press time.

Mohan Nannapaneni, president of the Telugu Association of North America and a friend of the family, told India-West he had spoken to Narra on the morning after the gruesome incident. Narra is a life member of TANA and volunteers with the organization’s crisis services program, known as TEAM Square. “Hanu is in a state of trauma,” said Nannapaneni.

TANA is making arrangements to send the bodies of Sasikala and her son back to a town near Vijayawada, Andhra Pradesh. The organization is not collecting funds to transport the bodies back to India, as the family has not requested financial help. Sasikala Narra and her husband had lived in the U.S. for about nine years. Anish was born in the U.S.

Hindu arti worship held weekly at Harvard

A weekly arti is reportedly held at Harvard University (HU), one of the world’s top and United States’ oldest institution of higher education established in 1636. Organized by Harvard Dharma (Harvard’s Hindu Students Association), it is held in Dharma Prayer Space at Canaday Basement in Harvard Yard of HU in Cambridge (Massachusetts) on Fridays at five pm, reports suggest.

Arti is a Hindu worship ceremony/offering performed in adoration/honor of deity/deities by circular movement of a lighted lamp accompanied by hymn singing and may include sounding of handbells and other instruments. Worshippers pass their hands over the flames of the lighted lamp and then touch their faces/heads with these hands, thus transferring the deity’s blessings.

Applauding Harvard for reported provision of dedicated prayer space, Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada today, described it as a step in the positive direction. Zed commended Harvard for recognizing the intersection of spirituality and education, which was important in Hinduism.

Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, urged all USA universities, colleges and residential schools; both public and private; to respond to the spiritual needs of diverse student body and provide permanent and dedicated Hindu prayer/meditation room for rituals, quiet reflection, festivals and spiritual exercise. It would help in the personal growth of Hindu students who were present in substantial numbers on various campuses. It was important to meet the spiritual needs of these students, Zed added.

Rajan Zed suggested that these Hindu prayer rooms should have an altar containing murtis (statues) of popular Hindu deities like Shiva, Vishnu, Rama, Krishna, Durga, Venkateshwara, Ganesha, Murugan, Saraswati, Hanuman, Lakshmi, Kali, etc.; besides being equipped with ghanta (big metallic bell hanging from the ceiling), dholak (two-headed hand-drum), Shiva-linga, etc. He or other Hindu scholars would be glad to help, if asked, regarding the structure of “Hindu Prayer Room”, Zed indicated.

Harvard Dharma, focusing on Hindu spiritual and cultural life at Harvard University, also celebrates various Hindu festivals like Deepavali, Holi, etc.; organizes discussions and speaker events about Hinduism and related issues on the campus; etc. Priyanka Kumar, Gunjari Raychaudhuri and Aniket Zinzuwadia are Co-Presidents.

HU, whose motto is Veritas (Latin for “truth”) and which has about 22,000 students, boasts of “48 Nobel Laureates, 32 heads of state, 48 Pulitzer Prize winners”. The Harvard Library—claimed to be the “largest academic library in the world”—includes about 20.4 million volumes. Drew Gilpin Faust is the HU President, while Kenji Yoshino is President of its Board of Overseers. It was named after John Harvard, a Christian minister. Hinduism, oldest and third largest religion of the world, has about one billion adherents and moksh (liberation) is its ultimate goal. There are about three million Hindus in USA.

Diwali declared holiday in New York’s Herricks Public Schools

Hindus have welcomed the inclusion of Diwali, most popular of their festival, as holiday by Herricks Union Free School District (HUFSD) in New York State on its School Calendar for 2017-2018.

Nearby Syosset Central School District, East Meadow School District, Half Hollow Hills Central School District and East Williston Union Free School District recently declared Diwali as an official holiday; while Mineola Union Free School District announced that no home work or examinations would be given on Diwali, reports suggest.

Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada today, describing it as a step in the right direction, urged all other public school districts and private-charter-independent schools in New York State to do the same.

Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, pointed out that it would be a positive thing to do in view of presence of a substantial number of Hindu students at schools around the state, as it was important to meet the religious and spiritual needs of these pupils.

Rajan Zed indicated that schools should make efforts to accommodate the religious requirements of Hindu students and show respect to their faith by not conducting regular business and scheduling classes on Diwali. We did not want our students to be put at an unnecessary disadvantage for missing tests/examinations/papers, assignments, class work, etc., by taking a day-off to observe Diwali.

If schools had declared other religious holidays, why not Diwali, Zed asked. Holidays of all major religions should be honored and no one should be penalized for practicing their religion, Zed added

Rajan Zed suggested all New York State schools, public-private-charter-independent, to seriously look into declaring Diwali as an official holiday, thus recognizing the intersection of spirituality and education. Zed noted that awareness about other religions thus created by such holidays like Diwali would make New York State students well-nurtured, well-balanced, and enlightened citizens of tomorrow.

Zed urged New York Governor Andrew M. Cuomo, New York State Education Department Board of Regents Chancellor Betty A. Rosa and New York State Commissioner of Education MaryEllen Elia; to work towards adding Diwali as an official holiday in all the 728 school districts, and persuading the private-charter-independent schools to follow.

Rajan Zed further says that Hinduism is rich in festivals and religious festivals are very dear and sacred to Hindus. Diwali, the festival of lights, aims at dispelling the darkness and lighting up the lives and symbolizes the victory of good over evil. Besides Hindus; Sikhs and Jains and some Buddhists also celebrate Diwali, which falls on October 19 in 2017.

Zed thanked HUFSD Board of Education President Nancy Feinstein and other Board members for supporting Diwali holiday. HUFSD, headquartered in New Hyde Park; operates schools in Williston Park, New Hyde Park and Albertson; and its Mission includes promoting “intellectual curiosity and creative expression”. It runs a free half-day Universal Pre-Kindergarten Program and has a Department of Spanish Language Immersion. Dr. Fino M. Celano is Superintendent.

Hinduism is oldest and third largest religion of the world with about one billion adherents and moksh (liberation) is its ultimate goal. There are about three million Hindus in USA.

AAPI condemns violence against physicians in India

Appeals to Govt. of India to put an end to violence against physicians

Physicians in India feel threatened and their lives are in danger. Some hospital administrators have begun to hire muscular looking bouncers, whose imposing presence deters patients’ relatives from aggressive behavior. The medical fraternity in several states is on strike, due to the recent incidents of violence against doctors. This is not good for the people we are committed to care and also is not benefitting the Doctors.

In a letter sent to the Prime Minister of India and several high ranking officials at the Government of India, Dr. Ajay Lodha, President of India condemned the ongoing violence against physicians across several states in India.

“We at AAPI, the largest ethnic medical organization in the nation, urge the government of India to make all the efforts possible and put an end to this ongoing violence against medical professionals and enable them to continue to serve the country with dignity, pride and security,” Dr. Lodha said in the letter sent to the Prime Minister, Home Minister, Health Minister, India’s ambassador to the US and the Ambassador of the US to India.

Recalling that from ancient times, physicians across India and around the world have been revered for dedicating their lives for the noble mission of preventing people from getting and saving millions of lives of people from illnesses, Dr. Lodha told the Indian government that “we as a community of physicians and individual members of this fraternity have decided to go into the medical profession with the best of intentions. We as physicians want to help people, ease suffering and save lives. Physicians of Indian origin are well known around the world for their compassion, passion for patient care, medical skills, research, and leadership.”

Expressing shock that despite these noble intentions, many doctors and nurses put their own lives on the line in the course of their jobs, facing attacks from the very people they are trying to help. “Violence against doctors has reached such an extreme in India that the medical staff is afraid to come to work and they need a police presence in the hospitals where they work,” Dr. Lodha said.

For instance, 49 doctors have been attacked in the state of Maharashtra alone since 2015. “The violence against physicians in India, will put a dent in these area, where we have been growing rapidly as world leaders and will cause irrevocable damage to the health industry in India and our image will be tarnished for ever, Dr. Lodha pointed out.

Pointing to reports by the Indian Medical Association (IMA), he said, more than 75% of the population of doctors have had to deal with some degree of violence or aggression directed at them, according to. Shockingly, a large proportion of doctors don’t report such incidents, believing them to be a part of the job so the true figures are likely to be higher. Incidents vary from minor verbal abuse all the way through to the murder or attempted murder of staff, Dr. Lodha said.

While security needs to be strengthened, enhancing the doctor-patient relationship is undoubtedly the most important factor in reducing violence. Improving the quality of medical facilities and reducing the financial burden on patient’s families is also important as large payments may be catastrophic for poorer people and if they then encounter poor facilities too, this may engender a feeling of corruption. There is even an online petition in change.org seeking safe work environment for doctors.

According to Lodha, these recent rapid increase in violence has the potential to tarnish India’s image globally as a rising super power. One of the world’s fastest growing economics, India is a dynamic market with immense opportunities in healthcare. With pioneering Indian companies offering a global work culture, India is becoming a preferred career destination for professionals looking for exceptional individual learning and unique growth opportunities. And, in recent decades, India is turning medical tourism hub, attracting millions of people from abroad.

The members of the American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin (AAPI), an umbrella organization which has nearly 90 local chapters, specialty societies and alumni organizations, with over 35 years of history of dedicated services to their motherland and the adopted land, are appalled at the growing violence against our fellow physicians in India, Dr. Lodha said. “We strongly condemn this ongoing violence and we are shocked by the lack of coherent action against such violence and protect members of this noble fraternity.”

Indian Americans’ income nearly double that of other Americans: US Census Bureau report

Asian Americans are the highest-income, best-educated and fastest-growing racial group in the United States. They are more satisfied than the general public with their lives, finances and the direction of the country, and they place more value than other Americans do on marriage, parenthood, hard work and career success, according to a comprehensive new nationwide survey by the Pew Research Center.

And, among the many groups that make up Asian Americans, people of Indian origin stand out as people with most education and highest income level. The household median income in the US was half as compared to that of an Indian American household. According to a report by the US Census Bureau, the median household income of Indian Americans was $103,821 in 2015. In comparison, the median household income in the US, overall, was $53,889.

The US Census Bureau report, titled Asian-American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month: May 2017, was released on March 17, on the occasion of the Asian Pacific American Heritage Month (APAHM) in May. The overall median income data for the year 2015 came from a separate report that is available on the Census Bureau’s website. The APAHM report concluded that the median income of households headed by the Asians alone or in combination population in 2015 was $76,260. But, within Asian households, too, an Indian American household’s median income was much higher. “Median household income differed greatly by Asian group. For Asian Indian alone, for example, the median income in 2015 was $103,821; for Bangladeshi alone, it was $49,515,” the report said.

The report estimates the Indian American population was four million in 2015, which makes it the second largest Asian group. “The Chinese (except Taiwanese) population was the largest Asian group, followed by Asian Indian (4.0 million), Filipino (3.9 million), Vietnamese (2.0 million), Korean (1.8 million) and Japanese (1.4 million),” the report read. The steady increase in the number of Indian American-owned firms complements the aloft trend in income and population. In 2012, the number of Asian-owned firms in the US was 1.9 million. Impressively, the Asian American ownership has spiked up nearly 24 percent from 2007 till 2012. With similar intensity, the Indian American-owned firms showed a steady growth of 20 percent during 2007-2012. In 2012, Indian Americans owned 377,486 firms in the US, compared to 308,491 in 2007.

The data indicates that the percentage of Indian American-owned firms to that of Asian-owned firms in the US did not change during 2007-2012. During this period, the Indian Americans owned nearly 20 percent of the total Asian-owned firms. Interestingly, from 2007 to 2012 while the number of Indian American firms grew by 22 percent, the White American firms witnessed a decline of five percent.

Overall, the report indicates positive trends for Indian Americans n terms of income, population and entrepreneurial initiatives.

Over 100 U.S lawmakers urge India to lift curbs on Christian charity

A group of 107 members of U.S Congress have written to Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh to temporarily lift the restrictions on American Christian charity Compassion International (CI) until a permanent solution can be found. The union government has ordered banks in India to stop processing wire transfers from CI to its Indian partners, bringing the charity’s operations to halt. CI supports 145000 children in India with donations raised in the U.S.

The U.S lawmakers said they were “long time supporters of U.S -India partnership” but the Indian government’s treatment of CI has “caused serious concern within the U.S Congress.”

“It is with this in mind that we write to express our deep concern over the lack of transparency and consistency in your government’s enforcement of the Foreign Contributions Regulations Act,” the members wrote.

The Indian government has put CI on a priority watch list, accusing it of carrying out religious conversion in the country. No case has been filed against the organization. American lawmakers, most of them staunch supporters of India, have raised the issue with the Prime Minister’s Office earlier, but the Indian government has not budged.

The letter to the Home Minister has been organized by the Republican Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee Ed Royce and Democrat Ranking Member Eliot Engel.

“As long time supporters of the U.S.-India partnership, we have worked diligently to deepen ties between our two countries. As the largest and oldest democracies in the world, India and the United States share bonds rooted in political pluralism and respect for the rule of law. It is with this in mind that we write to express our deep concern over the lack of transparency and consistency in your government’s enforcement of the Foreign Contributions Regulations Act.

The ongoing case of U.S.-based Compassion International, which will have harmful consequences for many Indian children, has caused serious concern within the U.S. Congress. As you may know, Compassion International has worked in India since 1968, and today, its programs support over 145,000 Indian children, providing critical tutoring, health and nutrition, and medical services,” they said in the letter to Mr. Singh.

The members of Congress said: “Tragically, Compassion will soon be forced to terminate its service to India after nearly 50 years of working in your country. We are writing because we believe the Ministry of Home Affairs has issued an inter-bank circular preventing all commercial banks in India from processing CI’s wire transfers without prior Ministry approval. As a result, Compassion is unable to process the funds it needs to continue, and will be forced to close its sponsorship programs on March 15th, to the detriment of the hundreds of thousands of children Compassion serves in India. Many of our constituents, who have built emotional attachments through years of building relationships with these kids, are devastated by this wrenching cutoff.”

John Prabhudoss, President of Federation of Indian American Christian Organizations said in statement that the CI program “helps break the cycle of poverty and indignity these children have experienced.”

“We believe that this action by Modi government against Christian aid agencies is an attempt by the political-Hinduism to hijack the rich religious traditions of religious Hinduism and the people of India,” he said. “The hardline approach of the Hindu nationalist government under Modi has the potential to cause serious damage to the US-India relationship,” said Mr. Prabhudoss.

7 Indian American Entrepreneurs on Forbes’ World’s Billionaires List

Seven Indian Americans have made it to the prestigious Forbes World’s Billionaires list for 2017, released on March 20 and featured more than 2,000 billionaires. The total combined net worth of this year’s billionaires was $7.67 trillion, up from $6.48 trillion last year. The 2,043 billionaires in 2017 is up from 1,810 in 2016, with an average net worth of $3.75 billion.

A total of 101 Indian-origin people made to the list, including Mukesh Ambani at No. 33 and $23.2 billion, Lakshmi Mittal at No. 56 and $16.4 billion, Azim Premji at No. 72 and $14.9 billion, and Dilip Shanghvi at No. 84 and $13.7 billion in the top 100 of the overall list.

Bill Gates of Microsoft fame was once again No. 1 on the list with a net worth of $86 billion. Berkshire Hathaway’s Warren Buffett with $75.6 billion, Amazon.com’s Jeff Bezos with $72.8 billion, Spain-based Zara’s Amancio Ortega with $71.3 billion and Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg with $56 billion rounded out the top five on the list.

Romesh Wadhwani, an Indian American who made his money in the software industry is valued at $3 billion, came in at No. 660. He is the chairman and CEO of Symphony Technology Group, a group of 18 data, technology, healthcare and analytics companies that together take in more than $2.8 billion in annual revenue.

Rakesh Gangwal was ranked at No. 973 with his $2.1 billion worth. The 63-year-old airline veteran made his fortune at InterGlobe Aviation, the parent company of his budget airline IndiGo, India’s largest by market share. The India-born mechanical engineer studied at the Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur before getting his M.B.A. at Wharton.

John Kapoor, with a value of $1.7 billion, was ranked No. 1,234 on the Forbes list. Kapoor came to the U.S. from India to get his doctorate in medicinal chemistry. He stepped down as CEO and chairman of opioid manufacturer Insys Therapeutics in January 2017. He remains chairman of Akorn, which specializes in “difficult-to-manufacture” prescription drugs. He also owns the Roka Akor Japanese eateries in Chicago, Scottsdale and San Francisco.

Vinod Khosla, who achieved his fortune through venture capitalism, ranks No. 1,290 with a net worth of $1.6 billion. Khosla has run his own venture capital firm, Khosla Ventures, since 2004,

Aneel Bhusri, the CEO and co-founder of Workday, with a net worth of $1.3 billion, following nearly two decades at VC firm Kleiner Perkins, is at No. 1,567 on the list. Bhusri notched up big returns at Greylock in 2007 when storage software outfit PolyServe sold to Hewlett-Packard for $200 million, and OutlookSoft was acquired by SAP.

Brian Sheth, of Austin, Texas, co-founded Vista Equity Partners in 2000 and is the firm’s president. Since then, Sheth has racked up a net worth of $1.1 billion and slides in at No. 1,795 on the list. Additionally, he helped boost his net worth by buying and fixing up a less-than glamorous collection of enterprise software companies.

Bharat Desai, at No. 1,940 on the list with a net worth of $1 billion, fell from the second-ranked Indian American a year ago — No. 688 and $2.6 billion net worth. Desai and his wife Neerja Sethi Desai founded IT consulting and outsourcing company Syntel in their apartment in Troy, Mich., in 1980. They turned it into a multi-million dollar operation.

‘We are here to stay’, say Indian-Americans amid growing hate crime incidents in the US

WASHINGTON: “We are here to stay”, Indian-Americans have vowed while holding a series of meetings to express their concern over growing hate crime incidents against ethnic and religious minorities in the US.

“No matter what gunmen or the President (Donald Trump) say, this is our country, we are here to stay, and we will keep demanding our rightful and equal place in this quintessential nation of immigrants,” said Suman Raghunathan from the South Asian Americans leading Together (SAALT) at a town hall discussion here on Friday.

Initiated by SAALT, South Asian groups are planning to organise a number of similar town halls across the country. Prominent community leaders who addressed the town hall were Arjun Sethi of the Georgetown University Law Center, Dr Revathi Vikram of ASHA for Women, Shabab Ahmed Mirza of KhushDC, Darakshan Raja of Washington Peace Center and Kathy Doan of the Capital Area Immigrants’ Rights Coalition.

“This is a seminal moment for our communities to be united for action, to take stock of what our communities need, for our communities to know our rights as we come into contact with law enforcement, and for our communities to build power through deep solidarity,” Raghunathan said.

Indian-Americans also joined Jewish and Muslims for a candle light vigil to express solidarity against the hate crimes that have hit them in recent weeks.  “This is about having peace throughout all communities and religions and races,” Rochelle Berman was quoted as saying by local WJLA TV, an affiliate of ABC News. “There should be no discrimination based on race, or gender or skin color,” Shruti Vhatnagar told the news channel as the participants lit candles and stood in solidarity.

“Immigrant, Muslim, Arab, Sikh, Hindu and South Asian American communities continue to be targets of hate violence and xenophobic political rhetoric. It remains critical for elected officials to speak out early, loudly and often against hate violence and the policies that fan the flames of violence,” New York Congresswoman Grace Meng said in a statement.

Appreciating the efforts of SAALT in supporting the South Asian community, she hoped that through collective efforts, they can reverse the “horrible trend” of heightened intolerance and violence. At another round table discussion, Senator Ben Cardin, Ranking Member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, held Trump responsible for the current anti-immigrant atmosphere.

“It starts with the leadership. President Trump’s comments as a candidate and a President is just the opposite of what you need,” Cardin said. A recent SAALT report documents over 200 instances of hate violence and xenophobic political rhetoric during last year’s general election. “There is an acute relationship between policies and rhetoric that criminalise Muslim, Arab, and South Asian American communities and the hate violence targeting these communities,” said Lakshmi Sridaran.

“While the judiciary doggedly blocks the President’s ‘Muslim Bans’, the damage continues to be done as each week uncovers a new inventory of victims of racially motivated attacks,” she added.

NJ Town rejects mosque proposal

A local Muslim community in Bayonne, New Jersey, was, last week, denied space for building a mosque by the zoning board. The proposal for a mosque and community center at the site of an empty 8,500-square-foot warehouse has been the subject of much debate and discussion for the past year-and-a-half, Waheed Akbar, founder and secretary of the nonprofit group Bayonne Muslims, was quoted to have told the media.

The proposal for a mosque and community center at the site of an old warehouse on East 24th Street has been the subject of much debate for more than a year. After a lengthy and crowded held at the high school instead of City Hall, the board failed by one vote to pass the motion to allow creation of the mosque and community center.

Residents who chose to comment at the meeting were in some cases reprimanded by the board for their “anti-Muslim rhetoric.” There was even “fist-shaking by some neighbors, shouting down and rounds of applause and cheers,” according to reports by PIX 11.

“Everyone’s turning it into a religious issue, but we are only fighting it because it’s in the wrong area,” one resident said. The New Jersey chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations called the decision “bias motivated.”

“As has happened with several New Jersey Muslim communities, local anti-Muslim opponents to new mosque construction have attempted to hide their bigoted intentions behind zoning technicalities,” CAIR-NJ executive director James Sues said.

“In the case of Bayonne, these intentions were not very well hidden. The zoning board has a moral obligation to rule on the basis of the benefits to the community, and that includes community members of all faiths.”

Despite paying $1 million for the property in 2015, Akbar said he and his group have faced an angry campaign by local residents, graffiti slurs outside their temporary prayer hall in a local school and numerous zoning and planning hurdles.

The group is also planning to file a federal lawsuit to contest the denial, Akbar said. The federal Justice Department is also undergoing its own separate investigation, he added.

‘Taj Express’ celebrates Bollywood, Indian culture, traditions

A new musical that’s exploding with the sounds of Bollywood and capturing its vibrant, expressive spirit is currently touring the U.S., taking viewers on a cinematic journey of dance, drama and music.

Taj Express has been touring across the US showcasing Indian culture and traditions with the sounds of India and Bollywood, that have been entertaining billions of people in India for generations. Through a fusion of film, dance, and music. This dazzling international sensation takes audiences on a live cinematic journey through modern Indian culture and society during their 2017 US tour. The production is a high energy celebration of new India’s pop music, Bollywood culture, and deep traditions featuring colorful costumes, joyful dance, and thrilling live music.

Created by the sisters Vaibhavi and Shruti Merchant, whose grandfather B. Hiralal, is considered a founding father of Bollywood, the tour began in February and has been described by critics and audience alike as a high energy celebration of new India’s pop music, Bollywood culture, and deep traditions featuring colorful costumes, joyful dance, and thrilling live music.

Shruti Merchant has been seen as a judge on India’s dance reality show “Dance India Dance”, while Vaibhavi Merchant has worked in over 75 Bollywood films and is known for hits such as “Dhol Baaje”, “Jhoom Barabar”, “Kajra Re” and “Kamli.” Her recent work includes songs for “Sultan”, “Fan” and “Befikre”. She has received numerous awards for her choreography, including the National Award for Choreography, IIFA, and the American Choreography Award.

In this internationally acclaimed stage production, the sisters weave an intoxicating tale of Varsha, an Indian journalist living in Europe. After traveling home to write a story about Bollywood and discover “The Greatest Indian Love Story Ever Told,” Varsha is swept up in a glittery, joyful musical extravaganza all of her own.

“Taj Express” is loaded with action, romance, comedy, a royal wedding Bollywood-style, and larger-than-life dance numbers set to India’s latest pop hits and its folk-music classics. When you hop aboard the “Taj Express”, you’ll embark on an exotic adventure that will have your feet moving, your hands clapping, and your heart soaring.

This years marks the fifth anniversary of the show’s international touring, and the North American tour marks the second leg of finishing a decade. The show is presented in the U.S. by Columbia Artist Management LLC. (CAMI). CAMI is an international leader in managing the careers and touring activities of the world’s most prominent performing artists and institutions. CAMI has been on the forefront of performing arts management and production throughout the world for nine decades.

To learn more about “Taj Express”, visit: http://www.tajexpressthemusical.com/bollywoodmusical/index.html

Arjun Rampal in NJ joins efforts to end hate crimes

Bollywood actor Arjun Rampal joined the local community activists in New Jersey to combat rising hate crimes in the United States, especially against minorities. Rampal was speaking at a panel discussion held March 11 at the TV Asia studios here on hate crimes targeted at the Indian-Americans and the South Asian-American community.

According to the popular star from India, the best way to beat the negative around us is through love and not through hate. “By keeping quiet about hate crimes or discrimination, we are giving victory to the terrorists and the hate mongers,” he said.

Moderated by Dr. Kavita Gupta, panelists included Rampal; Hirsh Vardhan Singh, a New Jersey-based businessman, who has announced his run for the governor’s race; Dr. Sudhir Parikh, publisher of Parikh Media; Dr. Sanjay Gupta, a New Jersey-based physician and executive producer of HealthTime TV; Dia Mathews, an immigration attorney from the Chug firm and Woodbridge Township Councilman Viru Patel.

Diwali on Times Square on Oct. 7

New York, NY (March 20, 2017) – EventGuru Inc. is delighted to announce Saturday, October 7, 2017 as the date for this year’s DIWALI AT TIMES SQUARE celebration.  Mark your calendars!  Diwali is  the “Festival of Lights,” is the one holiday that unifies the diversity of Indian regional cultures.This annual celebration is the largest celebration of Diwali outside of India, and it brings the South Asian community together for a fun-filled day showcasing cultural dance and musical performances, a Diwali bazaar, and mouth-watering Indian cuisine.  The celebration lights up Times Square with interactive, traditional Diya (lamp) lighting ceremonies, and the world’s best digital fireworks display. There will be a Bollywood celebrity filled evening concert ,and opportunities to interact with your favorite stars.  The fun will begin at 2:00 p.m. on Saturday, October 7, 2017 in Times Square!

Diwali at Times Square was established  in 2013 by Neeta Bhasin – a nationally recognized business leader specializing in multicultural marketing . She wanted to bring the most vibrant, national  festival of India to the “Center of Universe” – New York’s Times Square – to showcase India’s rich culture, heritage, and arts to the world, while invoking a sense of pride among South Asians.  This historic event is managed by ASB Communications, a New York-based multicultural marketing agency now celebrating its 20th anniversary which was founded by Ms. Bhasin. Advertising and sponsorship opportunities for Diwali at Times Square are available for businesses and organizations looking to deepen relationships with the South Asian community.

Event Guru World Wide is a premier full service event company specializing in festivals, concerts, trade shows, gala dinners and press conferences. We conceptualize and implement events of all sizes and statures. We have built a team of passionate individuals who are sure to create impactful and memorable experiences for its clients.

Shreya Ghoshal 1st Indian singer at Madame Tussauds

Shreya Ghoshal has become the first Indian singer to make it to Madame Tussauds, with her wax figure set to be showcased at the upcoming Delhi wing of the museum. Ghoshal’s statue will be seen striking a singing pose.

“I am thrilled to be a part of history here at Madame Tussauds and it is an honor to be featured among such talented stars, artists, historians and renowned celebrities. To be immortalized forever is a fabulous feeling. With its brilliant concept, Madame Tussauds has always been famous for bringing joy all across the world,” Ghoshal said.

The installation seeks to celebrate her 15-year-long illustrious career, since her debut in 2002 with songs like “Silsila Ye Chahat Ka” and “Bairi Piya” from the film “Devdas.”

“We are pleased to unveil Shreya’s figure in the Delhi attraction. She is one of the most loved singers of today’s generation. We are excited to see our visitors sing along with her,” Anshul Jain, General Manager and Director, Merlin Entertainments India Pvt Ltd, said.

“She was one of the most requested figures for us to include in the attraction, and we are delighted to be able to honour those fans with this wax figure.”

The museum, which will be housed in the iconic Regal Building, also will also have wax statues of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Bollywood actors Amitabh Bachchan and Shah Rukh Khan.

Indian-Americans hold rally in front of the White House to protest against hate crimes

Indian-Americans across the nation have become victims of Islamophobia and xenophobia, the community members said as they held an awareness rally against hate crimes in front of the White House last weekend seeking President Donald Trump’s intervention in the matter.

“Hindus have been recently affected and victimised (in the US) as a result of Islamophobia. It does affect our community as well,” Vindhya Adapa, 27, a Virginia-based corporate lawyer, told e media outside the White House on Sunday, March 20th.

Adapa along with a few dozen Indian-Americans representing various Indian-American groups from in and around the Greater Washington Area held a peaceful demonstration in view of the recent surge in hate crimes against the community.

“A recent example of that is recent shooting and murder of an IT personnel in Kansas, who was mistaken for being an Arab and a Muslim. I do think that the current political climate is eventually going to target all communities including Hindu-Americans,” said S Sheshadri, a young Indian-American doctor and Adapa’s friend.

“We are here today to raise awareness against hate crimes particularly against people of Indian origin. This is not necessarily a protest against the Trump Administration. We are here to seek bipartisan support against the hate crimes that has been happening recently against Indian-Americans,” Adapa said, urging the President to acknowledge and condemn what is happening.

“I would say what is happening against the Indian-American community is a result of xenophobia, Islamic phobia and the anti-immigrant statements that have come out from the Administration,” she alleged.

“A lot of Sikh people and Hindu people are mistaken for being Muslim, for being Middle eastern,” she said, adding that the way to tackle that is to spread awareness about these different communities.

In a petition memorandum submitted to President Trump, the recently established Coalition of Indian American organisations of the USA, which organised the event, urged him to intervene in the matter and take steps to punish the culprits under federal hate crimes law.  It also urged the President to allay the fears of the Indian-American community and show his support, and take remediation steps to eliminate the hate. The peaceful protest was organised in the aftermath of a series of hate crime incidents against Indian-Americans.

Maryland Hindu temple has plans for $20 million expansion with 36’ Hanuman statue

Sri Bhaktha Anjaneya Temple (SBAT) in Ijamsville (Maryland) reportedly has plans for second phase $20 million expansion including another about 51,000 square-foot temple with 36 foot Lord Hanuman statue.

According to reports, designs have been finalized for the second phase, which has already been approved, and funds are being raised for it. The existing about 5,000 square-foot Temple, launched in 2015, cost about $8 million.

Besides worship services and Vedic rituals, SBAT, which opens 365-days a year at 06-30 am; organizes Sanskrit workshops, cultural events, children’s activities, poojas, festivals, summer cultural camps; holds bhajans every second Saturday and concerts every first Saturday of the month; and offers classes in Bharatnatyam, slokas, Ramayanam, Srimad Bhagavatham, Bhagavad-Gita, yoga, etc. It plans to launch some Indian music-dance-languages classes. It also serves as gathering place for the community; besides participating in various community welfare activities, like cooking food for the homeless, donating to area food banks, providing support in disaster relief, etc.

Meanwhile, Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada today, commended efforts of temple leaders and area community towards realizing this Hindu temple and planning a grand expansion.

Rajan Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, further said that it was important to pass on Hindu spirituality, concepts and traditions to coming generations amidst so many distractions in the consumerist society and hoped that this temple would help in this direction. Zed stressed that instead of running after materialism; we should focus on inner search and realization of Self and work towards achieving moksh (liberation), which was the goal of Hinduism.

Mission of SBAT, which is open to all, includes to “Promote Hindu traditions, values, culture and heritage including music, dance, slokas and Sanskrit”. Free-food is available at the temple during its opening hours. It reportedly has ten priests and two shilpis and Bragadeesh Balasubramanian is temple manager.

Suggested donation at SBAT for “Life time pooja for all Deities” is $6,001, “Paaravana Shraadham” pooja is $575 and for “Vehicle Pooja” is $51. Its policies include using dairy products made from the milk of its own cows only, and it strictly discourages “short, revealing, knee-high attire”.

Lord Hanuman is known for incredible strength and was a perfect grammarian. Hinduism, oldest and third largest religion of the world, has about one billion adherents. There are about three million Hindus in USA.

Indian Consulate in New York celebrates Women’s Day

With a series of events, the Consulate General of India in New York celebrated International Women’s Day, with a grand finale event culminating on March 8 here in New York. A panel discussion on ‘Balancing Act -Women in 21st Century’ was held, and was attended by dozens of invited guests. Consul General Riva Ganguly Das, in her opening remarks talked about the challenges women continue to face as they balance their career and family.

The discussion was moderated by Dr. Hetal Gor,a physician, entrepreneur, political activist, women’s advocate and philanthropist with panelists comprising of Linda Bowden,Regional president, PNC Bank; Nina Pineda, WAVC-TV reporter; Dr. Nimisha Shukla, physician and entrepreneur and Seema Jagtiani, resident of Amogh Insurance & Wealth Management Agency. The discussion was followed by Q&A session.

Earlier, to mark International Women’s Day, photo exhibition on ‘Women of India’ by Prof. Doug Hilson was organized at the Consulate on March 6,2017.   Honoring the accomplishments and contributions of women from diverse backgrounds at the International Woman’s Day event. Consul General with the Hon. Maria Isabel Nieto, President of Society of Foreign Consuls and honoree Malini Shah on March 02, 2017.

Jubilant crowd in USA welcomes Capt. Amarinder Singh’s party’s landslide victory in the Punjab Vidhan Sabha Elections

Indian American businesses destroyed in fire in New York

A fire on Liberty Avenue in South Richmond Hill, New York City, on March 4th has destroyed at least 7 businesses, the Fire Department of New York (FDNY) announced here last week. Among them are several Indian-Americans, who are left homeless and their businesses destroyed. As per reports, a seven-alarm fire that has caused the fires, leaving dozens of people scrambling for alternatives and upset with local elected representatives.

According to community organizations, more than 50 people, young and old, have been displaced and are put up temporarily in hotels. However, they were housed only until March 6, and are now in limbo. Local organizations like Chhaya Community Development Corporation are stepping in to help.

The Indian-American community as well as advocacy groups are demanding Mayor Bill de Blasio and local elected officials step forward to help the scores of people displaced by the devastating seven-alarm fire that destroyed numerous businesses and apartments in south Richmond Hill, March 4.

As per reports, it took FDNY almost four hours to bring it under control with the help of dozens of units from around the city. Luckily, there were no fatalities but several people were injured. Frank Dwyer, spokesperson for FDNY said the station got a call at 10:52 p.m. on March 4 from 110-14 Liberty Ave. Fire trucks arrived at the scene within 3 minutes but it took till 2:40 am next morning to bring the fire under control. The fire started in a two-story building, but it escalated into a 7-alarm fire which took 200 fire fighters from 50 units to put out, Dwyer said.

The affected area is between what locals call “mini-Guyana” and “mini-Punjab.” One of the residents of mini-Punjab who was visiting mini-Guyana told Desi Talk the Wine & Liquor Store as well as Ghazal Beauty Parlor, were owned by Indians.

“The fire extended to 7 buildings which suffered fire damage and an additional 3 building were affected by water,” Dwyer said. Three civilians and two fire fighters suffered non-life threatening injuries. Fire Marshalls are investigating and will update the public on any new developments via their Twitter feed @fdny.

“The city has to do something. Why hasn’t the Mayor showed up? Even the local politicians have no reactions,” Annetta Seecharan, executive director of Chhaya CDC, said. Chhaya deals with housing issues and has already approached small business and other relevant agencies in city government to possibly extended the length of stay for the vulnerable individuals displaced, Seecharan said. “It’s not just the businesses that are affected. It is those living in apartments above the shops, poorer, more vulnerable people.” On March 9, an information session has been scheduled at Tulsi Mandir, 110-24, 111th Street, which organizers hope will update those affected about what the city and elected officials are doing.

Pramila Jayapal, Joe Cowley introduce resolution asking Trump to end hate rhetoric

A resolution introduced by Indian-American member Pramila Jayapal and House Democratic Caucus Chairman Joe Crowley in the U.S. House of Representative on Friday, last week asked the Department of Justice to commit sufficient resources to investigate hate crimes against South Asians and Jews in the country and urged President Donald Trump to “end his inflammatory rhetoric.”

Sixty-seven members of the House have signed the resolution, Jayapal said, addressing a gathering of protesters at Capitol Hill. Crowley and Indian American members Ami Bera and Ro Khanna also spoke at the protest event on Friday, March 10th. Bera and Jayapal were of the opinion that the violence against minority groups in America could not be considered isolated incidents, and there is now a pattern to it. Mr. Khanna, however, has said the South Asian community must remain positive while standing united against hate, given the wide support it gets from other Americans. The Congressman from Silicon Valley pointed out that Google has an Indian-origin CEO and while MasterCard CEO is an Indian-American Sikh.

‘America is our country’

“The victims of recent attacks in Kansas and Washington State were told to go back to their country. I have been told that numerous times. America is our country,” Jayapal said. “I came to this country as a 16-year old student without a penny. I could go on to become a Congressperson and that is the greatness of America,” she said at the event organised by South Asian Americans Leading Together (SAALT), a group that works for racial justice and civil rights.

Suman Raghunathan, executive director of SAALT, said a recent study by the group has documented over 200 incidents of hate violence and xenophobic political rhetoric aimed at South Asian, Muslim, Sikh, Hindu, Arab, and Middle Eastern Americans during the 2016 elections. “Ninety-five percent of incidents motivated by anti-Muslim sentiment. Notably, President Trump was responsible for 21% of the xenophobic political rhetoric we tracked,” she said.

“What we see today is violence against those perceived to be foreign and a slew of anti-immigrant rhetoric and policies coming out of the White House. That toxic mix is causing a palpable level of fear in the Indian-American and broader South Asian community. I’m committed to doing anything within my power to stop these acts of violence,” said Crowley.

“The resolution is an act of resistance to Donald Trump’s hateful vilification and ‘otherising’ of immigrants and communities of colour. Acts of violence rooted in racism have spiked since his campaign,” Jayapal said. “Attacking someone based on where they come from or what they look like insults the very core of everything that we stand for as a nation of immigrants. As a nation, we must stand up to these hateful attacks, which means doubling down on our commitments to safety, equality, and the American values of liberty and justice for all,” Mr. Bera said.

Indian-American Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi, who is away from Washington, told reporters on a teleconference that he was working with lawmakers to press Trump administration to take urgent action against hate crimes. “All Indian-American members of Congress are from the minority Democratic minority. We are trying to work with Republican members of Congress to use the legislative branch’s oversight powers over Justice and Homeland Security departments to effect more active response to the situation,” he said.

Man tries to set fire on store of Indian American in Florida

In an another incident of hate crime in the US, a 64-year-old man has been arrested after he had attempted to burn down a convenience store owned by Indian Americans in Florida as he mistakenly thought it was owned by Muslims.

Richard Lloyd, who wanted to “run the Arabs out of our country,” pushed a dumpster in front of the Port St. Lucie store and set the contents on fire on March 10. As per reports, the store was not open at the time of the incident and firefighters quickly extinguished the fire without it causing any property damage.

“It’s unfortunate that Mr. Lloyd made the assumption that the store owners were Arabic when, in fact, they are of Indian descent,” St. Lucie County Sheriff Ken Mascara said. Mascara said Lloyd’s mental health will be evaluated and the state attorney’s office will decide if this was a hate crime.

Lloyd told investigators he tried to buy a bottle of juice at the store a few days ago but was told they did not have any. He was also upset because he assumed the store employee was Muslim, CNN affiliate WPEC reported.

He said he was angry with what followers of Islam “are doing in the Middle East” and thought the store owners were Muslims. Lloyd was charged with first-degree arson and remained at the St. Lucie County Jail in lieu of a $30,000 bond as of Mar. 11, the news channel reported.

He told investigators he “was doing my part for America,” and planned to burn the entire building. According to WPTV, deputies said that Lloyd told them his plan was to get a big enough fire in the dumpster to catch the building on fire, and once it was burning he thought the alcohol from the beer and wine inside would burn it to the ground.

Hate crimes against Muslims increased by over 65 percent in 2015, according to FBI statistics. Some religious leaders attribute the crime spike to the rise of President Donald Trump, who critics say fueled Islamophobia and racism as a candidate.

 

Vigil on Capitol Hill honors victims of hate violence

On March 10, 2017, the Sikh Coalition joined allied civil rights organizations on Capitol Hill to honor victims of hate violence. Earlier in the day, Interim Program Director, Rajdeep Singh, asked Congressional staffers to push for the creation of a federal hate crime task force. The Sikh Coalition made this request of the White House in an op-ed on CNN in response to a spate of hate crimes targeting Sikh, Muslim, Hindu, and Jewish American communities nationwide.

Dozens of people held a candlelight vigil in southern India March 9 to mark the birthday of an Indian American engineer shot dead last month in Kansas in an attack the FBI is investigating as a possible hate crime.

In addition to marking Srinivas Kuchibhotla’s 33rd birthday, the people in technology hub Hyderabad also protested what they say is a rising wave of hate crimes in America.

According to witnesses, the gunman yelled “Get out of my country” at Kuchibhotla and his colleague Alok Madasani before opening fire at a bar in Olathe, Kansas, a suburb of Kansas City. Madasani and another bar patron were wounded. Adam Purinton of Olathe was arrested at another bar after telling a bartender he shot two people he described as Iranian. He remains jailed on murder and attempted murder charges.

The participants in Hyderabad included the family of Kuchibhotla. The marchers held candles as well as posters decrying attacks on Indians in the United States in recent days. The placards had slogans such as “Wake up India” and “Stop Racism, Stop Hate Crime.”

Last week a Sikh man, Deep Rai, was shot at by an unidentified man as he worked on his car in Kent, Wash., a suburb of Seattle. Another Indian, Harnish Patel, was killed in South Carolina 10 days ago, but the killing was not identified as a hate crime.

“This gathering is a reflection of the growing concern and disquiet among Indians over the safety and security of their people in the United States,” M. Rajkumar, who heads an organization of parents who have children living and working outside India, said in an Associated Press report.

Rajkumar said he blames U.S. President Donald Trump’s speeches for the increasing attacks against Indians in America. India raised the issue of the killing of Kuchibhotla in “very strong terms,” a top official said March 9, adding that the security of Indians and persons of Indian origin is a matter of serious concern for the Indian government, according to an IANS report.

On a day the issue featured in a major way in Parliament and Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh assured the Lok Sabha that the government is taking the issue very seriously, External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Gopal Baglay said in a briefing that Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar was conveyed by U.S. officials during his talks in Washington that the Feb. 22 attack on Kuchibhotla and Madasani was an “individual case,” IANS reported.

Baglay said that the Indian Consulate reached out to the families of Kuchibhotla and Madasani, as well as Rai. “You would have also seen the response of the U.S. authorities, beginning with President Trump who referred to the Kansas incident in his address to the Congress. The U.S. Embassy had put out a press release condemning the Kansas killing. Speaker of the House has also condemned it,” said the spokesperson, according to the IANS report.

“This point has also been highlighted by various prominent U.S. dignitaries that such crimes do not represent the views of the vast majority in that country. In fact, several senior U.S. dignitaries have explicitly mentioned in the recent days that Indians are welcome in the United States,” he added.

“Given the high priority the government attaches to the security and wellbeing of Indians and persons of Indian origin abroad, we will continue to remain strongly engaged with the concerned authorities wherever required.”

He also said that the government of Kansas has offered to provide support to the family of Kuchibhotla and has welcomed Indians to the state. Referring to the letter of Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback, Baglay said, “There is a sense of regret at the unfortunate shooting, commitment to prosecute the matter, support to the family of the deceased, and recognition of the qualities and contribution of Srinivas to Kansas.” Brownback March 8 wrote a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressing regret over the violence against Indians.

Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh March 9 asserted that the center has taken very serious note of the hate crimes against Indians in the U.S. and said the Modi government will come out with a statement on the issue.

“Want to assure the house that the government has taken up incidents against Indians in the U.S. very seriously and the government will give a statement on it next week,” Rajnath Singh said in Lok Sabha after resumption of the budget session of Parliament, IANS reported.

Protest marches have been held in India too. On March 9, the All India Students’ Association held a protest march against hate crimes against Indians in the U.S. and demanded strict action from the government. Members of the left wing student organization marched from Teen Murti to the U.S. Embassy to protest rising cases of racist attacks against Indians in the U.S., IANS reported.

The association demanded the government should hold Trump “accountable for propagating hate against racial minorities.” They asked for a tough diplomatic stand by Modi against increasing cases of hate crimes in the U.S.

The protesters raised slogans such as “America ki dalali nahi chalegi,” “Trump ki dalali nahi chalegi,” which translates to “The American and Trump interference will not be tolerated.”

“We will try to make this a civil society protest later. We are raising an initial voice against the deaths of the Indian Americans in the U.S. Not only Indian Americans, there have also been attacks on racial and religious minorities,” AISA’s national president Sucheta De told IANS.

“The racist attackers see minorities and shout, ‘This is not your country, go back to your country.’ Very interestingly, the Ministry of External Affairs and the prime minister are silent because their own party tells religious minorities here to go (back) to their countries,” she said. “We are here to say that hate makes no country great and that there is a need to be proactive to end hate crimes in the U.S.,” she added

Centenary Celebration of Osmania University in Chicago -An Invitation to Participate

“Glory of Hyderabad”, is organizing “Centenary Celebration of Osmania University”, Hyderabad, India on May 14th, 2017– Sunday, 03:00 pm to 10:00 pm, at Shalimar Banquets, 280 W. North Ave, Addison, IL 60101. Prof S. Ramachandram, Vice Chancellor, Osmania University will be the Chief Guest. Her Excellency Ms. Neeta Bhushan, Consul General of India, Chicago will preside. Mr. Hardik Bhatt, CIO, office of the Governor, IL will be Guest of Honor.

Glory of Hyderabad will also present Osmania University & Siasat Calligraphy Exhibition during the celebration at 3.00 pm and authentic Hyderabadi Dinner and Musical Extravaganza. Osmania University, with 300,000 students and 5000 Staff members, is the seventh oldest in India and the third oldest in South India. It is a multi-faculty and multidisciplinary university, offering rich and varied courses in the faculties of Arts, Sciences, Social Sciences, Law, Education, Engineering, Technology, Commerce, Management, Informatics, Pharmacy, and Oriental Languages.

In the recent past, Glory of Hyderabad hosted Mr. Mohammed Mahmood Ali, Deputy Chief Minister of Telangana, Mr. A.K. Khan, Advisor to Government of Telangana for Minorities, Padmashri Mohammad Ali Baig, Founder Qadir Ali Baig Theatre Foundation and Mr. Zahid Ali Khan, Editor Siasat Daily, among many notable Hyderabadis. In addition, Glory of Hyderabad hosted a number of Mayors, Diplomats, Congressmen, etc.

All Osmania’s living in the US and Canada are requested to attend this historic event, along with their families and friends, in large numbers. They are advised to reserve their seats or table at the earliest as the seats are limited. For further details :

Ekta Desai racially abused in NJ PATH Train

Hate crimes against Indian-Americans seem to be on the rise. Barely a week after Srivinas Kuchibhotla was shot in a bar in Olathe, Kansas, another Indian-American has reported a hate crime incident in a crowded New York City train.

An Indian-origin girl was racially abused by a stranger in a New York train while she was on way to work. A video of the incident is now going viral on social media. Ekta Desai, a physiotherapist in New York, posted a video on her Facebook profile that shows a man hurling racial slurs at her and another Asian woman on a train.

“So this is something that happened while I was on my way from work today!! This man was on the same PATH train as me along with 100 other passengers, I had my headphones on and was like any other day. Next thing I know he is yelling on my face (Did not bother to listen/react). Knowing it’s pointless I step away, next target alongside an Asian lady!” Desai wrote.

The video as well as Desai’s Facebook page have since been removed after the video went viral. In the video, an unidentified man hurled racial slurs at both Desai and another Asian woman. Desai, who works as a physiotherapist in New York, shared a video of her traveling on the New York subway on her way to work.

“Asian piece of s*** to I will F*** you all right here to get your F***ing ^$$es back to your country etc etc etc” (putting it in the best words here) he went on relentlessly!” Desai said in the Facebook post.

Following the racially-charged, expletive-filled tirade, Desai threatened to inform police of his actions, to which the man continually yelled at the Indian American to stop shooting the video of him and explaining how he didn’t touch anybody. “I just expressed what I feel. Freedom of speech,” the man was heard saying in the video. Not sure the cops found him or even took any action, though they showed up 15 mins after all this drama and he walked away with his friends!” Desai said in her Feb. 22 post.

The video was posted on Facebook Feb. 22 and within six days it got more than 49,000 views. It is being widely discussed after Indian American engineer Srinivas Kuchibhotla was shot dead in Kansas last week which is being probed as a hate crime.

Ekta Desai,a physiotherapist in New York, shared a video of her traveling on the New York train when she was abused by an African American man. The video which shows the man asking her to go back to her country and yelling at her. Desai says she contacted the metro authorities and the police, but the police were not able to find or take any action against him.

Indian Envoy hosts ‘largest gathering of US governors’

Ambassador of India Navtej Sarna hosted a reception for a record 26 Governors of the States of the US at his residence on February 24 in Washington, DC. The gathering of governors from across the nation, representing both the major political parties, described as the first of its nature held in recent years, was attended by a record number of Governors, including Governors of Virginia, Nevada, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut, Guam, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Montana, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah, Virgin Islands, Wisconsin and Wyoming. Senior representatives of Governors of California, Maryland, New York and Pennsylvania were also in the audience.

Ramping up its diplomatic profile in Washington with an eye on the Donald Trump administration’s orientation towards business, the Indian embassy, for the first time, hosted a reception for US governors who gather in the capital every year for their winter meeting. It’s a prestigious event that India won the chance to host, over stiff competition from other missions.

Founded in 1908, NGA is one of Washington D.C.’s most respected public policy organizations and is called the “collective voice” of the nation’s governors. Its prestigious membership includes the governors of all 55 US’ states, territories and commonwealths.

The reception aimed at showcasing for the governors the business potential of the partnership not only between the United States and India, but also between US states and India — Sarna called for “even greater attention” on the need for “state-to-state relations”.

Welcoming the guests, Ambassador Sarna noted that this evening interaction reflected the solid ground of bipartisan political and popular support on which the India-US strategic partnership is based. He emphasized that the India-US relationship is a symbiotic one which embodies our shared values of freedom, democracy and federation.

The Indian Ambassador underlined the particularly fruitful economic relationship between India and the United States that has greatly benefitted the two countries- providing jobs, creating resources and making both countries globally competitive.

Urging US companies to be part of the Indian success story, Ambassador said that India’s booming economy creates strong demand for U.S. goods, helping to create jobs and prosperity. Ambassador added that Indian companies operate in most U.S. states and are present in diverse sectors like IT and telecommunications, healthcare, pharmaceuticals and life sciences, education, financial service and manufacturing.

Ambassador drew attention to the immense contribution of the high tech sector in promoting bilateral economic cooperation. From 2011-15, studies by reputed business houses reveal that more than 400,000 jobs have been directly and indirectly supported by the Indian tech companies recording a growth of 10% annually. Over the last 5 years, Indian tech companies have paid over $20 billion as taxes, $7 billion towards social security contributions and impacted over 120,000 American lives through Corporate Social Responsibility contributions.

While summing up, Ambassador said that since US and India are both federal in their polity and governance systems, States will always have a critical role to play in spurring growth and facilitating investments. India’s Prime Minister, who has himself been the Chief Minister of a State for more than a decade, is a strong believer in ‘cooperative federalism’. This platform of cooperation between the Indian Embassy and NGA thus provides us with fertile ground for fruitful and active cooperation between State level authorities of our two countries.

On the behalf of NGA, its Chair, Gov. McAuliffe of Virginia highlighted the rapid strides and holistic growth in the bilateral relationship. Fondly recalling his eleven day visit to India in November 2015 (as the head of a Trade and Investment Mission), he highlighted the various opportunities that a growing Indian market represents to US companies and investments. On behalf of NGA, he assured the gathering that NGA and its components- the US State Governments, will continue to work closely with India to assure a safe and secure work and living environment for Indian citizens in the US as well as a productive business environment conditioned by a favourable regulatory and legal set-up.

To express their appreciation and regard, Vice Chair of NGA, Gov. Sandoval then presented a memento to Ambassador Sarna. The evening’s formal programme concluded with the screening of several visual presentations showcasing the themes of ‘Invest and Make in India’ jointly prepared and produced by the Ministry of External Affairs, Invest India Corporation, NASSCOM and the Embassy of India in Washington D.C.

The ambassador reminded his guests — who included CEOs and business leaders from India and the United States — the importance that Prime Minister Narendra Modi attaches to the development of states in India under the larger concept of “cooperative federalism”.

The reception comes close on the heels of a combined delegation of 27 US members of the House of Representatives that visited India last week, and set another record for the maximum number of lawmakers the country hosted at the same time.

Speaker Ryan meets Jaishankar, condoles ‘senseless murder’ of techie

After President Donald Trump condemned the killing, House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan has offered the condolences of the House for the “senseless” murder of Indian techie Srinivas Kuchibhotla, during his meeting with Indian Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar here.

Ryan, in a statement, also said that the two sides discussed ways to enhance the bilateral economic and defense cooperation. The Indian Foreign Secretary arrived here on Feb. 28 on a four-day visit to hold talks with top officials of the Trump Administration.

“The relationship between the U.S. and India is rooted in shared values of democracy and freedom,” Ryan said in a statement after his meeting with Jaishankar. “We had a great opportunity today to build on this critical partnership by discussing ways to enhance our economic and defense cooperation,” he stated.

“In our meeting, I expressed the House’s condolences on the death of Srinivas Kuchibhotla, who was senselessly murdered last week in Kansas. Our peoples must continue to stand together, and I look forward to working with Foreign Secretary Jaishankar in the years ahead.”

Ohio man stalks NRIs, posts video saying they are taking away our jobs

Coming days after the fatal shooting of Indian-born engineer Srinivas Kuchibhotla, on going anti-immigrants postings and hate crimes have been reported from many parts of the US. An anti-immigration website that features photos and videos of Indian families relaxing in the city of Columbus, Ohio, has alarmed community members in the United States.

A post on the website SaveAmericanITJobs.com called ‘Welcome to Columbus Ohio suburbs – Lets take a walk to Indian park’ features a video of Indian families hanging out in a public park in suburban Ohio. The video’s description mentions how wealthy Indian families have ‘moved in’ to suburban homes in Ohio as “displacement of Americans has occurred”. As of March 6, the video has over 41,000 views on YouTube.

A Buzzfeed report says that the website is created and maintained by Steve Pushor, a 66-year-old computer programmer from Virginia. In the video, Pushor’s camera pans over people playing volleyball and children riding bikes, as he narrates: “The number of people from foreign countries blows my mind out here. You see this whole area is all Indian, amazing. It’s an amazing number of jobs have been taken away from Americans. The Indian crowd has ravished the Midwest. It’s a takeover.(sic)” Pushor sarcastically describes the park as a “mini Mumbai”.

Pushor initially posted this video and the accompanying document ‘Ohio – A Journey To Indian Park’ in August. The document labels India as a “hell hole” and highlights the loss of “Norman Rockwell white people class” in the US. A link to the document now directs to a 403-error page, but an archived version of the page are still available online.

The recent shooting of Kuchibhotla and the anti-immigration rhetoric of the Trump government has caused the video and document to resurface on Facebook posts, forums and WhatsApp groups of Indian immigrants in the US.

Bhavin Bavalia, a US-born IT professional and son of Indian immigrants, said he came across the site and the video when a friend shared it on Facebook. Talking to Buzzfeed news, Bavalia said, “To think that there could be some weirdo filming my cousin’s kids as they’re playing at the park, and possibly fomenting resentment towards them, is just disturbing.”

The website SaveAmericanITJobs.org calls the “Indian IT mafia” as one of the “public enemies” of American IT professionals. A snippet on the website says: “The Indian IT Mafia Mega firms have greatly harmed the American Information Technology Workforce for decades. Their notorious practices and collaborations with greedy US Corporations have resulted in USA IT professionals training their H-1B or L-1 Indian replacements in order to receive severance pay. This is outrageous.”

Indian-origin businessman shot dead in South Carolina

With the nation still in shock from the killing of an Indian engineer Feb. 22, an Indian American businessman who was well-liked in his neighborhood was shot dead outside his home in Lancaster, South Carolina, on the night of Marvh 2.

A 43-year-old Indian-origin store owner in the US has been shot dead outside his home, just days after an Indian engineer was killed in Kansas in a hate crime shooting that had sent shockwaves across the country, reports PTI.

Harnish Patel, the owner of a convenience store in Lancaster County, South Carolina, was found dead of gunshot wounds in the front yard of his home on Thursday, coroner and police officials said.

Patel closed his store and drove in his silver minivan to his nearby home where authorities believe he was confronted by his killer. The store is about 6 km from his house, The Herald reported. He had locked up his nearby store less than 10 minutes before he was found dead, police said.

Patel’s death comes two days after President Donald Trump had said the nation condemned as “hate and evil” the killing of Srinivas Kuchibhotla, who was shot dead in a bar in Olathe, Kansas, by a white man who screamed, “Get out of my country.”

Local officials in Lancaster said they do not believe that Patel’s killing was a hate crime and that investigations are continuing, according to The Herald. “I don’t have any reason to believe that this was racially motivated,” County Sheriff Barry Faile said Mar. 3.

WSOCTV said that in Lancaster there was a lot of anger over the killing of Patel, who was considered an important member of the community and a kind person who treated his customers as friends and helped law enforcement. A sign on the shop door read, “Store closed for few days because of family emergency. Sorry for the inconvenience.”

A tearful customer, Nicole Jones, told the station that when someone didn’t have money, Patel gave them food. “I would have no idea who would do this to him as good as he is to everybody,” she said. A store employee, Keira Baskin, said that he only wanted the best for his employees and his family.

An IANS report from New Delhi adds: The Indian Consulate in Atlanta, Georgia, has deputed an official to meet the family of Harnish Patel, it was learnt Mar. 4. “CGI Atlanta is in touch with the family. It is deputing a consular official to meet the family and offer condolences and any required assistance,” a source here said.

India will have highest Muslim population by 2050

Key Pew findings in the U.S. and around the world

Indonesia is currently the country with the world’s largest Muslim population, but Pew Research Center projects that India will have that distinction by the year 2050, while remaining a majority-Hindu country, with more than 300 million Muslims. The Muslim population in Europe also is growing; with the projected 10% of all Europeans to be Muslims by 2050.

In 2015, according to estimates, there were 3.3 million Muslims of all ages in the U.S., or about 1% of the U.S. population. Pew Research Center’s 2014 Religious Landscape Study  found that 0.9% of U.S. adults identify as Muslims. A 2011 survey of Muslim Americans, which was conducted in English as well as Arabic, Farsi and Urdu, estimated that there were 1.8 million Muslim adults (and 2.75 million Muslims of all ages) in the country. That survey also found that a majority of U.S. Muslims (63%) are immigrants.

According to a Pew Research report, there were 1.6 billion Muslims in the world as of 2010 – roughly 23% of the global population. But while Islam is currently the world’s second-largest religion (after Christianity), it is the fastest-growing major religion. Indeed, if current demographic trends continue, the number of Muslims is expected to exceed the number of Christians by the end of this century.

Although many countries in the Middle East-North Africa region, where the religion originated in the seventh century, are heavily Muslim, the region is home to only about 20% of the world’s Muslims. A majority of the Muslims globally (62%) live in the Asia-Pacific region, including large populations in Indonesia, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Iran and Turkey.

Pew’s demographic projections estimate that Muslims will make up 2.1% of the U.S. population by the year 2050, surpassing people who identify as Jewish on the basis of religion as the second-largest faith group in the country (not including people who say they have no religion.

A recent Pew Research Center report estimated that the Muslim share of immigrants granted permanent residency status (green cards) increased from about 5% in 1992 to roughly 10% in 2012, representing about 100,000 immigrants in that year.

Muslims are the fastest-growing religious group in the world. The growth and regional migration of Muslims, combined with the ongoing impact of the Islamic State (also known as ISIS or ISIL) and other extremist groups that commit acts of violence in the name of Islam, have brought Muslims and the Islamic faith to the forefront of the political debate in many countries. Yet many facts about Muslims are not well known in some of these places, and most Americans – who live in a country with a relatively small Muslim population – say they know little or nothing about Islam.

There are two major factors behind the rapid projected growth of Islam, and both involve simple demographics. For one, Muslims have more children than members of other religious groups. Around the world, each Muslim woman has an average of 3.1 children, compared with 2.3 for all other groups combined.

Muslims are also the youngest (median age of 23 years old in 2010) of all major religious groups, seven years younger than the median age of non-Muslims. As a result, a larger share of Muslims already are, or will soon be, at the point in their lives when they begin having children. This, combined with high fertility rates, will fuel Muslim population growth.

While it does not change the global population, migration is helping to increase the Muslim population in some regions, including North America and Europe.Americans view more warmly the seven other religious groups mentioned in the survey (Jews, Catholics, mainline Protestants, evangelical Christians, Buddhists, Hindus and Mormons). But views toward Muslims (as well as several of the other groups) are now warmer than they were a few years ago; in 2014, U.S. adults gave Muslims an average rating of 40 degrees in a similar survey.

 

GOPIO condemns shooting on Indian Americans

The Global Organization of People of Indian Origin (GOPIO) has condemned the recent shooting death of Indian American Srinivas Kuchibhotla of Kansas. GOPIO Chairman Dr. Thomas Abraham said that the “apparent hate crime” is  vicious  and GOPIO stands together with the victims’ families at their time of distress.

The 32-year-old Indian engineer Kuchibhotla, who was working in aviation systems for Olathe-based Garmin Ltd, died after he was shot by navy veteran Adam Purinton who, according to witnesses, yelled “get out of my country” and “terrorist” at a bar on the night of February 22nd, 2017 before opening fire.

Kuchibhotla’s colleague Alok Madasani, also an engineer from Hyderabad, was critically injured in the attack. Another bar patron, 24-year old Ian Grillot, who had tried to apprehend the gunman, was also injured in the shooting and reportedly put his life in risk to save the Indians.
“Our thoughts are with the victims and families shaken by the shooting in Kansas and we do not have place for senseless acts of violence in our country,’ said GOPIO President Niraj Baxi.

GOPIO news release stated that any act of violence fueled by hatred, xenophobia and prejudice cannot be tolerated. The local and federal law enforcement must investigate the shooting as a hate crime. “The FBI and other state agencies must initiate quick legal proceedings against the murderer and the incident must be treated as a hate crime,” said GOPIO Vice President Ram Gadhavi. We also want White House to issue a statement against such senseless violence against immigrants who are legally in America and contribute to the economy of our country,” said Dr. Rajeev Mehta, GOPIO’s International Coordinator for North America.

GOPIO has also urged the community to sign the petition to the White House https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/indian-engineers-target-hate-crime.GOPIO Chapters have also planned Candlelight Vigils around the US. One such vigil has been planned in Riverside, Southern California by GOPIO-Inland Empire Chapter on March 5th.

GOPIO, with its many chapters in the USA and other parts of the world, has been working for the welfare of Diaspora Indians since 1989. It has taken up issues of the Indian Diaspora and has been promoting its interest and that of Indian around the world.
Contact: GOPIO International, Tel: 203-329-8010, gopio@optonline.net.

Maha Shivarathri celebration energizes the city with chants and prayer at Hanuman Mandir

Chicago, IL: Maha Shivarathri celebrations at Hanuman Mandir filled Chicagoland with divinity on February 24, 2017. The temple located at 3623 West Lake Avenue, Glenview, IL 60026 organized a beautiful Maha Shivarathri program under the guidance of Dr Khurana, where about 5,000 devotees enjoyed this Utsav.

The temple was decorated with fruits. Bhasam Alankar was performed and over 3000 devotees (men, women, & children) offered milk to Lord Shiva. The youngest child who performed this was 1&1/2 years old. This was witnessed by many devotees present at the ceremony and was applauded by everyone present.

Maha Shivaratri symbolizes “the great night of Shiva.” There is a legend about the fight between Vishnu and Brahma about who is the greatest in the universe. Then Shiva manifested himself as a huge column of light without beginning nor ending. Vishnu and Brahma gave up their fight and recognized Shiva as the One. This manifestation of Shiva as an infinite light lingam took place on the day of Maha Shivaratri and from there this day has acquired its special significance.

This day fills our planet with incredible spiritual energy enabling many of us to easily experience oneness through meditation and connect with our own self. This palpable energy helps us purify our mind by helping us get rid of unwanted thoughts bringing peace to one’s mind.  The repetition of the powerful Mantra “Om Namah Shivaya” benefits mind, body and soul.

Reghu Nair, Onni Nair, Raj Nair, Reji Nair, Jayraj Narayan, Mahesh Nair, Deepak Nair, Nitya Nair, Ashok Kumar from Omkaram Bhajans group Chanted Shiv Stotram

Asian Media Editor, Prachi Jaitly talked to devotees about their experiences. She asked kids about what they think about auspicious day and received some amazing response from them Kids related the Holy day with world peace and bringing community together.  Per ancient scriptures, Lingam is the shape through which Lord Shiva is worshipped.

The temple gave the opportunity to each devotee to offer milk to Lord Shiva the whole day. The program, started with Maha Sankalp followed by Ganapathi and Kumbh Puja. The chanting of prayers was followed by various Bhajans that kept the atmosphere thrilled with spirituality. The devotees were provided with the holy Prasad.  The celebration concluded with Abhishek, Aarti and melodious Bhajans. At 12 midnight, Maha Arti was performed and devotees received Prasad and blessings from Lord Shiva.

April 26, 2014 marked the historic day for the Hanuman Mandir of Greater Chicago, Glenview, IL, as a large number of devotees thronged to participate in the much awaited holy ceremony of Bhoomi Poojan (ground-breaking) for the upcoming Mandir. This Hanuman Ji is 22.5’ tall carved from 25’ one piece of best marble of Jaipur Curi. This unique art Dviva Shareera (double body) is exactly the same on both sides which makes it one of a kind in the whole world. Murti arrived in Chicago in July 2014 and was worshipped by his beloved devotee’s everyday with all love and devotion for 6 months while Hanuman Ji was resting in its original metal container.

On December 12, 2014, the Sthapna procedure was done & devotees did Darshan. Finally, the day came and Mandir was opened and Pranpratishtha of 13 idols including original Namadashivalinga was done on the 15th, 16th, & 17th of April 2016 with the help of 7 priests and 5000 devotees.  From April 17th to December 31st 2016, all religious events were performed at the temple. Many high profile saints visited and blessed the temple and the devotees. New Year of 2017 was celebrated by thousands of devotees.

Hindus seek apology as Amazon sells Lord Hanuman underwear

Upset Hindus are urging online retailer Amazon.com for the immediate withdrawal of men’s underwear, doormat and sweatpants carrying images of Hindu deity Lord Hanuman, besides a Hanuman cloth doll; calling these highly inappropriate. Hanuman men’s underwear, made from satin cloth, sells for $49.62 at Amazon.com.

Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada today, said that Lord Hanuman was greatly revered in Hinduism and was meant to be worshipped in temples or home shrines and not to wear on your hip/crotch or legs or put your feet on or touch with your feet or to be randomly thrown around (in case of a cloth doll). Inappropriate usage of Hindu deities or concepts for commercial or other agenda was not okay as it hurt the faithful.

Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, also urged Amazon.com President Jeffrey P. Bezos to offer a formal apology, besides withdrawing these products, as this was not the first time for the company to offer such products which were deemed offensive by Hindu devotees.

Hinduism was the oldest and third largest religion of the world with about one billion adherents and a rich philosophical thought and it should not be taken frivolously. Symbols of any faith, larger or smaller, should not be mishandled, Rajan Zed indicated.

Zed further said that such trivialization of Hindu deities was disturbing to the Hindus world over. Hindus were for free artistic expression and speech as much as anybody else if not more. But faith was something sacred and attempts at trivializing it hurt the followers, Zed added.

Amazon.com, Inc., a Fortune 500 company founded in 1994, and headquartered in Seattle (USA), claims to offer earth’s biggest selection.

Will present India’s unique culture, vibrancy through India Day Parade, Andy Bhatia

 

While announcing that the 37th annual India Day parade will be on Sunday, August 20 on Madison Avenue in Manhattan, Andy Bhatia, who has assumed charge as the president of the Federation of Indian Association in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, in an exclusive interview with this writer, said, “The parade management will be totally different this year.”

India Day Parade is known to be the 2nd largest in the world after India’s own Republic Day parade in New Delhi. Describing that the 37th annual parade will be a way of presenting India’s unique culture and vibrancy, Bhatia, a well known community activist and leader said, “Th iconic India Gate will be installed in the food court area and we will reach out to the New Yorkers in advance to come and enjoy the Indian cuisine.”

According to Bhatia, the India Day Banquet to celebrate 70th Independence Day will be on Saturday, August 19. There will be a solid one hour entertainment and a well-known singer is expected to entertain by singing in different Indian  languages. “This year it will be a sit down dinner with white glove service. We will announce the program and the menu in advance,” Bhatia said.

According to Andy Bhatia, “There will be the first ever fundraiser –GIFT BAZAAR- on April 29 & 30 at the TV Asia studios in Edison, NJ. The plan is seek the members of the Indian American community to donate  to FIA unwanted gifts received and new merchandise. FIA will issue a tax deductible receipt for the value and sell them at the Gift Bazaar to raise funds for its community projects,” he said.

Its’ not all about fun with the new leadership of FIA under Andy Bhatia, he said. A college fair to target the second generation will also take place in the Fall this year. It will be open to all young people wanting to meet with college recruiters. In addition, FIA is also planning on holding visa camps in NJ, PA, LI and CT, making it easier for people to take benefit of the Consular services in their own neighborhoods, Bhatia said. .Among others, he said, there are plans being made to hold an event in Connecticut that will be of interest to South Asians and their friends,” Bhatia informed this writer.

Andy Bhatia, who is the president of American Sales and Marketing Partners LLC, who has extensive experience in the airline/travel industry. He retired as the Area Sales Manager for Air India in New York, where he worked for nearly 35 years, both in the field and at the North American Headquarters in various capacities.

He has served in the FIA in various capacities for several years. For a quarter of a century, he actively participated in organizing the India Day Parade and Diwali Festival in New York City and Diwali Mela in Jackson Heights, among other community events in the Tri-State area on behalf of Air India.

He was honored thrice by the FIA and the National Federation of Indian Associations (NFIA.) He is credited with conceptualizing and launching the ‘Know India Seminars’ in USA and Canada which were attended by more than 6000 American travel agents to qualify as India tourism specialists. He also formulated the concept of selling co-op tours by agents in non-conflicting sales territories to increase tourist bookings to India.

Organizations including the Gujrati Samaj USA, City Council of New York, and Jackson Heights Merchants Association too honored him. He was also selected for the Paul Harris Fellowship Award of Rotary International for International Relations in 1998. The travel industry honored him several times.

Another honor he cherishes was the WICC Radio Station’s Community Service Salute (1971, 1974) for community service in the Greater Bridgeport area. He was also honored by the Rotary Club of Bridgeport with the Outstanding Young Man of America award (1971 and 1974) for leadership qualities when he was a student.

He was also instrumental in the launching a bi-monthly India Travel newsletter and the Traveler’s India magazine. He continues to be engaged in the industry as a consultant and serves as a member of several travel trade associations including the Pacific Asia Travel Association’s New York Chapter and  the American Society of Travel Agents, Airline Sales Managers Association and SKAL International.

He also worked at the Public Relations and Development Office at the University of Bridgeport as executive secretary of the Committee on Informal Education. He chaired the Halsey International Scholarship Program consisting of community support groups representing sixteen countries including India’s Shastri Scholarship Committee.

Andy Bhatia assumed charge as the President of FIA on January 1 along with a new team comprising of Srujal Parikh (executive vice president); Alok Kumar (vice president); Chhavi Dharayan  (secretary); Jatin Patel (joint secretary); Himanshu Bhatia (treasurer); Anand Patel (immediate past president) promising that an all out effort will be made to expand the activities of the organization.

The signature events of the FIA, including the India Day Parade, India Day Banquet and the Dance pe Chance. Expanding the programs of FIA to Connecticut and Queens/Long Island areas are also being explored, he said.

Sikh Foundation celebrates golden jubilee with “Pride and Promise”

The Sikh Foundation has announced of its plans to celebrate its 50th anniversary this year, beginning March 10 with a special exhibit at the San Francisco Asian Art Museum on “Pride and Promise.”.

The golden jubilee celebrations will have three components: A Golden Gala titled, The Pride & Promise will be held at the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco, CA, on May 5th, 2017; A Conference: on Advancing Sikhs through Education at Stanford University, CA, has been planned for May 6th & 7th, 2017; and finally, an exhibition, titled “Saints and Kings: Arts, Culture, and Legacy of the Sikhs,” will be on display at the Asian Art Museum through June 18. Portraits and treasures of the 18th century warrior Maharaja Ranjit Singh will be on display.  The exhibit will also feature a timeline of the first Indians who arrived in America: pioneering Sikhs, who settled in California’s Central Valley in the early 1900s.

The exhibit will also feature works from Narinder Singh Kapany’s extensive collection of Sikh art. The Indian American physicist, who is known as the “father of fiber optics,” founded the Sikh Foundation in 1967 and currently serves as the organization’s chairman. The display will focus on three themes, among which are a glimpse of the Sikh religion, with a focus on Guru Nanak; and the courtly art of Maharaja Ranjit Singh, who unified several small kingdoms into one, with the capital in Lahore. Three portraits of Singh will be on display, along with a large, wooden box inlaid with ivory, and an emerald ring with his inscription.

The 50th year anniversary celebrations of the Sikh Foundation will also feature a series of lectures at Stanford University, and a three-day gala, beginning May 5. Two ministers from Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Cabinet are expected to attend: Navdeep Singh Bains, minister of science and economic development, and Defense Minister Harjit Sajjan.

The Sikh Foundation is a cultural organization, not religious, said Kapany, adding that he wants Americans to understand the Sikh culture, especially in view of the current xenophobic climate of the country

INOC, USA expresses serious concern over USCIRF report on India’s deteriorating religious freedom

 

Indian National Overseas Congress, USA expressed serious concern over the recently issued annual report by the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF), a powerful freedom body that exercises considerable influence on the US Senate and Administration, which cited that religious tolerance has deteriorated and  religious freedom violations have increased in India under Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s regime. “It is unfortunate that the last two years have witnessed a steady deterioration of religious freedom and human rights in India especially that of the minorities and the current administration cannot shirk their responsibility in that regard,” said George Abraham, Chairman of the Indian National Overseas Congress, USA.

According to the recently released report, India faces serious challenges to both its pluralistic traditions and its religious minorities. “Muslims, Christians, Sikhs, and Jains generally are fearful of what the future portends. Dalits also are increasingly being attacked and harassed”.

It further urged the Indian government to immediately lift its sanctions against non-governmental organizations (NGOs) that are working for the welfare of the minorities in India. It also pointed out that FCRA (Foreign Contribution Regulation Act) is increasingly being used as a tool to shut down foreign-funded minority NGOs.

In an unusually sharp criticism of the Modi Administration, the USCIRF wants the US administration to identify and act against “Hindutva groups that raise funds from US citizens and support hate campaigns in India”, adding “such groups should be banned from operating in the US if they are found to spread hatred against religious minorities in India.”

INOC, USA urges the growing Indian community in the United States to refrain from funding these organizations that promote hatred and bigotry against the minorities in India. More than ever, as minorities in the United States,  it is incumbent upon us to uphold the democratic and pluralistic values that are a hallmark of this country and it is in our own ‘vested interests’ to see that those values preserved and protected.

Chicago celebrates romantic musical Valentine’s evening organized by Payal Shah

By Asian Media USA ©

Chicago IL: One of the very successful female promoters of Chicagoland, Payal Shah organized a romantic evening “Love Ke liye Kuch Bhi Karega” on February 17,2017 at Ashton Place, 75th Street, Willowbrook, IL. The party was full of class, dance and romance.  The theme of the party was Bollywood and the guests showed up dressed up as their favorite Bollywood stars.  The party hall looked stunning with beautiful floral and lighting effects. Amit Desai and Bharti Desai and many more helped with registrations at the ticket counter and were appreciated for their help by Payal Shah.

Yeh Cheez Party Planning did a phenomenal job with the decoration. Payal and her team kept props and extra accessories for the guests to add filmy fun to the pictures in front of the stunning black and red rose backdrop. The tables had a nice black and red theme, the stage looked beautiful with red and black stars and red hearts on black plain fabric. The venue was lit with red led lights. The Dj had a five-screen setup that displayed the live feed as the event was going on. All in all, the venue and stage looked grand and mesmerizing.

The couples competed for the title of best Bollywood Style Outfit to win some amazing prizes. Starting with “Gift Cards to your favorite restaurant or boutique” to a “Paid Cruise to Bahama for a Couple”. Watching these couples walking on the red carpet and dancing on the dance floor on the song of their choice was something new, creative and fun. The event was emceed by Noman Khan and Mohan Rawat, along with the beautiful, Prabh Khaira.  Their comic timing was impeccable and kept the audience on their toes throughout the evening.  All the singers like Anil Shah and Saarang Sane did a great job and sang some beautiful romantic numbers.

The food had a lot of variety and it was super delicious. Guests had many vegetarian and non-vegetarian options. The food was catered by one of the finest restaurants of Chicago, Shree Restaurant. No event is complete without its sponsors, even this event had a list of elite sponsors, such as Sahil, Shree Restaurant, Suga Builders, World’s Money Exchange, Xchange Tax & Accounting, New York Life, LIVE 2 U, Atlantic Travels, Raj Jewels, Bombay Styles, Insurance World, Saris and Things, Yeh Cheez, Shreeji Builders, New Life Medical Center, Adbhut, Hi India, Dvdj Sohbash and Lake Street Dental.

The grand finale dance performance by Yeh Cheez Dance Group gave the perfect closing to the evening. The group performed on some famous romantic Bollywood numbers, such as “Zoobie Doobie”, “Chura Ke Dil Mera”, “Tumse Milke Dil Ka”, “Nashe Si Chadgayi” “Meri Mehbooba”, “Hamma Hamma” and “Woh Ladki Hain Kahan” and created magic on the dance floor. It was a very elegant and very synchronize performance.

Payal Shah’s Valentine’s Day set the standards of Valentine’s Day Parties high. It was a packed house. Every known face of the community was present at this event and went home with a big smile. The event was a grand success and elicited an outpouring of appreciation from the attendees. The guests said that they are eagerly looking forward to Payal Shah’s next event.

‘Uma and Devan Namaste!’ stars Indian American siblings

Toonz Media Group and New York-based Sharmaji Productions have partnered on the production of a full season of Uma and Devan Namaste!, a new animated series that is the first to explore the daily lives of Indian-American families. Targeting preschoolers, the show follows sister Uma (age 5) and brother Devan (almost 4) as they balance growing up in the US while staying true to their Indian heritage.

“For Toonz, it is of utmost importance to find creative and philosophical synergies with our partners, and we found it in Sharmaji Productions,” Toonz Media, CEO, P. Jayakumar said. “Uma and Devan Namaste! is an amazing series which will connect well with kids across the world. We have great hopes for the show and this wonderful collaboration.”

Kerala-based Toonz Media Group and New York-based Sharmaji Productions have partnered on the production of a full season of “Uma and Devan Namaste!”, a new animated pre-school series that aims to explore the daily lives of Indian American families. The show follows the sibling duo of Uma, 5, and Devan, almost 4, as they balance growing up in the U.S. while staying true to their Indian heritage.

As the siblings navigate their multicultural world (with the help of family and friends), each episode highlights important, universal lessons while incorporating aspects of Indian culture, stated a press release. Uma and Devan also encounter the unique cultural practices of their friends, learning to respect and celebrate the diversity within modern America.

The series also features Uma and Devan’s family members: their grandparents dadi and dadu, first-generation immigrants; their U.S.-born parents; and their eccentric uncle, mamu. Among the siblings’ planned adventures for the series are making rangoli, playing cricket, practicing yoga, baking roti and celebrating Holi.

The show explores the wonders of childhood through the eyes of Uma and Devan as they learn to live, play and conquer obstacles in the multi-cultural society. Childhood is a fun, imaginative experience, often presenting many challenges to overcome. Each episode highlights a key lesson as well as an aspect of Indian culture, as the children learn about themselves and the world around them.

GOPIO-CT will be the voice of Indian Americans: Anita Bhat

Stamford, NY: “We lack a voice for Indian Americans in the United States. We need a stronger voice. And I want GOPIO-CT to be voice for all Indian Americans in our state and beyond,” declared Anita Bhat, who assumed charge as the President of GOPIO-CT during an inaugural event of her new executive team at the Hampton Inn, Stamford, CT on Friday, February 10, 2017.

In her first ever presidential address, Bhat, who has been active community organizer and philanthropist, laid out her plans for the next one year under her presidency. According to Bhat, her new team will make an all out effort to increase membership of GOPIO-CT; Bhta said, wants to strengthen GOPIO-CT through strong partnership and collaboration with other organizations of Indian origin in the state. She pointed out to AAPI-CT Chapter whose mebers have come to be part of the day’s deliberations.

Other plans, Bhat and her team have envisaged include: Creating a vibrant youth team; actively engaging with and in local community activities benefitting the larger American society; and, GOPIO-CT to be a liaison between the governments of India and the United States.

“We feel privileged that we are able to serve in local soup kitchens, walk to support cancer patients, and impact our community in numerous other ways. We could not have accomplished any of this without the support of our sponsors and our biggest fans–you,” she said.

The executive committee consists of Pradeep Govil, Exec. Vice President; Varghese Ninan, Vice President; Bhavna Juneja, Secretary; Deepender Gupta, Jt. Secretary; Viresh Sharma, Treasurer; and Shailesh Naik, and Immediate Past President

Board Members are: Meera Banta, Louella D’Silva, Ravi Dhingra, and Ritu Johorey. The  Scholarship Committee has Sanjay Santhanam (Chair); Hari Srinivasan, Tara Sharma, and
Priya Easwaran (Exec. Director) as its members. The Young Professionals Network is being chaired by Nisha Govil. Board of Trustees are” Anita Bhat – Chair; Dr. Thomas Abraham – Secretary, Comptroller; Santosh Gannu; Joe Simon; Amarjit Singh; and Shelly Nichani – Ex-Officio.

Echoing similar sentiments, the chief Guest for the evening, Connecticut Assemblyman Dr. Prasad Srinivasan, in his eloquent speech highlighted the need for Indian Americans to come together, stand united and work for the greater good of the larger American society. Stating that, he has declared his candidacy for the governor’s office in the state of Connecticut, Dr. Srinivsan said, “It’s ben a long journey and I know the challenge is great ahead. MY goal is to make our beautiful state more prosperous and more friendly for people of all backgrounds to live.” Pointing to the fact that several large companies have left or leaving Connecticut due to the dismal fiscal policies of the state government,” DR. Srinivasan urged the elite gathering of Indian American leaders to “join me as work together to make Connecticut a prosperous state again.”

The event attended by nearly 100 members from across the state honored Shelly Nichani, Shailesh Naik, and Sangeeta Ahuja, both past presidents of GOPIO-CT who have worked hard and with total dedication for the growth of the organization. Pradeep Govil, Exec. Vice President, said, GOPIO-CT serves as a non-partisan, secular, civic and community service organization – promoting awareness of Indian culture, customs and contributions of PIOs through community programs, forums, events and youth activities. GOPIO is a registered 501(c)3 non-profit organization. It seeks to strengthen partnerships and create an ongoing dialogue with local communities. The organization’s mission is to promote the well being of People of Indian Origin (PIO) and to enhance cooperation and communication between PIOs and other communities.

Varghese Ninan, Vice President, said, This year, GOPIO-Connecticut celebrates the 11th year of activities since its inception. What started out as the collective vision of a few like-minded individuals in partnership with the local Indian community, and their modest goals, has evolved into an exemplary community service organization thanks to the tremendous support of the community.

Earlier, in his welcome and inaugural address of the GOPIO-CT 2017 Activities Launch Party which included networking cocktails and dinner, Dr. Thomas Abraham, Chairman of GOPIO-International, gave a brief outline of the organization’s history and contributions in the past two decades years. GOPIO Connecticut Chapter was launched in March 2006. It is part of the GOPIO International network which has almost 100 active chapters in 40 countries. GOPIO International was formed in 1989 at the first convention of PIOs held in New York. GOPIO has been actively campaigning for issues of interest to the Indian community on Capitol Hill and at the European Union.

Dr. Abraham, who has behind the NRI/PIO movement in the last 3 decades, had  Abraham coined the word PIO (people of Indian origin) in 1989, when he put together the First Convention of People of Indian Origin in New York. The greatest achievement of Dr. Abraham is initiating and building several NRI/PIO Indian community institutions in the last 38 years, as follows: Dr. Abraham has been instrumental in the creation of several organizations, including, Federation of Indian Association (FIA) of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut; National Federation of Indian-American Associations (NFIA); GOPIO  International; Indian American Kerala Cultural and Civic Center; Jagdish Bhagwati Chair for Indian Political Economy at Columbia University; National Indian American Association for Senior Citizens (NIAASC) ; South Asian Council for Social Services (SACSS); and, The Indus Nanotechnology Association (TINA). Through these organizations, Dr. Abraham has helped to build a solid base for the Indian Diaspora and India in various countries. For more details, please visit:www.gopioct.org

Seed for History and Form

Tebhaga, curated by Sumesh Sharma in NYC

Aicon Gallery in New York is presenting Seed for History and Form – Tebhaga, a group exhibition curated by Sumesh Sharma, co-founder of Clark House Initiative, Bombay, featuring work by Richard Bartholomew, Jyoti Bhatt, Biren De, Haren Das, Aurélien Froment, Laxma Goud, Somnath Hore, M. F. Hussain, Mohammad Omar Khalil, Rachid Koraïchi, Aurélien Mole, Krishna Reddy, and Michael Kelly Williams.

According to  press release on the exhibit, “Survey shows deflect us from histories of art that engage in cross-pollination of ideas, form, and techniques across geography, language, and culture. Such seeds, often ignored and misunderstood due to endogamous art research, lead to untold histories and biases towards a linear understanding of the arts. Inclusion into art history and its long serving linear timeline to the Occident, that is fattened as it descends through survey shows and geography-specific exhibitions, only continues to serve an understanding of history that suffers from the lack of translation.  In art history, the act of translation should not be an act aided simply by a dictionary and etymology, but one that makes us rethink relationships to color, form and the idea of the visual.”

Conceptualism had its early history when Pablo Picasso and the Polish Avant-Garde were looking at face masks in the colonial collections that are now to be seen in the Musée du quai Branly in Paris. There was an idea of translation in this looking that gave birth to many etymologies. The etymology of modernism is a distinct idea in India, one that may manifest itself today in the homes Indians build for themselves, claiming them to be modern homes. If Joseph Beuys was the Shaman who performed a radical act that changed the possible definitions of the term artist, thereby allowing those heretofore outside the linear art history of North America and Europe leeway to enter, then these middle-class Indians may also define their own modernism.

What were the geo-political translations of a few men and women who gathered each year to teach printmaking through a series of workshops on the Atlantic coast of Morocco? This exhibition discusses those seeds of form, tracking geography from Santiniketan in Eastern India, to Dakar in Senegal, and ending in New York. It spans the life and work of Krishna Reddy and Mohammed Omar Khalil, and listens to the songs of Amadou Badiane and Somnath Mukherjee through Aurélien Froment’s cinema, while Michael Kelly Williams narrates the objectivity of form in sculpture that began in printmaking, and we study what makes Somnath Hore’s etchings both minimal and viscerally political. Does a drought effect conceptualism and modernism? Haren Das’s woodcuts narrate life in rural Bengal. How do blacksmiths in Dakar challenge form and materiality through history, like the standing sculpture of an ancient Surya (Sun God) or a stone Buddha from ancient Gandhara?

The right to land after the Bengal famine, described as the Tebhaga movement, where sharecroppers asked for a reduction in rent in return for giving grain to the landlords, was supported by the artists of Bengal.  In this exhibition, a painting from the 1960s by M. F. Hussain defines the seeds of India’s modernism as one based on the independence a nascent nation, depleted of its strength through colonialism, but now somewhat lost in its circumstances.

Jyoti Bhatt celebrates M. F. Hussain, who was later vilified by the Indian right for his art, by making a portrait of Hussain in the tricolors of the India flag. Aurélien Mole makes a poignant critique on India’s Progressive Artists Group, by inviting Akbar Padamsee’s muse, Arai Kesava Naidu, to the National Gallery of Art in Mumbai for her first time, despite her body being a source of that artist’s forms. Biren De’s drawings move from cubist renditions of pastoral Bengal to ones that circle out to tantric meditation and spiritualism, an element now celebrated in museum exhibitions of Indian modernism.

Laxma Goud, coming from the arid part of the Indian Andhras, puts a form to Indian erotica and an artist’s vision to vocabulary, camouflaging erotica in deep lines of cubist rendition uncovering many surprises. Rachid Koraïchi’s calligraphed ceramic hand in Arabic announces New Year wishes to the residents of the city of Saint Denis, a Parisian suburb. As the city welcomes 2017, it leaves behind the travesties of 2016 by celebrating an Algerian artist. Diasporas have created forms of conceptual intrigue in their role as a constant influence on creative thought. The Progressive Artist Group in Bombay was catalyzed by two Jewish refugees, Rudy Von Leyden and Walter Langhammer, who had fled Europe to Bombay and brought the rejection of classical form to the students of the Sir JJ School of Arts, among whom was M. F. Hussain.  Like the sharecroppers of Bengal, artists ask for their share in art history not through representation but adequate translation that hears their narrative.

The exhibition is open from February 23 – March 25, 2017 at  the gallery, located at 35 Great Jones St., New York NY 10012.

International Food Festival 2017

The Society of Foreign Consuls (SOFC), New York, in association with the Consulate General of India, New York, organized the International Food Festival from on February 09, 2017 at the Consulate premises.  More than 25 countries showcased their rich cuisine and culture during the event. A large number of people including Manhattan Borough President Ms. Gale Brewer, Brooklyn Borough Deputy President, Ms. Diana Reyna and members of the Diplomatic Corps attended the festival. Consul General (Mrs.) Riva Ganguly Das welcomed the guests while President of SOFC and Consul General of Columbia, María Isabel Nieto Jaramillo made the opening remarks. Cultural troupes from various participating countries enthralled the audience who got to taste the delectable flavors from around the world.

 

White supremacist group distribute racist fliers in Connecticut

Racist fliers by white supremacist groups targeting non-White communities are proliferating in the United States. After some fliers targeting Indian families were reported from Texas, more has been found distributed in Norwalk, Connecticut.

Police said several printed fliers were found on driveways and in mailboxes on Newtown Avenue in Norwalk on Monday. The fliers read, “We must secure the existence of our race and a future for white children. Make America White Again.”

Officials say the fliers also list a link to a white supremacist website, reported NBC News. Norwalk residents placed a complaint with the police department. Norwalk Police Spokesman Lt. Terry Blake said detectives are investigating the fliers.

Last week, ABC News reported a threatening racist flier was found by an unidentified Indian family living in the Riverstone community in Fort Bend, Texas. In November, close to Thanksgiving, similar racist fliers targeting Indians and Indian Americans were found in McKinney, Texas.

The unidentified family in Fort Bend found the flier left at their home in the middle of the night. The opening sentence was “Our new President, Donald J Trump is God’s gift to the white nation.” It added: “we need to get rid of Muslims, Indians, and Jews,” telling them to “get out of Texas and go back to where you came from.”

The family is too frightened to report it to police, much less discuss it publicly. They don’t know if they were specifically targeted, or if their house was selected at random, reported ABC News, quoting a family friend of the family.

“It is literally spewing in word form hate for everybody who isn’t white Anglo Saxon,” the family friend was quoted as saying. “That’s basically what this letter says.” More than 1,000 incidents of hateful intimidation and harassment were reported nationwide from November 9 through December 12, many of them apparently committed by supporters of President Donald Trump, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC).

7,000 Jains from all over the world to attend 2017 JAINA Convention in New Jersey

About 7,000 Jains from all over the world are expected to gather in New Jersey later this year when the 2017 JAINA Convention takes place in the Garden State. The June 30-July 4 convention will be addressed by eminent Jain scholars and leading members of the community coming to attend the convention from different parts of the world, including India. Besides eminent Jain acharya, Dr. Lokesh Muni, who is the founder of Ahimsa Vishwa Bharti, the five-day convention will also be addressed by founder of Art of Living Sri Sri Ravi Shankar.

A meeting took place between Muni and Ravi Shankar last week in India during which the latter was invited by Muni to the convention. The two spiritual leaders also discussed the details of the convention. An AVB media handler said several other spiritual masters, both Jains and non-Jains are expected to address the convention. “We are yet to finalize the list of speakers as also the location of the convention in New Jersey,” Kenu A. Sharma, AVP media secretary, told Desi Talk over phone from India.

The convention will have a series of seminars and lectures relating to Jainism. JAINA is the largest Jain organization outside India and represents 150,000 Jains in the U.S. and Canada. JAINA was established in 1981 to provide a forum to foster friendship and unity among all Jains from North America.

Muni said that members of JAINA work together to advance principles of non-violence, vegetarianism, charitable and humanitarian volunteerism and academic and cultural interchanges.

The theme of convention is ‘Jainism and Science’. A stimulating program is being developed to meet the interests of all segments and age groups attending the convention. “The convention will seek to drive home the point about the scientific nature of Jainism and how best the humankind can benefit by embracing it in their lives. Though the five day discourses and seminars, the convention will seek to decide on a plan of action for the future in order for it to be spread among more people,” Sharma said.

According to Muni, Jain religion has always made important contributions towards establishing non- violence and peace in society, adding that the Jain community has always worked for the development of different sections and areas of society. He noted during his meeting with Sri Sri Ravi Shankar that whenever people faced problems like flood, or earthquake, the Jain community came forward for welfare activities. He expressed the hope that like in U.S., the Jain community in India also will come together to work for social welfare in a more organized manner.

Sri Sri Ravi Shankar maintained that while all religions teach the values of humanity and the need for all religions to work together to establish world peace and harmony, peace is necessary for development. “Interfaith and inter-religion harmony is necessary to end war, violence and terrorism from the world. Jainism peaches the principles of Ahimsa (nonviolence), Anekant (unity in diversity) and Aparigrah (renunciation) and shows us the path towards establishing world peace and harmony.

Sri Sri Ravi Shankar also appreciated the fact that acharya Lokesh Muni has been making efforts towards mutual brotherhood, communal harmony, nonviolence and character-building not only in India but also in different parts of the world.

New Jersey on verge of becoming first state in US to prohibit marriage before the age of 18

New Jersey is on the verge of becoming the first state in the United States to prohibit anyone younger than 18 from getting married. At present, children ages 16 and 17 may marry with parental consent. Also, children under 16 may marry if they obtain parental consent and a state judge’s approval.

The New Jersey state Senate committee approved a bill on Monday to that effect. If passed, the bill (A3091) would make New Jersey the first state in the nation to remove all exceptions to the law that says people must be 18 years old to get married, reported NJ Advanced Media. The measure passed the state Assembly, 64-0, in November, and Monday’s action sets up a vote for final passage in the full Senate.

Fraidy Reiss of Westfield, founder and executive director of Unchained At Last, a non-profit organization that helps young women and girls leave forced marriages, was quoted as saying the problem is more widespread than people think. Between 1995 and 2012, 3,500 minors got married in New Jersey — some as young as 13. “Some had an age difference (large enough) to make it statutory rape,” Reiss told the Senate Judiciary Committee.

The practice is driven by some religiously conservative parents “who do not want their child to have boyfriends or to go to college unattended,” Abed Awad, a legal expert from Hasbrouck Heights who is an expert in religious law, testified. “They want control and decide who their child marries at a young age,” rather than allowing their child to mature and decide, ‘I’m in New Jersey, I’m an American, I’m going to college. I am going to decide who I marry.”

There is some opposition to the measure. State Sen. Michael Doherty (R-Warren), who voted against the bill, insisted there should be exceptions to the law, arguing for people enlisting in the military, saying they often marry young. He also raised the possibility of teenage girls who get pregnant before the age of 18, want to tie the knot, and would find it hard to get health insurance on her own. However, the committee voted 10-1 to pass the bill, with state Sen. Joseph Kyrillos (R-Monmouth) abstaining.

Pratibha Jairath’s Bollywood Sargam presents Valentine’s Day Party

Chicago IL: Pratibha Jairath’s Bollywood Sargam presented Valentine party at Ashton place in a romantic style with red roses at the entrance of the banquet hall, and was attended by over 200 guests. For couples, romantics and sky-watchers, Valentine’s Day 2017 was perfect. A full moon greeted lovers and sweethearts on this special day. Saint Valentine’s Day, also known as Valentine’s Day observed on February 14 each year

The evening started with welcome from Anoop Walia. He introduced the host of the evening, Pratibha Jairath as a person who brings community together by her persona, her energy and her desire to touch everyone’s heart. He spoke of her journey, as to how she started planning Sangeet and choreographing dances for her close circles. He eluted to her recent successful NYE show.

With romantic old and new numbers by Pratibha Jairath, who was joined by Raju Bankapur, a well-known singer, charming the audience. The party was in full swing with numbers like Baby Doll, Chittiyaan Kalaiyan, Om shanti Om and Deewangi, Gulabi Aankhen and so on. The duets like Tum hi ho, Soch Na sake, Tere sang yaara brought lovely couples to floor for waltz dancing. This was then followed by some very nice listening numbers by Dr. Manohar Jethani such as Pal Pal dil ke paas, Ek ladki ko Dakha and so on. People requested some more wonderful unique numbers from Dr. Jethani.

Ashika Kalra sought help with her project to help schools back home through her Vidya Dan project. Loomba of Home Mortgage Loan Solutions was the grand sponsor for Vidya dan project and he said he will take care of the first part of her project and students will have a great library of books.

The sumptuous dinner was followed by an interesting surprise like Belly dancer with Candalbra and folks cheered her on at Mahiya mahiya song’s fusion dance. Jairath presented the audience with the Bollywood dress up and fashion walk which was loved by the audience.

Shobhana Patel, said, “I am happy to be here on this occasion as this gives me an opportunity to impress my boyfriend.” “Due to our hectic schedule, we hardly get quality time to spend with each other,” Sonia Shah, an IT Engineer from Schaumburg IL. “Valentine’s Day is a good excuse to make that time and get the romance back.”

New US report exposes India’s mistreatment of minorities

India fails to comply with international standards on freedom of religion leading to the discrimination and persecution of religious minorities, said a new report by the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom.

The report, “Constitutional and Legal Challenges Faced by Religious Minorities in India” said that, although the country’s Constitution guarantees equal rights to religious minorities, the government fails to comply with international standards.

US Commission on International Religious Freedom
(http://www.uscirf.gov/) has asked newly-appointed President Donald Trump to put
“religious freedom and human rights at the heart of all trade, aid, and diplomatic
interactions with India” and urge the Government of India “to push Indian
states that have adopted anti-conversion laws to repeal or amend them to
conform to international norms.”

In an unusually sharp critique of the BJP-led NDA government, the USCIRF
wants the US administration to identify and act against “Hindutva groups
that raise funds from US citizens and support hate campaigns in India”,
adding, “Such groups should be banned from operating in the US if they are found
to spread hatred against religious minorities in India.”

Referring to the March 2016 amendment to the FCRA, introduced “to legalize
funding by foreign entities to political parties”, the USCIRF states, “
The amendment enables foreign Hindu organizations to send money to
India-based radical Hindu organizations”.
It insists, these radical groups “have been seeking funds for the
controversial Ghar Wapsi campaign ”, launched by Hindutva groups to aggressively
oppose the right to convert to religions like Islam and Christianity.

Especially citing a report prepared by US-based South Asia Citizens Web
(SACW), “Hindu Nationalism in the United States”, USCIRF says, the report
refers “policies and actions of Hindu radical groups in the US, and covers
tax records, newspaper articles, and other sources on the NGOs in the US
affiliated with the Sangh Parivar … and BJP.”

USCIRF approvingly quotes the SACW report as saying, “India-based Sangh
affiliates receive social and financial support from its US-based wings, the
latter of which exist largely as tax-exempt non-profit organizations in the
US.”

SAWC, says USCIRF, identifies US-based organizations which carry out these
activities. These are “Hindu Swayamsevak Sangh, Vishwa Hindu Parishad of
America, Sewa International USA, Ekal Vidyalaya Foundation-USA, and the
Overseas Friends of the Bharatiya Janata Party-USA.”

USCIRF regrets, “While the Indian government continues to use the FCRA to
limit foreign funding for some NGOs, Hindutva supporter organizations have
never come under the scrutiny of the FCRA”, adding, “With the new
amendment to the FCRA, these foreign-based radical Hindu organizations will be able
to send funds to India, without restriction, to support hate campaigns.”

At the same time, the report states, the FCRA is being used against
organizations which take up human rights of minorities, pointing to how the Modi
government has been blocking funds “to hamper the activities of NGOs that
question or condemn the government or its policies”.

It also enumerates India’s failure to ensure the rights of Dalit people, those from socially and economically poor castes, once considered untouchables. “Religious minority communities and Dalits, both have faced discrimination and persecution due to a combination of overly broad or ill-defined laws, an inefficient criminal justice system, and a lack of jurisprudential consistency,” the report said.

Hindus form the majority 80 percent of India’s 1.2 billion people while Muslims form some 15 percent. Christians, the second largest religious minority, form just 2.3 percent. Dalits and tribal people make up 70 percent of India’s 27 million Christians.

In 2016, at least 10 Christians were killed and over 500 members of the community were attacked for their faith or for allegedly converting people to Christianity, said a report by the Catholic Secular Forum in January 2017.

“Symbolic and structural violence has increased in the country since 2014. The government needs to respond to such violence in a much more sensible way rather than denying it,” said Samuel Jaikumar of the National Council of Churches in India, a union of all Protestant and Orthodox Churches.

The U.S. report said that seven of the 29 states have adopted laws banning religious conversions, which has resulted in inequitable practices. The report said that state governments have described church humanitarian aid and development “as a cause of improper and unethical conversions.”

The report also said that India’s law to regulate foreign funding has consistently been used against civil society organizations, charities and other non-governmental organizations that question government policies.

In June 2015, India put the leading Christian charity, Caritas International, on its watch list. The charity, which is the social arm of the Vatican, was scrutinized for alleged “anti-India activities,” the report said.

With a special reference, in this context, to the clampdown on human
rights activist Teesta Setalvad for “violating” FCRA, the report praises her
for “campaigning to seek criminal charges against Indian officials, including
Prime Minister Narendra Modi, for their alleged involvement in the
anti-Muslim riots.”

Referring to the Indian Divorce Act 2001 that restricts inheritance, alimony payments, and property ownership of people from interfaith marriages, the report said the law is “problematic.”
“The act also interferes in the personal lives of Christians by not allowing marriage ceremonies to be conducted in a church if one of the partners is non-Christian,” it added.

The cow protection laws in India which restrict or ban cow slaughter are “often mixed with anti-Muslim sentiment,” the report said. Cow slaughter “has remained a perpetual source of tension between Hindu, Muslim and Dalit communities.”

In recommendation, it said that India should stop harassing groups, reform anti-conversion laws, and establish “a test of reasonableness” surrounding prohibitions on cow slaughter. It also asked India to adopt the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination.

 

Indian American Muslim Council condemns inaction of Indian lawmakers

A whopping Rs. 333 crores of development funds unspent due to MP inaction

Indian American Muslim Council (IAMC – iamc.com) a non-profit advocacy group dedicated to safeguarding India’s pluralist and tolerant ethos, today expressed dismay over the shocking indifference of Members of Parliament from UP, as demonstrated by a report it released yesterday. The report, titled “Uttar Pradesh Members of Parliament Performance Report,” shows Lok Sabha MPs, 71 of them from the BJP are responsible for over 333 crores of development funds lying unspent, only due to their inaction and indifference.

The study, conducted by US-based news portal TwoCircles.net and commissioned by IAMC, finds that 71 crores of the unspent funds were in 17 Dalit-majority constituencies and over 64 crores unspent in 16 other constituencies where Muslims are over 20% of the population. The MPs in both cases are from the BJP. Every MP is given Rs 5 crore per annum for development works in their respective constituencies.

BJP’s claim of inclusive development, as articulated in their slogan of “sabka saath sabka vikaas,” rings hollow in the face of such indifference and inaction. It is also an indication of what UP can expect, given BJP’s penchant for granting election tickets to criminals.

“Elected officials have a duty to serve their constituents through every possible mechanism made available to them by the system,” said Mr. Jawad Khan, President of IAMC. “Funds allocated for development lying unspent due to MP inaction is highly deplorable,” added Mr. Khan.

In the face of upcoming elections in UP, the BJP’s strategy of unleashing fierce Hindutva through shutting down of slaughterhouses and threatening to use vigilantes, is cynical and dangerous. It also points to the party’s desperate efforts to deflect attention from the demonetisation disaster.

Indian-American Muslim Council is the largest advocacy organization of Indian Muslims in the United States with chapters across the nation. For more information, please visit our website at: http://iamc.com

Hindu temple opens in California’s Santa Clarita

Sri Siddhi Vinayaka Temple Santa Clarita (SSVTSC), where the main deity is Lord Ganesh, had its grand-opening on February nine evening in Valencia neighborhood of Santa Clarita (California).

Mission of Sri Siddhi Vinayaka Temple of SSVTSC, a non-profit organization, is “to serve Santa Clarita community by offering a place to worship, practice spirituality, celebrate festivals and cultural activities”. It plans to have Ganesh Puja (worship) and other services every Saturday, besides various activities/programs for everyone round the year, including programs for children and charity food donations.

Temple opening puja was performed by priest Cherukupalli Narasimhacharya and Tyger White of Santa Clarita Valley Interfaith Council also participated in the celebrations. Temple leaders/volunteers reportedly include Mano Dhana, Suman Dutta, Prakash, Deepthi Rajaraaman, Gautam Deepthi, Kavitha Muru, Aparna Kiran, Vijay Sharma and Ritu Khadiya.

Meanwhile, Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada today, commended efforts of temple leaders and area community towards realizing this Hindu temple. Rajan Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, further said that it was important to pass on Hindu spirituality, concepts and traditions to coming generations amidst so many distractions in the consumerist society and hoped that this temple would help in this direction. Zed stressed that instead of running after materialism; we should focus on inner search and realization of Self and work towards achieving moksh (liberation), which was the goal of Hinduism.

In Hinduism, Lord Ganesh is worshipped as god of wisdom and remover of obstacles and is invoked before the beginning of any major undertaking. Hinduism, oldest and third largest religion of the world has about one billion adherents. There are about three million Hindus in USA.

Incorporated in 1987, City of Santa Clarita is claimed to be “one of the best places to live in California”. Notable people associated with it include Oscar winner filmmaker Tim Burton, Olympian gold medalists track-field sprinter Allyson Felix and swimmer Anthony Ervin, etc. Cameron Smyth and Dr. Kenneth W. Striplin are Mayor and City Manager respectively.

BAPS celebrates Indian-American culture at the Texas capitol building in Austin

The BAPS Swaminarayan Sanstha hosted a celebration of Indian-American culture at the historic Texas State Capitol in Austin earlier this month. The celebration was sponsored by State Representative Matt Rinaldi of House District 115, who represents a BAPS temple in Irving, Tex.

On the morning of Feb. 1, a group of BAPS representatives were recognized during the 85th Legislative regular session, where a resolution commemorating this inaugural event was read. The resolution also noted the myriad of contributions by Indian-Americans to the Lone Star State and lauded BAPS’ commitment to community service in Texas and across the nation, a BAPS press release said.

Throughout the day BAPS members from across Texas met with their respective state representatives and senators to share the background on the Hindu faith and on the Indian-American community’s history and growth.

Hosted by BAPS, at the historic Texas State Capitol on Feb. 1, State Representative Matt Rinaldi of House District 115 fondly spoke of the contributions of Indian-Americans to the Lone Star State.

“This event is not only a chance for Indian-Americans to learn about government, but also for their government to learn about Indian culture and to provide a learning experience for senators and representatives,” the press release quoted Rep. Rinaldi as saying.

Throughout the celebration, speakers shared their thoughts on the diverse contributions of Indian-Americans to the economic and cultural fabric of Texas. “We value what BAPS has done for our community, from its Walkathon to its Health Fair…BAPS works tirelessly to make Irving, Texas and our district a better place,” Rep. Rinaldi continued.

“I am honored to be here this evening. I know firsthand from my work and relationship with BAPS about what a great job it does and how it impacts thousands of lives across the state,” Chris Wallace, president of the Texas Association of Business said. His remarks highlighted the importance of nurturing and advancing the relationship between the growing population of over 275,000 Indian-Americans in Texas and the state government, the press release noted.

The program also touched on the role of the BAPS temples. “Inspired by His Holiness Pramukh Swami Maharaj, places of worship, such as the beautiful, hand-carved stone mandir in Stafford, Texas, reflects the diverse culture of our state and demonstrates that the contributions of the Indian-American diaspora go beyond simply the economic realm,” said Ketan Inamdar of Missouri City, Tex.

The current spiritual leader, Mahant Swami Maharaj, as always inspired the Indian- American community to celebrate our shared culture and develop a sense of identity and pride in our heritage, he said.

Dance Pe Chance by FIA displays talents and creativity of young Indian Americans

The 68th Republic Day of India was celebrated by the Federation of Indian Associations of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut with its annual much expected dance competition – Dance Pe Chance, a colorful dance festival, showcasing the talents and creativity of budding artists from the New York region. More than 450 students representing nearly a dozen popular dance schools from the tristate area participated in the event that was held on January 28 at the Plainfield High School, NJ.

“It was heartening to watch young children, some of them as young as five, showcasing their talents, while the choreographers displayed their creativity in the dance sequences, costumes and techniques,” said Andy Bhatia, President of FIA. Different themes including patriotism, worship of Lord Ganesha, and life at an American school were featured.

Participants from the region, competed for honors in three categories – minor, junior, and senior dance contests, according to organizers of this much-anticipated event. The evening was kicked off with the opening remarks by Srujal Parekh, executive vice president, who introduced Mamta Narula, the master of ceremonies. Chhavi Dharayan, general secretary and chair of the Dance Pe Chance for the third consecutive year, introduced the DPC team.

Among the “Minor” category, the winners are: Best Costume: Fusion Arts; Best Choreography: Aum Dance Creations; Creativity (renamed as technique): Arya Dance Academy; 3rd place: Nirmiti School of Dance; 2nd place: Aum Dance Creations; and 1st place: Arya Dance Academy.

In the Junior category, the winners are: Best Costume: Nirmiti School of Dance; Best Choreography: Dance 4 Ever; Creativity (renamed as technique): Dancing Shiva; 3rd place: Aatma Performing Arts; 2nd place: Arya Dance Academy; and 1st place: Dancing Shiva.

The Senior group winners include: Best Costume: Aatma Performing Arts; Best Choreography: Aum Dance Creations; Creativity (renamed as technique): Arya Dance Academy and Nritya Creations; 3rd place: Aatma Performing Arts; 2nd place: Nritya Creations; 1st place: Arya Dance Academy; and, Best of the Best: Arya Dance Academy.

Anand Patel, FIA’s past president, formally welcomed all the participants. As per tradition, the new officials of FIA took the oath of office during the event. Andy Bhatia (president) Srujal Parikh (executive vice president); Alok Kumar (vice president); Chhavi Dharayan (secretary); Jatin Patel (joint secretary); and Himanshu Bhatia (treasurer) took the oath office before outgoing president Anand Patel and Deputy Consul General Dr. Manoj Kumar Mohapatra.

Ramesh Patel, chair of FIA, felicitated the outgoing and incoming officials and praised the team behind the event. H.R. Shah, recipient of the 2017 Padma Shri award was also felicitated at the event.

Jonathan Hollander, founder of the Battery Dance Company, and Dr. Kavita Gupta, were among the judges for the evening. Dr. Sudhir Parikh, Albert Jasani of Royal Albert’s Palace, Rajeev Bhambri of India Abroad, Dr. Sanjay Gupta, Yash Paul Soi and other prominent members of the community presented the trophies to the winners.

In his address Deputy Consul General Mohapatra noted the quality of the performances and saluted each team for their excellence. He announced that TV Asia will be hosting a live program every Tuesday with a consulate official to answer questions about passport or visa related matters. He asked people to utilize it to get correct information.

With India Republic Day commemoration, Hempstead Town on Long Island makes history

During a historic celebration of the 68th India Republic Day commemoration, Supervisor Anthony J. Santino, Town Clerk Nasrin Ahmad and the entire Hempstead Town Board welcomed the Indian American Forum, local Indian-American residents and outstanding performers and speakers on Januury 26th. The cultural event commemorates the anniversary of India becoming a republic after declaring independence from British rule. It is the largest event of its kind on Long Island.

“We are proud to celebrate the beautiful culture and heritage of the great nation of India, specifically the many Indian-Americans who have enriched our local communities and contributed greatly to our quality of life for many generations,” stated Santino. “The Town of Hempstead is honored to host a joyous celebration of India Republic Day, and we thank the many Indian-American neighbors who came out to support this wonderful event.”

Santino presented the prestigious Town of Hempstead India Republic Day Award to honorees Neeta Bhasin and Sunita Manjrekar for their decades of hard work and dedication to the local Indian-American community. Patriotic vocal performances presented by Jyoti Gupta and her group, and also were beautiful dances presented by Shilpa Jhurani and her students. Present at the evet were Miss India New York, Miss Teen New York, Mrs. Indi a New York and several other beauty pageant winners

Neeta is the founder of ASB Communications, a full-service international multicultural advertising and marketing organization. She also established Event Guru Worldwide, which produces one of Times Square’s biggest events, Diwali at Times Square. What’s more, Neeta has a prominent role as a television personality on ITV, the oldest South Asian TV network in the United States.

Sunita is a Certified Rehabilitation Counselor with more than 17 years of experience and proven leadership, specializing in the field of substance abuse and workforce development. Additionally, Sunita works as the Director of Employment Programs at the Nassau County Department of Social Services, developing innovative and creative programs to help the public assistance population achieve self-sufficiency and economic independence.

“I am proud to partner with Supervisor Santino in hosting the town’s largest India Republic Day ceremony,” said Ahmad. “The Indian-American community’s dedication to our township is one of the attributes that makes our town such a great place in which to live, work and raise a family.”

Santino also welcomed to the event Tejinder (TJ) S. Anand, CPA, CGMA, who served as the keynote speaker. Tejinder is a partner with the firm of T.S. Anand & Company CPAs, P.C. The New York firm has more than 25 years of professional experience in accounting, taxation and financial audits, specifically tailored to the not-for-profit organizations.

The ceremony, which was co-sponsored by the Indian American Forum, also offered many cultural features including a number of traditional Indian songs and dances. Akbar Restaurant provided Indian delicacies for attendees to enjoy after the ceremony.

“I would like to thank the Indian American Forum, honorees Neeta Bhasin and Sunita Manjrekar, keynote speaker Tejinder S. Anand and all our distinguished guests and talented performers for taking part in this annual celebration of India Republic Day,” concluded Santino. “We are proud to join together with our township’s Indian-American community to mark this important milestone in world history.”

“As Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, We Will Resist.”

Asian Americans critical of Trump’s policies

“As Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, We Will Resist,” said a statement issued by Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPIs). “We stand at a critical juncture in world history. The election of Donald Trump as president of the United States represents a direct threat to millions of people’s safety and to the health of the planet.”

While expressing its commitment to equality, inclusion, and justice, “we pledge to resist any efforts by President-Elect Trump’s administration to target and exploit communities, to strip people of their fundamental rights and access to essential services, and to use rhetoric and policies that divide the American people and endanger the world,” the statement said.

Trump’s campaign used explicit racial appeals to win the support of disaffected white voters, promising to restore their economic and social standing by deporting millions of immigrants, building a wall, creating a Muslim registry, banning Muslim immigration, and punishing Black dissent.

“The actions of the Republican Hindu Coalition today do not reflect the breadth and diversity of the Indian American community, or our Diaspora,” asserted Bera at a press conference organized by the AAPIVictory Fund Jan. 31, at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C.

“I’m very troubled by the Executive Order,” Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Illinois, told the media, especially as it affected Green Card holders. The Trump administration’s exemption of permanent residents soon after passing the Executive Order, he contended, was a “reversal” in the face of the public outcry, and insisted that the order itself was “an assault on the Constitution.”

Sunita Viswanath, a co-founder and board member of Sadhana: Coalition of Progressive Hindus, appealed to Indian Americans to “resist” the Trump order. The Sikh Coalition, an advocacy organization, strongly objected to the Trump temporary ban supported by RHC. “The Sikh Coalition rejects this order as unconstitutional and will continue to stand in solidarity with communities targeted by discriminatory policies,” the organization said, adding, “We support an immigration system that treats people with fairness and dignity, not one based on stereotypes masquerading as law,”

On the social media networking site Twitter, activist Deepa Iyer called for a “Twitterstorm” against RHC on Jan 31. The author of the award-winning book, “We Too Sing America: South Asian, Arab, Muslim and Sikh Immigrants” and a Senior Fellow at the New York City-based Center for Social Inclusion, Iyer tweeted, “Progressive Hindus stand w/Muslims, refugees, condemn #Muslimban; call out GOP Hindu Coalition.”

Meanwhile in the New York region, as many as 19 Indian-American academics from universities in New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania joined over 4,000 scholars from prestigious institutions across the nation Jan. 27, opposing President Trump’s executive order last week for a suspension of visas and other immigration benefits to nationals from certain Muslim countries.

The academics that included Nobel laureates, members of the National Academy of Sciences and faculty and department heads of universities and educational institutions from New York to California, signed an open letter opposing Trump’s 90-day suspension of visas and other immigration benefits to all nationals of Iran, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen. The ban is likely to become permanent after the 90-day suspension period. As many as 90 Indian-American professors and other academics across the U.S. had signed the letter, including people from Columbia, Cornell, Harvard and MIT, among others.

The academics have outlined three main reasons for their opposition, including the executive order’s discrimination against a large group of immigrants and longtime residents of the U.S. which is based solely on their country of origin, all of which have a majority-Muslim population. This executive order “is inhumane, un-American and entirely disproportionate to the threat it is purporting to address,” the letter said.

“This executive order would significantly damage the United States’ reputation for academic excellence in higher education. United States research institutions directly benefit from the work of thousands of researchers from the nations affected by this executive order,” the letter said.“The United States academic community relies on these talented and creative individuals for their contributions to the cutting-edge research,” it added.

The prominent Indian-American academic signatories to the letter include Karna Basu, Associate Professor of Economics, Hunter College, City University of New York; Kalyan Chatterjee, Distinguished Professor of Economics and Management Science, Department of Economics, The Pennsylvania State University; Anind K. Dey, Professor and Department Head, Human-Computer Interaction Institute, Carnegie Mellon University; Sampath Kannan, Henry Salvatori Professor and Chair, Computer and Information Science Department, University of Pennsylvania and Yash Kanoria, Assistant Professor of Decision, Risk and Operations, Graduate School of Business, Columbia University. The academics urged President Trump “to reconsider his stance to be more consistent with the longstanding values and principles of this country.”

“The actions of the Republican Hindu Coalition today do not reflect the breadth and diversity of the Indian American community, or our Diaspora,” asserted Bera at a press conference organized by the AAPIVictory Fund Jan. 31, at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C.

LA Times reported that 28 other Asian American politicians in California and around the nation have sent a letter to President Trump asking him to rescind his executive order banning citizens of Syria, Iraq, Iran, Sudan, Somalia, Yemen and Libya from entering the U.S. for 90 days.

The letter noted that Asian Americans have been targeted with similar policies in America’s past, including the Chinese Exclusion Act in the 1880s, which was the nation’s first major law excluding specific immigrants from the county. During World War II, Japanese Americans were sent to internment camps.

“Your 2,800-word executive order drips with cruel irony as it turns away refugees trying to escape the same Islamic terrorism and violence that you naively claim will be repelled from our shores if we only embrace your bigoted and cowardly directive,” the letter stated

Meanwhile the Republican Hindu Coalition, which worked closely with Donald Trump’s presidential campaign and his transition team, is in the eye of a storm within the Indian-American community for its support of the President’s temporary ban on people from seven countries – an executive order that has itself brought forth an eruption of protest by many around the country.

“We applaud the Trump administration for taking this decisive move to protect our citizens from Islamic terror,” Shalabh Kumar, chairman of RHC said. That unqualified support for the ban has invited a storm of criticism from many Indian-Americans, Hindus and non-Hindus, political activists and former administration officials.

The majority-Democrat Indian-American community has lashed out against his stand. California Congressman Ami Bera, Democratic Party activist Shekar Narasimhan, and author and activist Deepa Iyer and others, have assailed the RHC for supporting the temporary ban. Others rejected the Executive Order as “illegal,” and former Indian-American diplomats said it made Americans less safe.

Two other Hindu organizations, Hindu American Foundation and the Sadhana Coalition have come out against Trump’s ban which indefinitely bars Syrian refugees from entering the United States. It also suspends all refugee admissions for 120 days and blocks all citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries considered high-risk – Iran, Iraq, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen — from entering the United States for 90 days.

United Punjabis of America celebrates Lohri festival with flavors of Punjab

Chicago IL: United Punjabis of America (UPA) celebrated Lohri on January 28th 2017 at Ashton Place, Willowbrook, IL. The event started with lighting the lamp and national Anthems sung by Nipa Shah and Aavni Limdi.  The UPAeExecutive board members Madhu Uppal and Dharam Pawani introduced the UPA core team Brij Sharma, Om Dhingra, Ramesh Malhan, Shammi Mittal, Girish Kapur Rosey Bhasin, Shikha Tandon, Kumkum Kumar, Atul Wahi and Vishal Dutt. The event was anchored by the famous emcee and founder of Desi Junction Radio Jassi Parmar.

The Introduction was followed by a variety of singing and Dance items brought by varipus dance schools of Illinois. Jagoo folk by Sangeeta Singh, Rosey Bhasin & Group from Sant Nirankari Mission added a traditional color to the event. Madhu Chawdhary’s school Danceology brought a kid’s dance performance on Sadi Gali Aayo Karo. Prachi Jaitly’s Bollywood Arts Acdemy presented a kid’s talent show with boys and girls performing on a mix of songs like Singh is King, Tutak Tutak Tootitayaan, Radha Teri Chunri and Aun wala Sama tere bhai da. Boys Group Dance by Gauri Mittal performed on the famous Daler Mehandi song Hayo Rabba, Hayo Rabba. Sheetal Dhanani,s Tarana Kathak gave a stupendous performance on Bajirao Mastani – Diwani Mastani. Shalini Dixit,s dance school  Nashe si Chadh Gaye and Love Letter, Nach De ne Sare – Cuite Pie and Phuttey Chuck De and Kala Chashma.

The UPA board honored three business leaders Shalabh Kumar, Hersh Ketharpal and Rahul Wahi for their contribution to Indian community as well as the entire society at large. Shalabh Kumar, “Shalli” is the CEO of AVG Group of companies with headquarters in Chicago and operations all over the world. AVG, established in 1975, has produced over 500 innovative hardware, firmware and software products He is an active supporter of the Indian community in the US.

Hersh Ketharpal, Distinguished Punjabi Spiritual & Community Leader and the founding director of the Yog Sadhna Ashram of Chicago, West Chicago, IL For 25 years she has been serving the community by sharing her knowledge of Hatha Yoga, Raja Yoga, Pranayam, Mediation & and Yogic Cleansing not only at the Ashram but also at other locations, including Naperville, Oakbrook, Lemont etc.  Rahul Wahi, Distinguished Young Punjabi Entrepreneur Rahul Ji is the founder and CEO of LLT Group, a digital marketing company operating in Naperville, IL and Boston MA. LLT Group donates $50,000 per year to the College of DuPage for scholarship for creative art students.

UPA members Shammi Mittal, Rosey Bhasin, Girish Kapur & Atul Wahi gave a vote of thanks to all the sponsors with special thanks to GOLD sponsors Karl Kalra of Live2U and Om Dingra of Wholesome Health Pharmacy and media partners. The cultural program continued and another talented singer Sanjay Amin sang some evergreen songs like Jab Koi Baat Bigad Jaye Roop Tera Mastana, Dil Kya Kare Jab, Kuch Na Kaho. Sukhdev Singh presented a Punjabi Skit by depicting Mast Malanga, a hilarious Punjabi Character. The Famous Punjabi Singer Maddy Singh made the audience dance on some fabulous Punjabi numbers. The grand finale performance Gidha was brought by Prachi Jaitly’s Bollywood Arts Academy and the dance floor was opened to the entire audience followed by BonFire.

Hindus urge California’s Leaf Group withdraw items disrespecting Hindu gods

Hindus are urging Santa Monica (California) headquartered Leaf Group Limited to immediately withdraw some of the products sold on its marketplace Society6 which mock-distort-disrespect various Hindu deities, calling it highly inappropriate. They are also urging its Board Chairman James R. Quandt and Chief Executive Officer Sean Moriarty to offer a formal apology.

Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada today, said that such depicted Hindu deities—Shiva, Vishnu, Ganesha, Krishna, Durga, Lakshmi, Kali, Saraswati, Parvati, Radha, Manasa Devi—were highly revered in Hinduism and were meant to be worshipped in temples or home shrines and not to be mocked at or to put your feet on or touch with your feet or sleep on. Inappropriate usage of Hindu deities or concepts for commercial or other agenda was not okay as it hurt the faithful.

Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, pointed out that products like Kali as “Mistress of Chaos”, Shiva as cartoon character Popeye, Lakshmi like a belly-dancer, Kali as “Collie Kali”  with dog-face and dog-feet, “Funky Female Shiva”, “Pink Krishna”, “mutant Ganesh”, Shiva with a nose-ring, Krishna as skateboarder, “Ganesh Loves Selfies – Two at a Time!” showing Ganesha taking selfies with two cell-phones,  “Durga Carrying Tiger” instead of traditional riding on the tiger, Ganesha holding cowboy lasso, cartoonish Lakshmi, Ganesha in cropped trousers, etc.; highly trivialized the greatly revered Hindu deities. There was a print of Hindu Sloth also.

Other products, deemed disrespectful by Hindu devotees, included: yoga mats, bed sheets, rugs and duvet cover depicting Hindu deities Shiva, Balaji Vishnu, Ganesha, Krishna, Durga, Saraswati, Parvati, Radha and Manasa Devi; Rajan Zed stated.

Hinduism is the oldest and third largest religion of the world with about one billion adherents and a rich philosophical thought and it should not be taken frivolously. Symbols of any faith, larger or smaller, should not be mishandled, Zed indicated.

Moreover, distorted images of Hindu deities created further misinformation and confusion among non-Hindus regarding Hinduism; Rajan Zed noted. Zed further said that such trivialization of Hindu deities was disturbing to the Hindus world over. Hindus were for free artistic expression and speech as much as anybody else if not more. But faith was something sacred and attempts at trivializing it hurt the followers, Zed added.

Leaf Group Limited, listed in New York Stock exchange, claims to be “a diversified Internet company that builds platforms across its media (eHow andLIVESTRONG.COM) and marketplace (Society6 and Saatchi Art) properties to enable communities of creators to reach passionate audiences in large and growing lifestyle categories”.  Society6, which claims millions of “products from Wall Art and Apparel to Tech Accessories and Home Décor” designed by “artists from around the world”, was founded in 2009

National Sikh Campaign Plans New Strategy to Reach Conservative Americans

The National Sikh Campaign Jan. 30 announced it has partnered with marketing firm FP1 Strategies to raise awareness of the Sikh religion in the United States.

The firm will develop and implement a strategy to improve the perception of Sikhism throughout the country, the Sikh organization said in a statement.

NSC and FP1, a Washington-based marketing firm with clients such as Facebook and Ford, will launch a major marketing campaign that will focus on increasing the Sikh American community’s presence in national and local news outlets, as well as social media.

FP1’s relationship with conservative media and organizations will also help NSC reach and educate Republican and right-of-center audiences, the NSC said.

AKPD, former President Barack Obama’s media team founded by David Axelrod and the Hart Research Associates, whose clients include the World Bank, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Harvard University, have already been working closely with NSC to develop a media strategy to create awareness about Sikhs and the Sikh identity in America, the organization noted.

The marketing campaign is scheduled to launch in the spring through television advertisements, an innovative website, public relations efforts, targeted digital media and community events to affect change, it added.

“Engaging FP1 was a crucial decision in making our entire strategy complete, and their expertise in reaching conservative Americans will be valuable in expanding our reach beyond our target audience of millennials and progressives,” said NSC co-founder and senior adviser Dr. Rajwant Singh. “This is perhaps the first time that any U.S. Sikh community has undertaken a major, proactive effort to reach out to Americans nationwide.”

NSC was created to reduce the hate crimes and violence Indian Americans of the Sikh faith have faced since 9/11, and their mission has become increasingly important in today’s political and social environment.

Through research conducted in early 2015, it has been verified that when Americans learn about the key tenets of the Sikh religion, their feelings become far more positive, the NSC noted.

“The professional approach of our different advisers to tackle this difficult issue facing the Sikh American community is very impressive,” said NSC national outreach director Inderpal Singh. “Hiring agencies like FP1 Strategies is offering us a new way to understand and explain our religion among our neighbors.”

The National Sikh Campaign has continued to gain momentum in the past few months as it steadily reveals its sophisticated ads, website and cutting edge research to select cities across the country, it added. These materials will lay the foundation for their new, public education initiative set to launch in 2017.

Dr. Martin Luther King’s legacy remembered on Long Island

Just as Mahatma Gandhi’s philosophy of nonviolence and civil disobedience had changed the fate of India and shook up the British Empire in the same manner Dr. Martin Luther King’s movement had a profound effect on America and its people. Other parts of the world that changed the course of their country’s history include South Africa, Poland, Myanmar etc. and civil disobedience is used in many parts of the world on a daily basis with tremendous success.

Dr. King said no person is free until we are all free. He dedicated his life to create a just society where no one was discriminated based on race, creed, color, national origin, sex, age, religious belief or political persuasion.

Hundreds of people came to pay tribute to Dr. King at the Marriott Hotel, Uniondale on January 16. 2017 so that his dream and legacy of a society free of human and civil rights violations can be achieved.

Many political, judicial,  religious and community leaders who came to pay their tribute included President and Founder Julius and Joysetta Pearse who pioneered Dr. Martin Luther King Celebration Committee in New York thirty two years ago, Bishop Phillip Elliott who also introduced  County Executive Ed Mangano who received standing ovation for his work to improve civil and human rights on Long Island.

Comptroller George Maragos, Justices: Anthony Paradiso, Gary Knoble and Andrea Phoenix, several legislators from County and towns, Executive Chairperson Mr. Rodney Mcrae, Board Director and Finance Chair Dr. Parveen Chopra who also served as Chairperson and Commissioner of Human Rights for twenty years and was previously awarded Dr. Martin Luther King Award, Rabbi Bruce Ginsburg who was Master of ceremonies, Rabbi Art Vernon, President Rabbinical Assembly of Nassau, Suffolk and Queens, Nassau County Police Commanding Officer Gary Shapiro, Mr. Mohinder Taneja,  Dr. Isma Chaudhry, President Islamic Center of Long Island, Dr. Hubert Keen, President Nassau Community College and many others were some of those who had participated and addressed the audience.

Dr. Martin Luther King Committee awarded several scholarship awards to winners who will attend universities this year of their choice and also honored distinguished civil and human rights leaders who have made significant contributions to society to realize the dreams of Dr. Martin Luther King.

North America’s Largest Sai Temple to Hold Grand Opening in July

By Upendra Mishra
GROTON, MA—With construction in full swing and the exterior wall and framing nearly complete, North America’s largest Sai temple is gearing up to hold its grand opening ceremony in July 2017. The two-story, 40,000-square-foot temple in Groton, MA, is being built by New England Shirdi Sai Parviaar, known as NESSP. Built on 28 acres of land, upon completion the temple will become the largest Sai Temple in North America.
“Even we cannot believe the progress we have made. We are very thankful and grateful to our supporters and volunteers, who have worked tirelessly on this project,” says NESSP President Mahender Singh.

Project architect B. D. Nayak of Braintree, MA-based B.D. Nayak Architects & Planners Inc., says the location of the temple is perfect. “The most important for a temple is to be on a higher ground and people should be walking up there,” said Nayak, who has designed six temples in New England. “This site is on high ground. Also, from a Vastu point of view, all the statues of Gods and Goddesses will have a perfect location.”

It all began in 2006, when 10 like-minded Massachusetts families got together and formed New England Shirdi Sai Parivaar, a non-profit organization for the growing Shirdi Sai Baba devotees in New England. “Our mission was very clear to promote the philosophy of Shri Shirdi Sai Baba and to support religious, spiritual, cultural and charitable activities in New England,” said Singh, adding that initially the group rented a tiny place for temple purposes and later expanded to a 7,200-square-foot rented facility.

When they outgrew this space, the devotees decided to take a giant step and build their own facility where they could fulfill not only their spiritual needs but also serve as a community center open to people of all faiths and communities.

“We have grown from 10 families to 1,500 families now,” said Singh. “We did not have any experience in building a temple. All we did was believed in the philosophy and teachings of Baba and worked hard to start this project.”

NESSP currently operates out of a 7,200-square-foot rented facility in Chelmsford, MA, and will relocate to the new facility when it is completed in July 2017. NESSP acquired the land for $1.14 million and plans to spend an additional $10 million to build the new complex. As of now, the temple has already raised over $7.5 million.

The temple has been receiving donations from across North America and from states like North Carolina, Florida, Illinois, New Jersey, New York, California, and Atlanta in addition to being supported by devotees from Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine, Rhode Island and Connecticut.

When fully completed, the two-story temple will be largest Sai Temple in North America. The sprawling 28-acre campus is located in the two neighboring towns of Groton and Littleton in Massachusetts. Four acres of the land is located in Littleton.

Reading, MA-based NM Construction Corp. is the general contractor. The temple will be open to everyone and will hold weddings, ayengetrams and other community and cultural events. The temple complex will provide a great venue for poojas, learning and weddings where open-air havans can be held, where the barat (wedding party) can come with horses and full traditional festivities can occur.

Founded in 2006, New England Shirdi Sai Parviaar (NESSP) is a non-profit organization. Its mission is to promote the philosophy of Shri Shirdi Sai Baba and to accordingly support religious, spiritual, cultural and charitable activities. NESSP was formed by devotees who share their love for Shri Shirdi Sai Baba and are inspired by His teachings. For more information, visit www.NESSP.org.

United Christian Cultural Association hosts Christmas Banquet

 Chicago IL: The inclemency of the Chicago snow storm could hardly ebb the reigning festive spirit of the Christmas celebrations that were held with full compliments of melodious carols, dance presentations, canticles, inspiring remarks and yuletide sermon marking the Grand Christmas Banquet hosted by United Christian Cultural Association [UCCA] on Friday, December 16, 2016 at the Bristol Palace in Mount Prospects, Illinois.
The Christmas carols singing with an ensemble of musical accompaniments including sounds of traditional indian ‘Dhol’ with families and children relishing the joyous canticles of the Christmas augmented by the presence of Ambassador Dr. Ausaf Sayeed, Consul General of India and Movie/TV Actress & Gospel Speaker Divya Vani from India enhanced the evening celebrations of songs, dances, music, worship and dinner.
The evening celebrations set off with the lighting of the Advent Lamp led by Ambassador Dr. Ausaf Sayeed, Consul General, Telugu Movie Actress Divya Vani opened the evening accompanied by a graceful musical carol.  Addressing the guests, Ambassador Dr. Ausaf Sayeed, Consul General   extolled the festival of Christmas and reflected on  the exceptional contributions made by Christians in India  in the field of education, health care, charity, social empowerment, emancipation of women socio-economic  conditions and participation in public life and added that Christianity has profoundly helped strengthen the social fabric in India.  Ambassador Dr. Ausaf Sayeed sincerely expressed his appreciation to the UCCA leaders for inviting him and his wife to Christmas celebrations and complimented them for showcasing the spirit and celebrations of Christmas.
Movie/TV Actress Divya Vani in her short yuletide sermon explained the significance of Christmas as a day of celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ into this world and that which symbolizes Jesus Christ as the personification of Divinity.  Divya Vani ‘s message which was interspersed with singing said Christmas is a season of great joy as it emphasizes the incredible mystery of the Lord’s coming to earth in the form of a child and destined to offer salvation to the humanity. In appreciation of her presence and sermon, Divya Vani was honored with a shawl and a flower bouquet.
Earlier, Keerthi Kumar Ravoori, Director of UCCA  welcomed the gathering  and introduced the chief guest Ambassador Dr. Ausaf Sayeed, Consul General of India and later joined by UCCA leaders  honored the Ambassador and his wife by presenting traditional shawls and flower bouquets. Raju Enoch Pasumarthi, UCCA President thanked the gathering of the families. Emmanuel Neela Vice President, Vasanth Charles, Director. Suneeta Christina, Satish Dadipogu Austin D’Souza, Nandan Thogaru, Pravin Neetipudi & Karunakar Mondithoka offered the Christmas greetings and seasons compliments; while Renee Thogaru arranged the Christmas carol choir singing.
The event was emceed by Anitha Tandur and music was provided by Johnson Kodipally, Vijay & Athyun Nagelli.  Several church pastors were also present including Mrs. Subhadra Vipparathi, Rev. David Vidyasagar, and Rev. Samson Purohit who participated in the ceremonies. The evening celebrations concluded with entire hall shimmering in candle lights sang together the traditional Christmas carols “Silent Night” which was followed by the serving of the festive dinner.

Yoga’s benefits being researched in many govt. funded projects across USA

Various US universities-medical/clinical centers-hospitals are undertaking research projects exploring yoga’s possible help in treatment of various illnesses, according to a database published on US National Institutes of Health (NIH) website.
Funded/administered by National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH), National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Cancer Institute, etc.—all part of U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; and U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs; cost for some of these projects is listed at over half-a-million dollars each.
Project titles listed include looking into yoga’s help in the treatment/relief/intervention/management/care of PTSD, sleep disturbance, chronic pain, symptom management for breast cancer, arthritis, antenatal depression, urinary incontinence, smoking cessation, substance abuse, type 2 diabetes, insomnia, depression, pain perception and pain control, anxiety disorder, etc.
These projects are being undertaken at Indianapolis Veterans Affairs (VA) Medical Center, University of California-San Francisco, University of Minnesota, Duke University, NIH Clinical Center in Maryland, Providence Butler Hospital, Boston Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Rhode Island Miriam Hospital, Alexandria University of Pennsylvania, University of Rochester, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston University, etc.; as per as the website.
NIH website also points out that “NCCIH is currently supporting research on how practicing yoga may affect”:  HIV, immune function, menopausal symptoms, multiple sclerosis, diabetes risk, etc.
Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada today, welcoming these state funded/administered research projects looking into possible usage of yoga in various health/medical related issues, called it “a step in the positive direction”. Zed urged all major world universities/medical-centers/hospitals to explore various benefits yoga offered.
Yoga, referred as “a living fossil”, was a mental and physical discipline, for everybody to share and benefit from, whose traces went back to around 2,000 BCE to Indus Valley civilization, Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, noted.
Rajan Zed further said that yoga, although introduced and nourished by Hinduism, was a world heritage and liberation powerhouse to be utilized by all. According to Patanjali who codified it in Yoga Sutra, yoga was a methodical effort to attain perfection, through the control of the different elements of human nature, physical and psychical.
According to NIH; yoga may help reduce low-back pain and improve function, relieve anxiety and depression and insomnia, improve quality of life, reduce stress, lower heart rate and blood pressure, improve strength and flexibility. According to a “2016 Yoga in America Study”, about 37 million Americans (which included many celebrities) now practice yoga; and yoga is strongly correlated with having a positive self image.  Yoga was the repository of something basic in the human soul and psyche, Zed added.

Hindus urge Amazon to apologize & withdraw Lord Ganesha skateboards

 

Upset Hindus are urging world’s largest online retailer Amazon.com for the immediate withdrawal of skateboards, bed covers, duvet covers and bedspreads; carrying the images Hindu deity Lord Ganesha; calling it highly inappropriate.

Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada today, said that Lord Ganesha was highly revered in Hinduism and was meant to be worshipped in temples or home shrines and not to put your feet on or touch with your feet or sleep on it. Inappropriate usage of Hindu deities or concepts for commercial or other agenda was not okay as it hurt the faithful.

Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, also urged Amazon.com and its President Jeffrey P. Bezos to offer a formal apology, besides withdrawing about few dozen of such products, as this was not the first time for the company to offer such products which were deemed offensive by Hindu devotees.

Hinduism was the oldest and third largest religion of the world with about one billion adherents and a rich philosophical thought and it should not be taken frivolously. Symbols of any faith, larger or smaller, should not be mishandled, Rajan Zed indicated.

Zed further said that such trivialization of Lord Ganesha was disturbing to the Hindus world over. Hindus were for free artistic expression and speech as much as anybody else if not more. But faith was something sacred and attempts at trivializing it hurt the followers, Zed added.

In Hinduism, Lord Ganesha is worshipped as god of wisdom and remover of obstacles and is invoked before the beginning of any major undertaking. There are about three million Hindus in USA. Amazon.com, Inc., a Fortune 500 company founded in 1994, and headquartered in Seattle (Washington, USA), claims to offer earth’s biggest selection.

Religion and Education Around the World

Low levels of education attainment among Hindus

Jews are more highly educated than any other major religious group around the world, while Muslims and Hindus tend to have the fewest years of formal schooling, according to a Pew Research Center global demographic study that shows wide disparities in average educational levels among religious groups.

These gaps in educational attainment are partly a function of where religious groups are concentrated throughout the world. For instance, the vast majority of the world’s Jews live in the United States and Israel – two economically developed countries with high levels of education overall. And low levels of attainment among Hindus reflect the fact that 98% of Hindu adults live in the developing countries of India, Nepal and Bangladesh.

But there also are important differences in educational attainment among religious groups living in the same region, and even the same country. In sub-Saharan Africa, for example, Christians generally have higher average levels of education than Muslims. Some social scientists have attributed this gap primarily to historical factors, including missionary activity during colonial times. (For more on theories about religion’s impact on educational attainment.

Drawing on census and survey data from 151 countries, the study also finds large gender gaps in educational attainment within some major world religions. For example, Muslim women around the globe have an average of 4.9 years of schooling, compared with 6.4 years among Muslim men. And formal education is especially low among Hindu women, who have 4.2 years of schooling on average, compared with 6.9 years among Hindu men.

Yet many of these disparities appear to be decreasing over time, as the religious groups with the lowest average levels of education – Muslims and Hindus – have made the biggest educational gains in recent generations, and as the gender gaps within some religions have diminished, according to Pew Research Center’s analysis.

At present, Jewish adults (ages 25 and older) have a global average of 13 years of formal schooling, compared with approximately nine years among Christians, eight years among Buddhists and six years among Muslims and Hindus. Religiously unaffiliated adults – those who describe their religion as atheist, agnostic or “nothing in particular” – have spent an average of nine years in school, a little less than Christian adults worldwide.

But the number of years of schooling received by the average adult in all the religious groups studied has been rising in recent decades, with the greatest overall gains made by the groups that had lagged furthest behind.

For instance, the youngest Hindu adults in the study (those born between 1976 and 1985) have spent an average of 7.1 years in school, nearly double the amount of schooling received by the oldest Hindus in the study (those born between 1936 and 1955). The youngest Muslims have made similar gains, receiving approximately three more years of schooling, on average, than their counterparts born a few decades earlier, as have the youngest Buddhists, who acquired 2.5 more years of schooling.

Over the same time frame, by contrast, Christians gained an average of just one more year of schooling, and Jews recorded an average gain of less than half a year of additional schooling.

Meanwhile, the youngest generation of religiously unaffiliated adults – sometimes called religious “nones” – in the study has gained so much ground (2.9 more years of schooling than the oldest generation of religious “nones” analyzed) that it has surpassed Christians in average number of years of schooling worldwide (10.3 years among the youngest unaffiliated adults vs. 9.9 years among the youngest Christians).

Gender gaps also are narrowing somewhat. In the oldest generation, across all the major religious groups, men received more years of schooling, on average, than women. But the youngest generations of Christian, Buddhist and unaffiliated women have achieved parity with their male counterparts in average years of schooling. And among the youngest Jewish adults, Jewish women have spent nearly one more year in school, on average, than Jewish men.

These are among the key findings of Pew Research Center’s new demographic study. A prior study by researchers at an Austrian institute, the Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Human Capital, looked at differences in educational attainment by age and gender. The new study is the first comprehensive examination of differences in educational levels by religion. Wittgenstein Centre researchers Michaela Potančoková and Marcin Stonawski collaborated with Pew Research Center researchers to compile and standardize this data.

About one-in-five adults globally – but twice as many Muslims and Hindus – have received no schooling at all. Despite recent gains by young adults, formal schooling is neither universal nor equal around the world. The global norm is barely more than a primary education – an average of about eight years of formal schooling for men and seven years for women.

At the high end of the spectrum, 14% of adults ages 25 and older (including 15% of men and 13% of women) have a university degree or some other kind of higher education, such as advanced vocational training after high school. But an even larger percentage – about one-in-five adults (19%) worldwide, or more than 680 million people – have no formal schooling at all.

Education levels vary a great deal by religion. About four-in-ten Hindus (41%) and more than one-third of Muslims (36%) in the study have no formal schooling. In other religious groups, the shares without any schooling range from 10% of Buddhists to 1% of Jews, while a majority of Jewish adults (61%) have post-secondary degrees.

Over three recent generations, the share of Hindus with at least some formal schooling rose by 28 percentage points, from 43% among the oldest Hindus in the study to 71% among the youngest. Muslims, meanwhile, registered a 25-point increase, from 46% among the oldest Muslims to 72% among the youngest.

Christians, Buddhists and religious “nones” have made more modest gains in basic education, but they started from a higher base. Among the oldest generation in the study, large majorities of these three religious groups received at least some formal education; among the youngest Christians, Buddhists and religious “nones,” more than nine-in-ten have received at least some schooling. The share of Jews with at least some schooling has remained virtually universal across generations at 99%.

Historical Letter by Mahatma Gandhi to Adolf Hitler on Display at Philadelphia Museum of Art

If you want to experience a powerful work featuring a letter from Mahatma Gandhi to Adolf Hitler urging him not to undertake aggressions that would “reduce humanity to the savage state,” head over to the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Mumbai-based contemporary artist Jitish Kallat’s “Covering Letter” is an immersive installation and video projection, which presents a historical letter by Gandhi to Hitler, written five weeks before the start of World War II. Kallat reincarnates this letter as a film of mist.

In the spirit of his doctrine of universal friendship, Gandhi begins the letter with the greeting “Dear friend,” according to the museum. The letter offers a passionate plea to Hitler to pursue peace rather than war. Kallat describes this correspondence as a plea from a great advocate of peace to one of the most violent individuals who ever lived.

Kallat believes these lines by Gandhi can go “way beyond its intended recipient” and speak to perhaps “anyone now to create a space of self-reflection.”

Kallat’s interest in remediating history through the actions and words of historical figures aligns “Covering Letter” with his earlier work. In his “Public Notice” series, Kallat, whose body of work is vast, spanning painting, photography, drawing, video, and sculptural installations, staged sculptural and interactive interventions that similarly appropriated texts by Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, and Swami Vivekananda.

Kallat’s “Covering Letter” is the first exhibition of this work in the U.S. The exhibit will remain on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art’s Perelman Building through March 5, 2017.

World Hindu Economic Forum: Galvanising Hindu Businesses to make society prosperous

 

Hundreds of Indian American and NRI professionals attended fifth annual world conference Organized by the World Hindu Economic Forum in the Grand Ballroom of central Orange County’s Hotel Irvine from November 18-20 to discuss ways to improve market access in India and help the nation sustain its path as a growing global player.

“With a larger part of Hindu population being youth, there is an inherent potential that is waiting to be unlocked,” Swami Vigyananand said in a statement, published for WHEF attendees. “WHEF is therefore an effort to create that platform which will trigger this creation of surplus wealth by effectively utilizing the available potential.”

He added the forum — the 5th Global Business Leaders Conference — and its annual meetings serve as a catalyst to facilitate greater market access through global collaboration and cooperation.

The World Hindu Economic Forum (WHEF) brings together financially successful elements within Hindu society such as traders, bankers, technocrats, investors, industrialists, business persons, professionals, along with economists and thinkers, so that each group can share their business knowledge, experience, expertise and resources with their fellow brethren. We encourage, support and mentor budding Hindu entrepreneurs. The end goal is to generate surplus wealth and make society prosperous.

Today, while some economies are passing through a turbulent phase, many emerging economies are providing us great opportunities. The issue is how to leverage the global situation for collective growth. Hindus should cooperate and collaborate globally so that market access is facilitated amongst them. We need to create market access across geographic zones and countries, spreading from Auckland to Alaska and Oslo to Johannesburg, cutting across the entire globe. Similar cooperation can be envisaged in the area of capital, enabling availability of appropriately priced capital. Also, technologically savvy Hindus should be matched with those who can convert technical innovation into business with ideas, funds and market access.

WHEF chairman Agarwal shared his perspective on businesses and the roles people play in companies around the world, saying, “It is time for us to remove barriers and show all are equal and every role being played by individuals is equally important. Can we take a place today that we will practice equality in our minds and our actions? […] Make money with 100 hands and share with 1000 hands.”

WHEF 2017 will be held in Nairobi, Kenya. The forum was previously held in Hong Kong, Bangkok, New Delhi and London.

Rev. Varghese Paul bestowed “STAR OF ASIA AWARD”

Fr Varghese Paul, a Jesuit priest of Indian origin, to his great surprise received “Star of Asia
Award” from International Business Council (IBC), New Delhi. He got the Award via mail on his return from Philippines on November 3, 2016. He attended at Tagaytay City the World Congress of International Christian Organization of the Media (ICOM). On the occasion he also
visited New Zealand.

The Award says, “Certificate of Outstanding Achievements STAR OF ASIA AWARD presented to FR. VARGHESE PAUL, SJ Director-Trustee, Catholic Information Service Society, Ahmedabad, Gujarat at New Delhi on 30th September, 2016”.

Earlier Fr Varghese had received a letter from the IBC dated August 16, 2016 saying, “We have the pleasure in informing you that your name has been selected for the presentation of ‘STAR OF ASIA AWARD’ and a ‘CERTIFICATE OF EXCELLENCE’ for your outstanding achievements. The Award will be presented to you on 30th September, 2016 in New Delhi at a largely attended prestigious ceremony.”

In reply Fr Varghese had written to IBC saying, “I do not know on what basis you have selected me. I am not a business person and as such I am not qualified to become a member of International Business
Council”. Since he neither received a reply nor he expected to get the Award. So he did not go to New Delhi for the Award Function.

IBC Web site says, “International Business Council, a Non-Profit Foundation registered body of People of Indian Origin, was founded with the aim of providing a platform for the Indians living in India
and abroad. The Foundation highlights the achievements of National & International in their chosen field of activities.”

Fr. Varghese Paul’s extensive travels in India and abroad (34 countries) for studies and attending international seminars and presenting papers in World Congresses; his contributions to Gujarati and English periodicals as well as his books (43 in Gujarati, 4 in English, 3 in Malayalam and 1 in Hindi) and his three popular web sites; regular face book contributions are counted among his outstanding achievements.

Rev. Paul has been the director of Catholic Information Service Society (CISS), which is a diocesan print media communication center in the diocese of Ahmedabad in India since its beginning in 1984.

He was born on May 31, 1943 at Ennalloor in Ernakulam district, Kerala as the eldest son with four sisters and four brothers. After completing High School, he joined the Jesuits Society. He completed two years of Novitiate and spent one year each to study English and Gujarati. Then he joined St. Xavier’s College at Ahmedabad and graduated from Gujarat University with Gujarati and Sanskrit literature in 1968.

He completed his post graduate studies in philosophy at Pune and Theology at Gregorian University, Rome and journalism in London School of Journalism in London. He was ordained a priest in Rome on June 21, 1977 was in the US with further studies in writing and editing.

On returning to Gujarat, he edited DOOT for two years from January 1978. “Then I took up a very challenging job as Founder-Director of South Asian Religious News (SAR News) a Church news agency under the aegis of Indian Catholic Press Association (ICPA) and the South Asian Catholic Press Association (SACPA) for four years,” says the writer/editor.

As the Editor-in-Chief of SAR News, he got exposed to the International Catholic Union of the Press (UCIP). He attended first time the 13th UCIP World Congress in September 1980 at Rome and was elected a member of the International Federation of News Agencies (FIAC) and consequently a member of UCIP Council.

When he returned to Gujarat, he was appointed editor of DOOT for a third time from January 1984. In 1984 he also launched Catholic Information Service Society (CISS) as its Founder-Director under Ahmedabad Diocese with Bishop Charles Gomes, S.J. as its President. As an Executive Body member of ICPA, he helped to organize the first UCIP World Congress at New Delhi in 1986. In the Congress he was elected as the President of South Asian Catholic Press Association (SACPA) and consequently he became a board member of UCIP with six monthly meeting in Switzerland or elsewhere for 3 years.

“With knowledge and expertise gained through SAR News and UCIP with interacting with print media personnel around the world I went to make DOOT a modern popular monthly without deviating from the goal of DOOT as a religious magazine for the formation of the Christian community,” recalls, Rev. Paul.

After doubling the DOOT circulation in two years in January 1987 he was instrumental in changing the format of DOOT from a book-size periodical to a standard magazine size monthly and increased the pages. “Reaching 5000 plus paid subscribers among a Catholic population of two lakh target audience DOOT had the highest circulation for any Church periodical in India with one copy for every 40 Catholic Christians or 20 literate Catholics,” Rev. Paul says proudly.

Traveling to and spending 10 days in New Delhi every month from 1994, he had set up the ACECI National Office in New Delhi. The then Pro Nuncio to India H. E. Archbishop George Zur inaugurated the office on September 11, 1994. He had served as the Executive Secretary of the ACECI National Office until 2002. Presently Rev Paul is the President of ACECI.

Gujarati Lakhak Mandal (GLM – Gujarati Writers Association) has unanimously elected Fr. Varghese Paul as its Chairman in the board meeting in July 19, 2013. Fr. Varghese succeeded an eminent journalist and author of more than 400 books, Yashwant Mehta who was the Chairman GLM for 12 years. Varghese was Vice President of GLM for two terms from 2007. He joined GLM in 2004. He continues to be in the editorial team of GLM quarterly publication: “Lekhak and Lekhan”.

“My jobs and responsibilities in mass media helped me to cultivate and enjoy my hobbies of reading, writing and traveling,” says Rev. Paul, “I have I had the opportunities to study 10 languages and have traveled far and wide in India and abroad for my studies or for participating or conducting seminars and workshops and also for attending World Congresses and Council Meetings of UCIP. So far I have visited 34 countries in Europe, North and South America, Asia and Africa. I believe that my writings have been enriched by these traveling and world-wide contacts.”

India’s Vrindavan to build world’s tallest religious skyscraper

The International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON) is planning to build a skyscraper temple-cum-heritage centre, touted to be the world’s largest religious structure, here in Vrindavan, in the state of Uttar Pradesh, India.

The 700-ft tall and 70-storey ‘Vrindavan Chandrodaya Mandir’ in Uttar Pradesh, India will be taller than St. Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City and Ulm Cathedral in Germany when completed.

A grand temple of Lord Krishna at the centre, a theme park and facilities to hold many social programmes constitute the major components of the edifice, spread across 5.5 acres.
The goal of the project is to acknowledge and celebrate on an epic scale the depth of the ennobling influence Lord Krishna has had on humanity, said Naveena Neerada Dasa of ISKCON Sree Radha Krishna Temple in Bengaluru.

“The forests of Vrindavan will be recreated around the temple. Spread over a sprawling 26-acre campus and designed by leading international landscape designers, the 12 forests of Braj will come alive here,” said Neerada Dasa. “It is our aspiration to create a world-class and iconic monument for Sri Krishna in the holy land of Vrindavan and proudly place Krishna on the world mindscape and Vrindavan on the world map,” he added.

Espousing the mystique of Lord Krishna, the social programmes include welfare events for the widows of Vrindavan, restoration of the Yamuna river and refurbishment of important sites in Braj. The fascinating aspect for visitors would be a capsule elevator that will rise through the temple core taking visitors through different planetary systems in the Universe according to Vedic literature, accompanied by a stunning light-and-sound show.

“The elevator will take visitors to the viewing gallery on top for a breathtaking view of Braj Mandal,” said an official communication. The project will also have apartments and villas around it, which will be sold to devotees to raise money for the skyscraper.

The construction will be earthquake-resistant and state-of-the-art. Numerous consultants of different faiths from across the world are involved in it, while its structural consultant is Thornton Tomasetti, who has designed the tallest buildings across the globe, including Petron as Towers and Shanghai Towers.

The project cost is expected to reach Rupees 800 crore, of which Rupees 50 crore has been spent for the pile foundation work. Donations from devotees are expected to fund the iconic structure.

Four Cardinals Throw down Guntelet Before Cunning Pope

By Christopher A. Ferrara, in the Voice of Bombay Laity, 22/11/16

For the past three-and-a-half years we have witnessed the bizarre, completely unprecedented spectacle of a wayward Roman Pontiff engaged in clever maneuvering to impose upon the Church a disastrous fracturing of her bimillenial moral and Eucharistic discipline respecting the divorced and “remarried”—and, even worse, via Amoris Laetitia (especially Ch. 8, ¶¶ 300-305), a form of situation ethics that would institutionalize admission to the sacraments of all manner of people living habitually in situations that are mortally sinful.

(Editorial Note: The Remnant is the mouth piece of the ultra conservative traditionalist wing in the Catholic Church. It has been very critical of Bergoglio ever since he became Pope. But the most beautiful thing about Pope Francis is, that he not only tolerates, but even invites criticism from Cardinals and bishops. He did that openly during the two Family Synods in Rome. No pope before him adopted such an open policy, a Jesus like “Transparency (palam locutus sum”, posing provoking questions to his audience and answering them). Some take advantage of it to peddle in or promote their own views meant to cancel out the Pope’s teachings. Since the Pope feigns insensitive even to sharp criticisms, some of them have started even to pray for his death at the earliest.

The four cardinals seen in the picture had sent their objections and doubts, months ago, but didn’t publish them. Since Francis did not answer them, they have now published them in their official paper “Remnant” and other supporting catholic publications like Catholic Register and The Catholic Herald for the whole world to see, to force the Pope to speak out or to admit his teachings in “Amoris laetitia” to be wrong.

They went one step further by quoting words and sentences from his predecessor John Paul II, whom he made a Saint, but whose teachings are diametrically opposed to what the Pope teaches now. According to them what Pope teaches on adultery, divorce, remarriage, communion etc. are opposed to God’s own teachings and the Bible. So they claim, Francis is teaching heresy and destroying all the moral claims of the Catholic Church.

But the great problem here is this: Who on earth can prove to have a hotline to God? What about the millions who don’t believe in a God? Or those who believe, but in a God who can create humans for a good end only (Good tree produces good fruits only), and is capable of making them reach that goal, not a God who fails in his purpose, like a failed computer, which is an oxymoron, a contradiction? So is the church divided into two unbending, irreversible factions, not ready to bent but only to break up like Titanic and go down, or split for good as in the time of Luther?

If there is a God, He has to be goodness and mercy overflowing, as reason suggests. If there is to be a heaven or hell, they are to be not in the next world but here and now. And the duty of mankind here and now is to try and make the hell that we are living in – due to terrorism, racial and religious conflicts, war mongering and, exploitation of the week by the strong – less of a hell and do all possible things to build a heaven on earth for which Pope Francis is sweating from dawn to dusk.

The four questioning cardinals have raised 5 questions. Though addressed directly to the Pope, indirectly they are five bombshells (especially the central issue “Conscience”) thrown into the midst of a crowded market place (the whole world looking and listening to a Pope they admire) to see how many approve or object in to day’s world of free speech, discussion and dialogue. Rome has spoken and let discussion in all earnest start. james kottoor, editor)
The entire sinister program, the centerpiece of Bergoglianism, is summed up in Francis’ shocking declaration at ¶ 303 of Amoris:

Yet conscience can do more than recognize that a given situation does not correspond objectively to the overall demands of the Gospel. It can also recognize with sincerity and honesty what for now is the most generous response which can be given to God, and come to see with a certain moral security that it is what God himself is asking amid the concrete complexity of one’s limits, while yet not fully the objective ideal. In any event, let us recall that this discernment is dynamic; it must remain ever open to new stages of growth and to new decisions which can enable the ideal to be more fully realized.

Francis here reveals nothing less than an insane attempt to conjure up exceptions to exceptionless, divinely imposed negative precepts of the natural law respecting intrinsically immoral conduct, such as adultery, reducing those precepts to mere “ideals” to which God does not expect strict conformity “amid the complexity of one’s limits.” This, of course, would represent the total destruction of the moral order in practice.

To accomplish this moral sedition, Francis, post-Amoris, has been winking and nodding to prelates who are now admitting divorced and “remarried” people to Holy Communion, purporting to “absolve” them of their continuing adultery in “certain cases.” At the same time, he observes a studious silence in the face of urgent entreaties from other prelates and large numbers of the laity that he “clarify” his position and retract the errors of Amoris.

Respecting that stonewall of silence, however, Francis’ cunning has finally caught up with him. Having refused to answer a private petition for clarification of Amoris submitted by four cardinals in September, these Princes of the Church—Carlo Caffarra, Walter Brandmuller, Joachim Meisner and Raymond Burke—have taken the extraordinary step of making the document public. EWTN’s National Catholic Register and The Catholic Herald are among the Catholic organs that have just published the entire text of the intervention, which presents five questions for the Pope to answer. The contents are explosive, to say the least. More than that, they constitute what will undoubtedly be a landmark in the history of the Church.

As even the resolutely mainstream Catholic Herald put it in the headlines of its story: “Pope Francis declines to answer four cardinals’ Amoris appeal. The cardinals have taken the unusual step of publicly requesting clarification on Communion and the moral law.” Let me stress the key phrase: “publicly requesting clarification on Communion and the moral law.” That is, the four cardinals recognize that Francis, who is supposed to be the Vicar of Christ, has called the moral law itself into question. Leaving no doubt of this, they note that “while the first question of the dubia is a practical question regarding the divorced and civilly remarried, the other four questions touch on fundamental issues of the Christian life.”

The five questions the cardinals presented to Francis, and now to the Church at large, express grave doubts about his teaching in Amoris:

1. It is asked whether, following the affirmations of Amoris Laetitia (300-305), it has now become possible to grant absolution in the sacrament of penance and thus to admit to holy Communion a person who, while bound by a valid marital bond, lives together with a different person more uxorio [as if they were married, including sexual relations] without fulfilling the conditions provided for by Familiaris Consortio, 84 [ending the adulterous relationship by separating or living as brother and sister for grave reasons, such as caring for children], and subsequently reaffirmed by Reconciliatio et Paenitentia, 34, and Sacramentum Caritatis, 29. Can the expression “in certain cases” found in Note 351 (305) of the exhortation Amoris Laetitia be applied to divorced persons who are in a new union and who continue to live more uxorio?

2. After the publication of the post-synodal exhortation Amoris Laetitia (304), does one still need to regard as valid the teaching of St. John Paul II’s encyclical Veritatis Splendor, 79, based on sacred Scripture and on the Tradition of the Church, on the existence of absolute moral norms that prohibit intrinsically evil acts and that are binding without exceptions?

3. After Amoris Laetitia (301) is it still possible to affirm that a person who habitually lives in contradiction to a commandment of God’s law, as for instance the one that prohibits adultery (Matthew 19:3-9), finds him or herself in an objective situation of grave habitual sin (Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts, “Declaration,” June 24, 2000)?

4. After the affirmations of Amoris Laetitia (302) on “circumstances which mitigate moral responsibility,” does one still need to regard as valid the teaching of St. John Paul II’s encyclical Veritatis Splendor, 81, based on sacred Scripture and on the Tradition of the Church, according to which “circumstances or intentions can never transform an act intrinsically evil by virtue of its object into an act ‘subjectively’ good or defensible as a choice”?

5. After Amoris Laetitia (303) does one still need to regard as valid the teaching of St. John Paul II’s encyclical Veritatis Splendor, 56, based on sacred Scripture and on the Tradition of the Church, that excludes a creative interpretation of the role of conscience and that emphasizes that conscience can never be authorized to legitimate exceptions to absolute moral norms that prohibit intrinsically evil acts by virtue of their object?

These five questions are a direct challenge to Francis to declare whether he purports to contradict infallible teachings of the Magisterium “based on sacred Scripture and on the Tradition of the Church” as well as “absolute moral norms.” The polite language of petition aside (the reader may consult the document as a whole in that regard), the four cardinals are essentially demanding publicly that Francis declare whether he intends to teach heresy and undermine the entire moral edifice of the Church!

Further on in the document the cardinals provide an analysis of each question that has clearly been written to force Francis to declare himself. Respecting the first question, the cardinals write that admitting divorced and “remarried” people to Communion while they continue to engage in sexual relations would mean that, in practice, Amoris is teaching “one of the following affirmations about marriage, human sexuality and the nature of the sacraments”:

• [That] people who are not married can under certain circumstances legitimately engage in acts of sexual intimacy.
• A divorce dissolves the marriage bond…. The divorced and remarried are legitimate spouses and their sexual acts are lawful marital acts.
• A divorce does not dissolve the marriage bond, and the partners to the new union are not married… [but] the faithful can approach the Eucharistic table even with consciousness of grave sin, and receiving absolution in the sacrament of penance does not always require the purpose of amending one’s life. The sacraments, therefore, are detached from life: Christian rites and worship are on a completely different sphere than the Christian moral life.
Regarding the second question, the cardinals inquire whether Francis accepts the teaching of the very Pope he canonized, in Veritatis Splendor, that “that there are acts that are always evil, which are forbidden by moral norms that bind without exception (‘moral absolutes’),” including “‘Do not kill.’ ‘Do not commit adultery.’ Only negative norms can bind without exception.” Here the cardinals target Francis’s novel moral notion of “discernment” of “particular situations,” requesting to know whether Francis accepts that: “with intrinsically evil acts no discernment of circumstances or intentions is necessary. Uniting oneself to a woman who is married to another is and remains an act of adultery, that as such is never to be done… and that it is enough to know the species of the act (‘adultery’) to know that one must not do it.

Quite simply, the cardinals—incredibly enough—are asking a Pope to clarify whether he accepts the most basic moral teaching of the Church, which even a child can understand: that God’s commandment “thou shalt not” admits of no exceptions under any circumstances.

Respecting the third question, the cardinals further inquire whether Francis accepts the teaching of John Paul II, also the constant teaching of the Church, that “the question of the admission to the sacraments is about judging a person’s objective life situation and not about judging that this person is in a state of mortal sin.” The cardinals wish to know whether “even after Amoris Laetitia, it is still possible to say that persons who habitually live in contradiction to a commandment of God’s law, such as the commandment against adultery, theft, murder or perjury, live in objective situations of grave habitual sin, even if, for whatever reasons, it is not certain that they are subjectively imputable for their habitual transgressions.”

That is, the cardinals wish to know if Francis has overthrown the bimillenial Eucharistic discipline of the Church respecting habitual public sinners!
Respecting the fourth question, the cardinals further inquire—rather archly, I must say—whether:Amoris Laetitia,too, is agreed that any act that transgresses against God’s commandments, such as adultery, murder, theft or perjury, can never, on account of circumstances that mitigate personal responsibility, become excusable or even good.

Do these acts, which the Church’s Tradition has called bad in themselves and grave sins, continue to be destructive and harmful for anyone committing them in whatever subjective state of moral responsibility he may be?

Or could these acts, depending on a person’s subjective state and depending on the circumstances and intentions, cease to be injurious and become commendable or at least excusable?

That is, once again, the cardinals query whether Francis purports to undermine the entire moral order by condoning intrinsically evil acts as excusable or even commendable in certain situations!

Finally, respecting the fifth doubt, citing the astounding affirmation of ¶ 303 of Amoris, which I quote above, the cardinals wish to know if Francis is in accord with the teaching of John Paul II—once again, also the constant teaching of the Church—rejecting attempts “to legitimize so-called ‘pastoral’ solutions contrary to the teaching of the magisterium, and to justify a ‘creative’ hermeneutic according to which the moral conscience is in no way obliged, in every case, by a particular negative precept.”

Here the cardinals note that if this “creative” pastoral approach were permitted “it will never be enough for moral conscience to know ‘this is adultery,’ or ‘this is murder,’ in order to know that this is something one cannot and must not do.” That is, the cardinals indicate that Amoris appears to condone situation ethics, and they ask Francis to “clarify” that this is not his intention—quite an astonishing public request to make of a Roman Pontiff.

To their eternal credit, the cardinals have politely demanded from Francis a simple yes or no answer to each of these five questions, noting that they have presented them in the form of dubia precisely to avoid further Bergoglian equivocation: “What is peculiar about these inquiries is that they are worded in a way that requires a “Yes” or “No” answer, without theological argumentation. This way of addressing the Apostolic See is not an invention of our own; it is an age-old practice.”

In sum, what the four cardinals have issued is, in essence, a politely worded indictment framed in such a way that Francis must, if he says anything at all, plead Guilty or Not Guilty—Guilty or Not Guilty, that is, of teaching objective heresy and engaging in ecclesiastical treason, no matter what his subjective culpability may be in the sight of God.

In the face of an accusation—which is what the cardinals’ document is—a common criminal can remain silent and his silence cannot be used against him in a court of law. But the Catholic Church is not a court of law. It is the Household of the Faith, and the head of that household now has a duty to speak clearly, for once, to the souls who inhabit it, for whose eternal welfare he is directly responsible. If Francis continues to refuse to speak, even when four of his cardinals publicly call upon him before the whole Church to give an answer, his silence will speak for him; the truth he refuses to affirm will convict him, and the bar of history will pass sentence on his disgraceful pontificate, just as it has done with other wayward Popes.

To recall the eerily apt condemnation of the infamous Pope Honorius I by his own successor, Leo II: “We anathematize… also Honorius, who did not attempt to sanctify this Apostolic Church with the teaching of apostolic tradition, but by profane treachery permitted its purity to be polluted.” May the good God deliver us from the profane treachery of the current occupant of the Chair of Peter.(Catch Chris Ferrara’s regular column in the print/e-edition of The Remnant)

New Podcast Series Highlights History Of Hinduism

A new podcast series released by the Hindu Students Association aims to bring to light the history of Hinduism and important issues affecting Hindus in the United States and around the world. Shruti, which means “that which is heard,” is named after the set of authoritative scriptures of Hindu philosophy.

The first episode in the series “Arrival in the West: Finding a Place in the New Land” is hosted by the national officers of Hindu Students Association. It focuses on the movement of Hinduism to the Americas, and the unique challenges early Hindu immigrants faced as they sought to practice their religion in a foreign land.

“It seemed appropriate to use the term Shruti,” Hari Venkatachalam, vice president for the HSA was quoted in a press release. “We’re hoping that we can share the Hindu experience in the same way, recreating how Hinduism has been passed from generation to generation for millennia,” he said.

Some of the clips included in the first episode include Budhaditya Mukherjee’s “Hindustani Classical Sitar” in Raaga Behag; “Golden Deer Scene” performed by Central Javanese performers from the Wayong Wong genre; Dr. Natesan Ramani’s Flute performance of “Ninnukori”; Yankaran Isaac’s “Hari Ka Bhajan Karle Mere”; President Lyndon B. Johnson’s Remarks on the Signing of the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act; and G. Sivaraman’s interview “Experience with Maha Periyava Dr. Alagappan.”

The HSA was formed in 2009 by a group of Hindu students and young professionals who realized the need for an organization that catered to young Hindus in America and provided a platform for their religious and spiritual development. It aims to empower young Hindu adults through education, service and devotion; to cultivate and foster cross-cultural dialogue and interaction on issues pertaining to Hindus domestically and nationally; to improve the level of representation at colleges/universities with organizational activities and participation in other organizations and media; and to build a network amongst younger Hindus in America.

‘Remarkable’ resilience of Kandhamal Christians focus of US film

The 26-minute film shows Christian communities in India, Turkey and elsewhere which suffer religious freedom violations. The resilience of Kandhamal Christians is portrayed in a new documentary short film Under Caesar’s Sword, directed by Jason Cohen Productions in the United States.

The documentary which focuses on Christian persecution around the world was produced by the Under Caesar’s Sword initiative, a partnership of the Notre Dame Center for Ethics and Culture and Georgetown University’s Religious Freedom Project.

“What is remarkable about persecuted Christians is their resilience. They are not just victims. Understanding this is the key to being in solidarity with them,” said Daniel Philpott, the movie’s co-director and a political science professor at the University of Notre Dame, Indiana.

The 26-minute film shows Christian communities in India, Turkey and elsewhere which suffer religious freedom violations. It interviews Christian families, refugees and regional leaders as well as scholars. Under Caesar’s Sword focuses on their “creative strategies” to survive, build alliances and resist persecution, Notre Dame News reports.

The erasure of Christian culture in the Middle East is one focus, as is human rights activism among Christians in India. In the Kandhamal riots of late 2007 and early 2008, rioters in the eastern India state of Odisha killed 45 people and destroyed more than 80 churches. Christians were targeted for forced conversion to Hinduism.

In the film, the widow of a man who refused to convert recounted how he was tortured and killed in front of her and their two children. “They beat my husband badly as we pleaded with them to stop,” she said. “They dragged him for a kilometer with a cycle chain around his neck.”

Timothy Shah, associate director of Georgetown University’s Religious Freedom Project, reflected on many Christians’ response to persecution. “Christians have spontaneously responded to their own suffering by enlarging their concern and compassion and work for justice to include others as well,” Shah said. “It’s important because that’s what their faith calls them to, but it’s important too in that I think many Christians realize the only world in which they are going to be more secure is a world in which everyone is more secure.”

Jason Cohen is an Academy Award-nominated producer/director. He has produced and directed all formats of film and television on projects that cover a broad range of topics over the past 20 years. The Under Caesar’s Sword film is available at no cost on-line, as is a discussion guide for groups. It can be seen at the website ucs.nd.edu/film.

Over 500 attend ‘Indian Seniors of Chicago ‘Diwali’ festival

By Asian Media USA ©

Chicago IL: Indian Seniors of Chicago (ISC) celebrated their 14th Annual Diwali Celebration for the benefit of members their family and friends, at Maha Laxmi auditorium at Manav Seva Mandir, Bensenville, IL on Sunday 23, October, 2016. Capacity crowd of over 525 members joined the program.

Shri Hirabhai Patel on behalf of Executive Committee welcomed and thanked all for joining the occasion. Giving outline of the program, he stressed the hard work of the members and volunteers of ISC organization in creation of this event and stressed the audience to enjoy the program including the melodious singing and music from Musical group and his party at the conclusion.

Popular Ageless Jester and Emcee, Mr. Arvindbhai Kotak, commenced held the entire event together with his wit, interactive sessions, jokes and satires. The program kicked off by traditional Lamp Lighting ceremony while Dr. Anantbhai Rawal recited mantras from Rig Vedas. Smt. Janakbala Shah invited luminaries including chief guest Shri Chhotalal Patel, Special Guests Shri Mafatbhai Patel, Dr. Chittranjanbhai Patel, Shri Dahyabhai Prajapati, Dr Ashok Shah, Shri Pradeep Patel, Shri Rajubhai Chauhan and President Dr. Narsinhbhai Patel for this Deep Pragatya formality.

Cultural and entertainment program followed by Swagta Geet combined with classical dance of ‘Jyoti Kalash Chhalke’ performed by Pika Munsi and Swapna Shashidharan, Next number was a recital of ‘Shree Ganeshy Dheemahi’ performed by Kshama Shah, Susan Abrham and Anupama Mangalvedhe. This item was a dance based on a song ‘Tuhi Mere Mandir Tuhi meri Puja’ performed by Executive Committee member Smt. Hema Shastri. Audience was thrilled by this and subsequent presentation of fourth item, a boogie and song ‘Hum kale hain to kya hua dilwale hain’ (Performed in Movie by legendary Bollywood actor Mahamood) performed by Executive Committee member Bhupendra Suthar, Hema Shastri and Anjana Desai. This got enthusiastic response from packed hall.

Half way through the program, Shri Hirabhai Patel invited chief guest Shri Chhotalal Patel special guests Shri Mafatbhai Patel, Dr. Chittranjan Patel, Dahyabhai Prajapati, Shri Pradip Patel, Shri Rajubhai Chauhan and President Dr. Narsinhbhai Patel on stage. Chief guest Shri Chhotalal Patel was greeted with flowers bouquet by Dr. Narsinhbhai Patel, Shri Mafatbhai Patel was greeted with flowers bouquet by Dr. Rasikbhai Shah, Dr. Chittranjan Patel was greeted with flowers bouquet by Dahyabhai Prajapati, Shri Pradip Patel was greeted with flowers bouquet by shri Hirabhai Patel and Shri Rajubhai Chauhan was greeted with flowers bouquet by Arvind Kotak.

Informational presentation on year 2016 highlights of activities of Indian Seniors of Chicago Pariwar was given by President Dr. Narsinhbhai Patel. Sponsors were recognized and honored by Shri Manubhai Shah & Shri Nalin Shah with a gift and a rose flower bouquet by Shri Dahyabhai Prajapati. All the artists were also recognized and honored by Shri Naresh Dekhtawala and hailed with a gift and a rose bouquet presented by Shri Chandrakant Gandhi. The evening concluded following Shri Bipin Shah gave vote of thanks.

For the rest of the evening number, Shri Naresh Dekhtawala introduced nostalgic melodious musical evening to be presented and performed by famed and talented Musical Group artists. Everybody enjoyed and cherished the nostalgic melodious musical evening bringing back those nostalgic days while growing up in India. The music brought rejuvenated youth in many seniors who overcame age related restrictions and performed impromptu Bollywood dance following music beats. The excellent presentation of meet, greet and fun filled evening finally ended in late hours of night.

Indian Seniors of Chicago, a registered not for profit organization is brainchild of founding and pillar member Dr. Narsinhbhai Patel, started in year 2001. The organization main goal is to give a social platform for our senior Diaspora to congregate periodically, help organize cultural activities including monthly meetings, presentation of informational seminars, arranging visitation to interesting places, picnics, group travel to local and international destinations. The organization gives special consideration to widowed spouses of deceased single seniors to help them address their risk of developing depression due to lonesomeness and isolation.

Members of Executive Board: Dr. Narsinhbhai Patel – President, Dr. Rasikbhai Shah – Vice- President, Shri Hirabhai Patel – Secretary, Shri Chitranjan Desai- Treasurer, Shri Manubhai Shah- Jt. Treasurer Shri Arvindbhai Kotak- Jt. Secretary.

Colorful Lights and Traditions Abound at BAPS Diwali Celebration in Chicago

By Asian Media USA ©

Chicago IL: This October, lights and candles will be lit, sweets will be prepared and shared, and warm greetings and well wishes will be exchanged as millions of Hindus around the world celebrate the festival of lights, Diwali. Diwali presents Hindus around the world with an opportunity to renew the rich traditions of their roots with great fanfare.

Diwali is an ancient Hindu festival commemorating many historical events including the return of Bhagwan Shri Ram to the kingdom of Ayodhya after fourteen years of exile. His return brought about a period of enlightenment within the kingdom and its people. The tradition of self-enlightenment continues today as Diwali presents an opportunity for self-improvement and progress through reflection within.

In marking the season, volunteers of all ages came together to organize a Diwali celebration at the BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir in Bartlett, IL on October 31, 2016.

Colorful intricate designs called rangoli, decorative oil lamps and Annakut offerings of vegetarian food before the sacred images of God filled the atmosphere with a renewed spirit of the festival. Over 11,000 attendees experienced the culture and traditions of the auspicious holiday as they offered prayers, well wishes, and resolved to mark the New Year with spiritual enlightenment.

A beautiful exhibition entitled ‘In the joy of others’ was prepared by the youth of BAPS to celebrate the inspiring life and legacy of Pramukh Swami Maharaj.

Throughout his life, he has untiringly remained in the service of others restoring villages from natural disasters, building new schools, hospitals and community

centers, and strengthening societies on the foundation of compassion and peace. His humanitarian efforts have garnered widespread international respect, while his

personal spirituality has been an inspiration for millions around the world. He has guided many youth on brilliant career paths, while keeping cultural values intact.

BAPS youth take great measures to organize and conduct this annual event for the younger participants. Children enjoyed the Diwali fare filled with games, activities

and sweet treats during the Kid’s Diwali Celebration on Sunday, October 16. Arts and crafts stations were set up to illustrate traditions and teachings of Diwali. A spectacular light and sound show also took place on the steps of the Mandir on the evening of October 30 to commemorate the selfless life of Pramukh Swami Maharaj, who lived by the words of his life motto, “In the joy of others lies our own”.

Hundreds of devotees and well-wishers alike relished the divine atmosphere of Diwali as they immersed themselves in the traditional songs and delicious cuisines of the holiday. Many distinguished guests were also in attendance for the Diwali celebrations, impressed and personally touched by the inspiring messages portrayed in the

exhibition. “The impression made upon me is mostly compassion,” said Tom Cullerton, IL State Senator. “The caring, the selflessness, the fact that there is a mission beyond just a self-serving mission or just getting people to believe in him, but actually expanding out into entire communities. And not focused on one single sect of

people or one single basis but really trying to empower others to be better people, empower others to help other people which is something we don’t always see in today’s culture. And to have somebody who not only embodies that but preaches it, and tells everybody to do that, and has a large group of people who follow and believe everything about that, and tries to live that same mission is absolutely wonderful to be a part of.”

Similar sentiments were conveyed by the Lieutenant Governor of Illinois, Evelyn Sanguinetti. When asked to describe Pramukh Swami Maharaj in one word she simply said, “Servitude. That’s what he was about. Service first. Never putting himself first. But God and the people first, and that’s a big deal.” Also impressed with his humility and meekness she paralleled those qualities as a public servant stating, “That’s what we have to be, we have to be humble, we have to be meek, and help others.” Particularly emphasizing his inspiration to the youth, she believed his legacy to be timeless. “I see that these volunteers are incredibly young which leads me to believe that it’s timeless because our very young are putting in work and paying it forward.”

The exhibit invoked a personal connection with Pramukh Swami Maharaj for Raja Krishnamoorthi, Candidate for the IL House of Representatives (8th District). Pointing to a panel referencing the over 700,000 letters Pramukh Swami Maharaj has spent time personally reading and replying to, Mr. Krishnamoorthi said, “I’m proud to say I’m

two of those letters.” When describing Pramukh Swami Maharaj’s legacy, IL State Senator, Michael Connelly also offered his thoughts saying, “An amazing man. There is an exhibit where people were allowed to write something to him to thank him, and the first thing I saw was ‘thank you for making me a better person.’ And at the end of

the day, that is what his message was, that is what his life was. And if we can all dare to follow his example the world would be a very better place.” The Diwali festivities brought devotees together to serve a common purpose, develop spiritually, and please their guru His Holiness Mahant Swami Maharaj and inspirer,

His Holiness Pramukh Swami Maharaj. Pramukh Swami Maharaj inspired the celebration of Hindu festivals at BAPS centers worldwide to keep the rich traditions and ulture of India alive with emphasis on the true historic and spiritual purpose of Hindu festivals.

The BAPS Swaminarayan Sanstha (BAPS) is a worldwide spiritual and humanitarian organization that is dedicated to community service, peace and harmony. Motivated by Hindu principles, BAPS strives to care for the world by caring for societies, families and individuals. Through various spiritual and humanitarian activities, BAPS

endeavors to develop better citizens of tomorrow with high esteem for their roots and culture. Its 3,300 international centers support these character-building activities. Under the guidance and leadership of His Holiness Mahant Swami Maharaj, BAPS aspires to build a community that is free of addictions as well as morally,
ethically and spiritually pure. For more details, please visit www.baps.org.

His Holiness Mahant Swami Maharaj is the sixth and current spiritual successor of Bhagwan Swaminarayan. He was ordained a swami by Yogiji Maharaj in 1961 and named Sadhu Keshavjivandas. As he was appointed the head (Mahant) of the Mandir in Mumbai, he became known as Mahant Swami. His devout, humble and service-focused life

earned him the innermost blessings of Yogiji Maharaj and Pramukh Swami Maharaj. Mahant Swami Maharaj travels throughout the world inspiring people through his insightful spiritual discourses and disciplined conduct. His virtuous lifestyle and profound devotion to Bhagwan Swaminarayan and gurus are ideals toward which
devotees strive. Mahant Swami Maharaj became the guru and President of BAPS upon Pramukh Swami Maharaj’s passing in 2016.

A magnificent 49,000 sq ft Hindu temple opens in New York

A two story 49,000 square foot temple, BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir, has opened in Melville (New York) on a five acres plot after three days of festivities. Constructed by utilizing eco-friendly and cost-effective technological advancements, it includes an assembly hall, classrooms, gymnasium, dining area, indoor basketball court, etc. It is open to the public daily, conducts twice daily arti and offers Gujarati classes.

Opening celebrations included kirtan aradhana, yagna, prayers, murti-pratishta, etc. Sadguru Pujya Kothari Swami (Pujya Bhaktipriya Swami), one of the most senior swamis of Bochasanwasi Shri Akshar Purushottam Swaminarayan Sanstha (BAPS), presided. Although this temple was envisioned in late 1980s, its construction began in 2012.
Meanwhile, Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada today, commended efforts of temple leaders and volunteers and area community for realizing this magnificent Hindu temple.

Rajan Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, further said that it was important to pass on Hindu spirituality, concepts and traditions to coming generations amidst so many distractions in the consumerist society and hoped that this temple would help in this direction. Zed stressed that instead of running after materialism; we should focus on inner search and realization of Self and work towards achieving moksh (liberation), which was the goal of Hinduism.

This temple is run by BAPS, “a socio-spiritual Hindu organization with its roots in the Vedas” and headquartered in Ahmedabad. With over 3,850 satsang centers, BAPS “encourages a lifestyle rooted in spirituality and purity”. Bhagwan Swaminarayan was the founder and His Holiness Mahant Swami Maharaj (Swami Keshavjivandasji) is its sixth and present spiritual guru.

Designed by about 83 years old Melville headquartered firm H2M, this traditionally built temple with domes and flags, will reportedly serve about 60,000 Hindu families of the area and beyond. It was raised with the help of large number of volunteers; including Vipul Patel, Samir Bhatt, Girish Patel, etc. Melville, a host of operations for various Fortune 500 companies, is in Suffolk County.

Christian philosophers assert India’s diversity

The Association of Christian Philosophers of India (ACPI) discussed the theme Becoming a nation: processes and prospects. India’s Christian philosophers have resolved to celebrate the nation’s cultural diversity and religious pluralism to help the country uphold its secular traditions and affirm citizen’s human dignity and equality.

The Association of Christian Philosophers of India (ACPI) said this in a statement issued after their hosted its 41st annual research seminar at St. Albert’s College in Ranchi Oct. 20-23. The statement of some 80 philosophy teachers and students took pride in India’s secular and democratic nature, its Constitution that safeguards the fundamental rights, religious plurality, scientific advancement and immense potentiality.

“The nation’s variegated religious and spiritual traditions and its multicultural richness enhance the uniqueness of the process of becoming a nation. We are invited to affirm human dignity and equality in spite of cultural and religious differences, said the statement issued after discussing the theme, Becoming a nation: processes and prospects.

They noted “unenlightened and dysfunctional attempts” being made “to challenge and subvert” many of India’s strengths and assets. Other challenges included a colonial hangover resulting in religious polarization, the assertion of cultural supremacy and developmental projects lacking ecological sensitivity.

“Current developments seem to lead to a narrow understanding of nationalism, with fundamentalist and anti-secular overtones foregrounded by the politicized use of the media, resulting in mob violence and terrorist activities,” said the statement.

“While dissent is an integral part of democracy, what we are witnessing is the suppression of dissenting voices of intellectuals and the masses. Numerous challenges to the integrity of the Constitution via anti-democratic and anti-minority policies have emerged, resulting in cultural and economic exclusion which will have severe consequences for various subaltern communities,” they said.

“The process of “becoming a nation” invites us to celebrate differences, to recognize and accept one another, to affirm cultural liberty and plurality, and to appreciate a mutually fecund co-emergence grounded in an ethics of compassionate care,” they said.

They pledged support to democratic and rational approaches and egalitarian moments, especially of the voiceless. They also supported sustainable development that recognizes “the mutuality of science and religion, and is aimed at integral and holistic growth.”

“We will cultivate a spirit of pluralistic patriotism rather than chauvinistic nationalism. As Indians who profess the Christian faith, we will celebrate overlapping socio-cultural spaces with our fellow country men and women at macro and micro levels,” they asserted. “Our interrelationships and collaboration with diverse communities will be aimed at fostering a spirit of harmonious coexistence,” said the statement.

Vatican message to Hindus emphasizes hope in family life

The Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue in Rome has issued its annual message to Hindus for Diwali, this time stressing family life. The message, entitled “Christians and Hindus: promoting hope among families,” said it is “especially important” that “parents, together with the wider community, instil in their children a sense of hope by guiding them towards a better future and the pursuit of the good, even in the face of adversity.”

“Providing a formation and education in hope is thus a task of paramount importance for families, as it reflects the divine nature of mercy which embraces the disheartened and gives them purpose,” it said added.

In a message titled, “Christians and Hindus: Promoting hope among families,” the statement offered best wishes as India celebrated Deepavali on October 30th, 2016. “May your celebrations around the world deepen your familial bonds, and bring joy and peace to your homes and communities. The health of society depends on our familial bonds and yet we know that today the very notion of family is being undermined by a climate that relativizes its essential significance and value. With this abiding respect for the family, and keenly aware of the global challenges daily confronting us, we wish to offer a reflection on how we, Christians and Hindus together, can promote hope in families, thus making our society ever more humane.”

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