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When did you discover your Christian
faith?
It was in high school. I was a teenager
and my grandfather had passed away.
It was really the first time I had thought
about life and what happens after death
and the importance of religious beliefs.
I had always been raised to believe
in God and to pray to God, but I felt
like this was how God was calling me
to worship Him. It happened about the
third or fourth year of high school,
when I was 14 or 15 years old.
Your parents must be Hindu. Were
they very religious Hindus who went
to the temple regularly? And how did
they take your conversion to Christianity?
My parents are still Hindu. There was
not a temple in Baton Rouge when I was
growing up; there are now, two, maybe
even three. They went to pujas fairly
regularly. They tended to be in people’s
homes as opposed to in a formal temple.
But you felt the Christian faith
answered the questions you had basically?
Yes, yes. My parents were very supportive.
They felt like it was important that
I was embracing God. I think it would
have been harder for them if I had come
home and said I did not believe in God.
They’ve always believed in God
so I think it was just important for
them that I continue to believe in God
and pray to God.
Was it difficult to explain your
faith to other members of the community?
No. I think most people respect that
as a personal decision, something that
was between me and God, and something
that they respected.
How did you meet your wife Supriya?
We actually went to high school together.
We did not start dating till about ten
years afterwards. We had not stayed
in touch and met again when she was
working in New Orleans and I came back
to Baton Rouge to head the health care
department.
What’s a typical day for
you and your family? I know it’s
going to change very soon, but right
now there must be a lot of night feeds!
I try to start the day early. We have
two children. Selia’s two and
a half and Shaan’s 7 months old.
Selia goes to half-day school and Shaan
stays home with mom. So I start the
day trying to help get the kids ready.
I’ll take Selia to school on my
way to work and so we’ll spend
that time together in the morning. I’ll
get her ready, give her breakfast and
get her to school and then I’ll
go on the campaign trail all day long.
And that includes a mixture of phone
calls, speeches and traveling
In the morning I’ll check emails
as well as look at the newspapers. I
get to the office by 8.30 and work through
the day. I try to get home by 9 p.m.
so I can see my daughter before she
goes to bed. I’m generally the
one that puts her to bed. Her mom will
feed her dinner and I will try to give
her a bath and get her in bed, and read
a couple of stories to her. Our son
still gets up every few hours. My wife
generally does most of those responsibilities.
And then we start all over the next
morning.
What are your leisure activities,
if you have any leisure, that is!
Right now, whenever I get time off
the campaign trail, I try to spend it
with my kids. Before I campaigned for
office, I used to play tennis, liked
to read, liked to travel, but nowadays
I’m either on the campaign trail
or I spend the time with my family.
Now that you’re headed for
Washington, will the family be going
with you or will you be commuting?
I’ll commute. They’ll stay
here and I’ll fly back and forth
literally every week. I’ll be
back in the district, back at home three-four
days a week. So you basically spend
a lot of time on airplanes.
What suggestions do you have for
Indian immigrants to become part of
America? What should they be doing?
I think it’s very important that
Indians get involved in policy and politics.
In many areas Indians tend to be very
successful, in business, in academics,
in medicine, and I think that’s
a wonderful thing. The community has
been diverse, successful, and everybody’s
going to choose a different path. I
don’t think people should feel
like there’s only one way to succeed
or make a contribution or live their
lives here.
I think the great thing about our community
is that there’s so much diversity
and people are making their own decisions
and I would just encourage people to
get involved in whatever they like to
do. It may not be politics, it may be
media, it may be business, it may be
medicine. The great thing is because
of the examples before us we really
have been shown that we can do anything
we want in this country. I think it’s
a great opportunity.
Also with the new generation, people
are getting into policy making. An earlier
immigrant might not have the chance
to do that.
It’s a wonderful thing, the diversity
in the community. It makes sense when
you look at other immigrant communities
that have come here. They start by securing
their academic and economic future for
their families but after they do that,
you see those other immigrant communities
become more involved with a greater
array of things. I think that’s
happening with the Indian American community.
So it’s a very positive and very
natural development.
What gets you through your day,
through good times, bad times?
Well, my kids are very important to
me, my family is very important to me.
To me, that reminds me why I’m
doing this, why I want to be involved,
because I want them to have a better
quality of life, I want them to pursue
whatever their dreams are. That makes
it worthwhile for me, to make all these
sacrifices.
And also it must be your faith
too, your Christian faith which gets
you through?
Absolutely. I think this idea that
we’re all connected and have to
care for each other is a very important
aspect. Anybody who has a strong religious
belief has this belief that life is
more important than titles or toys,
but rather we were created for a purpose
so we should try to fulfill that purpose.
With your qualifications, you could
have gone into any profession and probably
become a multimillionaire. So why did
you choose public service and why does
it bring you so much satisfaction.
I feel it’s where I feel personally
fulfilled. My parents, again, they have
done very well. By coming to this country,
I think they’ve always felt we
owed the community, we need to give
something back. It’s not just
enough to make the most money or get
the most titles, it’s important
to do something that improves the community
around you. So that’s always been
a very important consideration of my
family. My parents have raised us with
that ethic, that importance of not only
helping the less fortunate but helping
by giving back to the greater community,
and this is my way of doing that. For
me, it’s personally very fulfilling.
Especially if you can do something
in healthcare, where the maximum number
of people will benefit from that.
That’s right. I originally thought
I was going into medicine, but then
I realized that if I went into health
policy I could help make the system
better for several doctors and therefore
help several more patients than I could
have if I just went into medicine itself.
Obviously it’s much more of an
indirect satisfaction. Doctors directly
heal people. I won’t be doing
that, but hopefully if I do my job right
I can impact even more people, even
if it is indirectly.
There is a perception among many in
the Indian community that you converted
to Christianity and adopted extreme
conservative views to make yourself
palatable to the Republican establishment
in Louisiana. How do you respond to
such critics?
My own views on faith and values have
been shaped over the years by a variety
of relationships and experiences. Like
many people, while I was raised in a
household of faith, I took a rather
carefree attitude toward matters of
religion in my early years, not paying
much attention to spiritual things.
It was not until my grandfather died
that I began to seriously consider the
questions of life, death, and the possibility
of life after death.
My best friend growing up had the courage
of his convictions, and the courage
to talk to me about his faith in Christ.
He gave me a Bible for Christmas. I
thanked him for the Bible but promptly
laid it aside to gather dust. Later,
after hearing the testimony of yet another
friend, I decided to search the scriptures,
almost as if I was trying to do some
investigative reporting. A youth minister
played a critical role in answering
my many questions.
As I reflected on the scriptures, I
knew that I had a decision to make,
and I made it. As I made my profession
of faith, I felt an assurance of my
destiny and an understanding of the
love of God. Today, my faith in Jesus
Christ is central to who I am, and I
pray regularly for God’s wisdom
in all the parts of my life.
The conventional wisdom is that the
Republican Party is not hospitable to
minorities and immigrants. Why were
you attracted to the GOP and does the
criticism of the party have any validity
in your opinion.
My allegiance to the Republican Party
has everything to do with the core values
at the center of the party. The Republican
Party believes in the value and freedom
of all individuals. It believes in less
government in our lives, not more. It
stands for lower taxes, less spending
and less government control of our health
care systems. The Republican Party also
represents the conservative values that
Louisiana residents find most important
in their lives. The Republican Party
wants every individual to work toward
and achieve his own American Dream.
You rose through the ranks in Louisiana
politic and had little name recognition
within the Indian community until you
ran for governor. Do you see yourself
playing a role in the politics of the
community and do you think the community
should cultivate political leadership
rooted in the community, such as Jesse
Jackson is perceived to speak for the
African American community.
I look at my success this year as the
ultimate embodiment of the American
Dream.
I owe my victory to the voters in the
1st District who have trusted me to
work for them, the volunteers who literally
worked around the clock to get our message
out, and most of all to this country
of opportunities. This is a country
of opportunities where people are judged
on their ability and their performance.
I think that is very important. What
makes the American system so successful
is the fact that immigrants and their
children can do very well here with
hard work.
I think we all follow those who came
before us, and we are certainly grateful
for the example Congressman Saund and
others have established for us. I am
building on those who came before me,
and many more, certainly will come after
me. I truly hope many more Indian Americans
will begin to work in appointed and
elected positions. I think we are a
large diverse community that has a lot
to offer, and it makes sense that as
many people as possible do participate.
— Lavina Melwani
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