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The future will be a fierce political battle between those who stand for equality and justice and those who walk in step with entrenched wealth. For this reason Ambassador Mansingh takes the coconut as a metaphor for the Indian Diaspora. "What is the coconut famous for," he asks, and answers, "It grows on sandy soil, requires little water, and requires virtually no maintenance. The Indian Diaspora, in its American sector, however, is multi-layered and complex. While there are some Indian Americans who flourish economically, there are too many who do not. A full quarter of Indian Americans live in households with incomes below $25,000, even though Indian Americans reported the highest median household income ($49,696). This means that the rate of inequality in our community is very high, with a few millionaires and a considerable number who live in the basement of US society. You can't go into an urban hospital in the United States without being treated by either an Indian doctor or an Indian nurse. Yet, a fifth of Indian Americans have no health insurance, a higher percentage than the national average. They created the groundwork for the Indian American success stories. But, bear in mind, that of the Indians who migrated to the United States between 1987 and 1990, a fifth had no high school education, a tenth remain unemployed and a fifth live in poverty. By ignoring this socio-economic disparity we run the risk of ignoring the rifts and dilemmas that already trouble our community. Most of them are averse to the attacks on civil liberties that result in increased humiliation at the hands of the Homeland Security people, and few of them would agree that Bobby Jindal is the "Indian American community's future." So, when Ambassador Mansingh speaks of "coconuts," it gave me pause. How could desis in the room not think about the disparities in our community? How could we also let the Ambassador get away with his analogy without widespread laughter? Now surely the Ambassador, who served in DC as Deputy Chief of Mission (1989-92) and who took up the highest post in Washington from 2001, has some personal sense of U.S. slang or else has someone on his staff who does. Coconut, in the lexicon of Indian Americans, is a pejorative term used for someone who is "brown on the outside, white on the inside." There are at least two uses of these terms. The first is about assimilation, where the Indian American coconut, for instance, becomes "white" in all respects but appearance. The Indian American coconut identifies as white, has "white tastes" and has a disregard for things Indian. There is a problem with this usage because it assumes that there is a certain way to be Indian, to be an authentic Indian. It also ignores the history of colonialism that intertwined European and Indian tastes, particularly among the middle class in India. Assimilation, itself, is a spurious term because it often stands in for conformity: all of us assimilate by our very presence in the United States. To demand that we "assimilate" is really a demand that we conform to norms that may not be tasteful to us. The second use of terms like coconut and Oreo has less to do with cultural assimilation and more with political belief. Those who use it identify the U.S. state as an institution that works to preserve the outrages of history: it sanctifies the property stolen by white slave owners from enslaved Africans and African Americans, it continues to use racist ideas to keep working people separated, and it pretends that its gift of "equal rights" is enough payback for the impoverishment of the descendents of the enslaved people. If you're an African American who denies this history and says that all of us are now equal and that's fine, then there will be many who may call you an Oreo. If you are an Indian American who blames those desis who are being detained for their own problems, then there are many who will call you a coconut. Bobby Jindal will be the future of the Indian American community, but he will not be alone. The future will be a fierce political battle between those who stand for equality and justice, the champions of working people, and those who walk in step with Jindal and entrenched wealth. The greatest thing about our community is its feisty diversity |
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