Washington Post
 
 
Record number of Indian-Americans seeking  office
   
By JESSE WASHINGTON
The Associated Press 
Saturday, June  19, 2010; 9:23 PM  
 
-- Meet Reshma, Surya, Manan, Raj, Ami, Ravi, Nimrata and Kamala - a new 
wave  of Indian-American politicians. At least eight children of Indian 
immigrants are  running for Congress or statewide office, the most ever. The 
star 
of this trend  is Nikki Haley, born Nimrata Nikki Randhawa, who is favored 
to win the election  for governor of South Carolina.  
 
Indian heritage is where Haley's similarity with the other candidates seems 
 to end. She is the only Republican, the only one who has been widely 
mistaken  for a white woman, the only one who has been accused of abandoning 
her 
heritage  for converting from the Sikh faith to Christianity.  
Yet when Haley's motives are questioned and some suggest Indians must 
become  less "foreign" to get elected, many of these new candidates are quick 
to 
ask:  Who are we to judge the mashup of American ambition with an ancient 
culture?  
Manan Trivedi, a doctor and Iraq war veteran who recently won a Democratic  
primary for Congress in eastern Pennsylvania, said he did not view his 
ethnicity  as a handicap: "The American electorate is smarter than that."  
He called criticism of Haley's name and religion unfounded. "Nikki Haley 
and  (Republican Louisiana Gov.) Bobby Jindal are on the wrong side, but they 
worked  their butts off, they had the bonafides to get the votes, and I 
think it had so  much more to do with their work ethic than the fact that they 
may have changed  their names and adopted a different religion." 


 
Jindal was elected the nation's first Indian governor in 2007, at age 36.  
Named Piyush at birth, he told his Hindu parents when he was 4 that he 
wanted to  be called Bobby, like the "Brady Bunch" boy. He converted to 
Catholicism as a  teenager.  
As Jindal's star rose, the meaning of his assimilation drew much scrutiny.  
Many people outside South Carolina only learned Haley is Indian after a 
fellow  South Carolina lawmaker used a racial epithet to describe her. Now her 
choice of  names, marriage to a white man and Methodist conversion is 
raising similar  questions.  
Christianity is a more critical issue for white Republicans than other 
groups  - could a Hindu who worships multiple gods, or a turbaned Sikh who 
doesn't cut  his hair, survive a statewide Republican primary in the Bible 
Belt?  
Vidya Pradhan, editor of India Currents magazine, thinks not.  
Haley and Jindal "were really ambitious about their politics, and they 
could  not do it being Hindu or their old religion," Pradhan said. "I do think 
it was a  political move. They felt that not being a Christian would hurt 
them."  
Haley and Jindal declined to be interviewed for this story. But J. Ashwin  
Madia, a Minnesota Democrat who lost a congressional election in 2008 and is 
a  follower of the Jain religion, says their faith is irrelevant.  
"They can choose to be called what they want to be called, they can worship 
 what they want to worship," said Madia, a board member of the Indian 
American  Leadership Initiative, which supports Democratic candidates. "I don't 
think  being Indian-American is this thing they need to strive for or meet 
some sort of  purity test. They are finding the right balance for themselves." 
 
Madia stopped using his first name, Jigar, when he joined the Marines about 
 age 22. "I'm not running from something or ashamed of it. I'm proud of my 
name  and where I come from. But I was constantly explaining it or hearing 
it  mangled."  
Barack Hussein Obama, known as Barry in his younger days, proved that an  
unusual name was not an insurmountable political barrier. Some Indian  
politicians seem to be following his blueprint as they embrace their Indian  
names 
while describing their faith in voters' lack of bias.  
"This campaign is all about vision and values and policies," said Raj 
Goyle,  who is battling for the Democratic congressional nomination in his 
hometown of  Wichita, Kan. "I don't spend time thinking about differences, I 
think 
about ways  that Kansans can come together."  
Goyle worships at an Indian temple. His first name is Rajeev, but he has 
gone  by Raj since childhood. In 2006, he became the first Indian-American 
elected to  the Kansas Legislature and the first Democrat to hold his 
statehouse district.  
He said he doesn't worry about appearing more American or more Indian. "I 
am  who I am, I'm proud of my background and what I've accomplished and my 
family.  Kansas voters absolutely will choose the best candidate based on the 
merits."  
Indians began immigrating to the United States in large numbers about 50  
years ago, but just two have been elected to Congress: Dalip Singh Saund in 
1956  and Jindal, who entered Congress in 2004 and became governor midway 
through his  second term.  
In 2008, Madia says he was the only major Indian-American candidate for  
Congress. Today there are six, including Goyle and Trivedi. Ami Bera in  
California, Ravi Sangisetty in Louisiana and Reshma Saujani in New York face  
upcoming primaries, and Surya Yalamanchili won a primary in Ohio.  
In California, Kamala Harris, the child of an Indian mother and black 
father,  won the Democratic nomination for state attorney general and is 
favored 
to win  the election this fall. Harris was raised in a black neighborhood, 
attended  black churches and graduated from historically black Howard 
University. She also  worshipped in her mother's Hindu temple and has made many 
visits to her family  in India.  
"Running for office, you have to simplify or condense or put into  
pre-existing boxes who you are," Harris said, "so people will have a sense of  
you 
based on what they easily and quickly identify."  
"I grew up in a family where I had a strong sense of my culture and who I 
am,  and I never felt insecure about that at all," she said. "Slowly, 
perhaps, with  each of us taking on more prominent positions, people will start 
to 
understand  the diversity of the people." 
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