Indian American Communities in Indiana, 1998-1999
A Guide to the Collection of Oral History Interviews at Indiana University
Bloomington
Finding aid prepared by the staff of the Center for
the Study of History and Memory with a grant from the National Endowment for the
Humanities Division of Preservation and Access, 2000-2002
Overview of the Collection
Repository
Indiana University Center for the Study of History and Memory
Indiana University
400 North Sunrise Drive
Weatherly Hall North, Room 122
Bloomington, IN 47405
Phone: 812/855-2856
Fax: 812/855-0002
E-mail: ohrc@indiana.edu
http://www.indiana.edu/~cshm
Creator
Indiana University Center for the
Study of History and Memory
TitleIndian American Communities in
Indiana, 1998-1999
Project No.
ohrc065
Interviews
21 interviews. Audiotapes, transcripts, and collateral
materials.
Physical Location
Interviews are housed in Weatherly Hall North, Room
122. Copies are also housed at the Indiana University Archives in Herman B Wells
Library E460. For other locations housing the interviews from this project, please
contact the Center for the Study of History and Memory office.
Language
Materials are in English
Abstract
Indian American Communities in Indiana provides a sampling of Indian American voices,
most of whom were born in India and now reside in the United States. Among the
topics discussed are maintaining Indian cultural values in an American context,
religious beliefs and practices, imparting Indian traditions and values to children
born to Indian parents but are growing up in the United States, differences between
Indian born and American born Indian Americans, educational and career choices,
politics of India and America, current events, Indian community associations, and
cultural differences between India and America. his project was co-directed by
Professor M. Gail Hickey of the School of Education at Indiana University-Purdue
University at Fort Wayne.
Scope and Content Note
This collection contains twenty-one interviews conducted over two years. The interviews range from 45 to 175 minutes. All
interviews consist of audio tapes and typed transcripts.
Administrative Information
Acquisition Information
Oral history interviews conducted by the Indiana University Center for the
Study of History and Memory from 1968 to the present, with particular focus on the
history of twentieth-century America and the Midwest.
Usage Restrictions
The archive of the Center for the Study of History and Memory at Indiana
University is open to the use of researchers. Copies of transcript pages are
available only when such copies are permitted by the deed of gift signed by the
interviewee. Scholars must honor any restrictions the interviewee placed on the
use of the interview. Since some of our earlier (pre-computer) transcripts do
not exist in final form, any editing marks in a transcript (deletions,
additions, corrections) are to be quoted as marked. Tapes may not be copied for
patrons unless the deed of gift permits it, and a transcript is unavailable for
that interview. The same rules of use that apply to a transcript apply to the
taped interview. Interviews may not be reproduced in full for any public use,
but excerpted quotes may be used as long as researchers fully cite the data in
their research, including accession number, interview date, interviewee's and
interviewer's name, and page(s).
Preferred Citation
[interviewee first name last name] interview, by [interviewer first name last
name], [interview date(s)], [call number], [project name], Center for the Study
of History and Memory, Indiana University, Bloomington, [page number(s) or tape
number and side if no transcript].
Interview List
Interviewee
Anonymous October 23, 1998
Call Number
98-019
Physical Description
19 pages; 1 tape, 1 7/8 ips, 50 minutes; index
Interviewer
Nordstrom, Justin
Access Status
Restricted: Interviewee to remain anonymous
Scope and Content Note
Anonymous speaks of his decision to return to India to marry, because he
feels it has kept him more in touch with Indian culture. He also talks about
Sikhism, and its importance in his life. Anonymous describes the types of
activities he participates in within the Indian community, which helps
remind him of his Indian heritage.
Anonymous was born in Punjab, India and moved to the United States at the age
of 10 to join his father, who had gotten a job in Indianapolis, Indiana,
where he still resides today. Anonymous went to Indiana University as an
undergraduate and currently runs his own insurance business.
-
Keywords
-
-
Occupation Names
- insurance agent
-
-
Place Names
- Indianapolis, Indiana
- Lucknow, India
- Punjab, India
-
-
Subjects
- Gurudwara
- Hindu-Muslim conflict
- Indian community associations
- marriage customs
- naturalization
- racial discrimination
- Sikhism
- sportscasting
Interviewee
Anonymous November 10, 1998
Call Number
98-021
Physical Description
24 pages; 1 tape, 1 7/8 ips, 55 minutes; index
Interviewer
Sheehan, Steven
Access Status
Restricted: Interviewee wishes to remain anonymous.
Scope and Content Note
Anonymous discusses the importance of maintaining Indian customs and values
in the United States even though he identifies himself as an American.
Anonymous was born and raised in Baroda, India. After earning an
undergraduate degree in India, he decided to come to America for further
study. He attended several different universities and became interested in
pharmaceutical research. He decided to remain in America because of the
greater research opportunities available. Anonymous eventually got a
position at Eli Lilly and Company in Indianapolis, Indiana and has remained
in the city, although he left Lilly to start his own company that
manufactures medical testing supplies. Anonymous met his wife while studying
in America, who was an Indian also studying in America, and they had an
Indian wedding ceremony in the United States.
-
Keywords
-
-
Corporation Names
- Eli Lilly and Company
- Gita Mandala
- Indian Community Center
- National Institutes of Health
- University of Michigan
-
-
Occupation Names
- business owner
- medical researcher
-
-
Personal Names
- Lugar, Richard G.
- Pauling, Linus C.
-
-
Place Names
- Baroda, India
- Indianapolis, Indiana
-
-
Subjects
- citizenship
- Hinduism
- Indian community associations
- Indian weddings
- joint families
- medical research
- multilingualism
- naturalization
- pharmaceutical research
- vegetarianism
- Vietnam War
Interviewee
Anonymous; Anonymous October 27,
1999
Call Number
99-006
Physical Description
30 pages; 2 tapes, 1 7/8 ips, 75 minutes; index
Interviewer
Sheehan, Steven
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Anonymous and Anonymous, both raised in Indianapolis, talk about growing
up as Indian-Americans. They do not feel they were exposed to much
Indian culture as children, beyond attending events sponsored by the
India Association of Indianapolis. They talk about the experience of
being a minority in Indiana, their travels to India, and their growing
interest in Indian culture as they grow older.
-
Keywords
-
-
Corporation Names
- India Association of Indianapolis
- University of Michigan
- Vincennes University
-
-
Place Names
- Indianapolis, Indiana
- Vincennes, Indiana
-
-
Subjects
- aviation
-
Bhagavad Gita
- dating customs
- Hinduism
- international travel
- racial discrimination
- religious beliefs
- religious pilgrimage
- Tamil language
Interviewee
Ahuja, Girdhar October 12, 1998
Call Number
98-016
Physical Description
36 pages; 3 tapes, 1 7/8 ips, 130 minutes; index; interviewee's
business card
Interviewer
Nordstrom, Justin
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Dr. Ahuja discusses the differences of living and working in India and
America, and advantages in the medical profession that are present in
America, which factored into his decision to remain in the U.S. long term.
He speaks of the ways he has retained his close family ties by frequent
communication and visits to India. He speaks of his involvement in the India
Association of Indianapolis and its importance in maintaining ties to Indian
values and traditions while living in America.
Dr. Girdhar Ahuja, a neonatologist in Indianapolis, Indiana, was born in
Sidh, India, a region now located in Pakistan. He was educated in Punjab,
India, and continued his medical degree in Scotland. After getting married,
he and his wife decided to move to the United States, where he studied
neonatology in Louisville, Kentucky, then an emerging field. After a few
years of residency, Dr. Ahuja moved to Indianapolis and has remained ever
since.
-
Keywords
-
-
Corporation Names
- India Association of Indianapolis
-
-
Occupation Names
- neonatologist
-
-
Place Names
- Indianapolis, Indiana
- Louisville, Kentucky
- Rajasthan, India
- Scotland
-
-
Subjects
- 1947 Partition
- Indian medical profession
- international travel
- joint families
- marriage customs
- medical profession
- medical school
- naturalization
- neonatology
- philanthropy
- racial discrimination
- Sidhi culture
Interviewee
Basu, Abhijit September 3, 1998
Call Number
98-014
Physical Description
30 pages; 2 tapes, 1 7/8 ips, 80 minutes; index; interviewee's
resumé
Interviewer
Nordstrum, Justin
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Prof. Basu discusses the ways he has kept in touch with friends and family in
India and his Indian heritage while living in America. He talks about the
differences of living and working in India and America. He also speaks of
conservative and liberal ideologies and how people use these ideologies in
politics, culture and religion.
Abhijit Basu, born and raised in Calcutta, India, is a geology professor at
Indiana University and currently lives in Bloomington, Indiana with his wife
and mother-in-law. Prof. Basu was educated in Calcutta and worked for the
Geological Survey of India for several years before coming to the United
States for the first time to earn a PhD at Indiana University. He returned
to his position at the Geological Survey of India, but quickly became
frustrated and unhappy, and so moved back to the United States with his wife
and son, eventually obtaining a professorship at Indiana University.
-
Keywords
-
-
Corporation Names
- Geological Survey of India
- Indiana University
- NASA
-
-
Occupation Names
- geology professor
-
-
Place Names
- Bloomington, Indiana
- Calcutta, India
-
-
Subjects
- academic freedom
- American politics
- atheism
- conservatism
- Fulbright scholars
- geology
- Gita study
- Indian music
- Indian national politics
- Indian traditional dress
- marriage customs
- naturalization
- parenting philosophy
- racial discrimination
- religious beliefs
- spirituality
Interviewee
Basu, Ilora October 7, 1999
Call Number
99-003
Physical Description
23 pages; 1 tape, 1 7/8 ips, 50 minutes; index
Interviewer
Sheehan, Steven
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Ilora Basu, born in Bangalore and raised in Calcutta, India, currently lives
in Bloomington, Indiana with her husband. Ms. Basu discusses her family's
history in India. Although they come from Bangladesh, they were forced to
immigrate to Calcutta during the 1947 Partition of India and Pakistan. Her
uncle, who partially raised her, was very active in the independence
movement and Indian national politics. Ms. Basu got her degree in India in
human physiology, but is now studying environmental chemistry. She discusses
the ways she tries to stay in touch with her Indian heritage, mostly by
communicating with her family in the United States and India and
participating in Indian cultural events in the States. She also speaks of
her efforts to pass on Indian culture and values to her son, who is now a
rock guitar teacher in California.
-
Keywords
-
-
Corporation Names
- Indiana University
- Indic Society
-
-
Occupation Names
- environmental chemist
-
-
Place Names
- Bangladesh
- Bloomington, Indiana
- Calcutta, India
-
-
Subjects
- 1947 Partition
- Bengali culture
- environmental chemistry
- Hindu-Muslim conflict
- Indian classical guitar
- Indian community associations
- Indian educational system
- Indian Independence Movement
- parenting philosophy
Interviewee
Gidda, Jaswant October 12, 1998
Call Number
98-017
Physical Description
22 pages; 1 tape. 1 7/8 ips, 50 minutes; index
Interviewer
Nordstrom, Justin
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Mr. Gidda speaks of his identity as an American, and yet still acknowledges
his Indian heritage by staying in touch with family members in India and
participating in Indian events in Indianapolis, mostly sponsored by the
India Association of Indianapolis.
Jaswant Gidda, a pharmaceutical researcher at Eli Lilly and Company in
Indianapolis, Indiana, was born and raised in Punjab, India. He grew up in a
poor family and worked very hard to attend college. After nearly completing
his PhD, he earned a scholarship in a university in Texas for pharmaceutical
research. He then got a position at Harvard Medical School, but found that
he was not able to do as much research as he would like because he spent
most of his time looking for grants to fund research. He decided to go into
the private sector, got a position at Eli Lilly and Company in Indianapolis
and has remained there since.
-
Keywords
-
-
Corporation Names
- Eli Lilly and Company
- Harvard Medical School
- India Association of Indianapolis
-
-
Occupation Names
- pharmacologist
-
-
Place Names
- Indianapolis, Indiana
- Punjab, India
- Texas
-
-
Subjects
- joint families
- local politics
- naturalization
- pharmaceutical research
- racial discrimination
- Sikhism
Interviewee
Kalhan, Behroz October 15, 1999
Call Number
99-004
Physical Description
30 pages; 2 tapes, 1 7/8 ips, 80 minutes; index
Interviewer
Sheehan, Steven
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Mrs. Kalhan discusses her initial worries of marrying a Hindu man, since she
was raised Parsi Zoroastrian, but feels that both her family and his have
been very tolerant. She talks about living in America, and feels that her
family is more Americanized than a lot of Indian American families. She
points out that she did not make any great effort to teach her children
about the Parsi religion or Hindu religion, or teach them Indian languages
when they were growing up. Mrs. Kalhan speaks of her job at Bloomington
Hospital as a physical therapist, and the enjoyment she receives from
helping people.
Behroz Kalhan, born and raised in Bombay, India, currently resides in
Bloomington, Indiana with her husband. She trained in India as a speech
therapist and came to the United States in 1969 to study speech and physical
therapy at the University of Oklahoma, where she also met her husband. After
their marriage, they moved to Bloomington, Indiana and except for a few
years have resided there since.
-
Keywords
-
-
Corporation Names
- Bloomington Hospital
- Indic Society
- University of Oklahoma
-
-
Occupation Names
- physical therapist
- speech therapist
-
-
Place Names
- Bloomington, Indiana
- Bombay, India
-
-
Subjects
- marriage customs
- multilingualism
- parenting philosophy
- Parsi Zoroastrianism
- philanthropy
- racial discrimination
- spirituality
Interviewee
Kalsi, Swadesh July 7, 1998; July 22, 1998
Call Number
98-012
Physical Description
29 pages; 2 tapes, 1 7/8 ips, 94 minutes; index; Asia in US Columbus
"Taste of India" event ticket; Asia in US Columbus "Taste of India" event
program; Asia in US Columbus "Taste of India" event invitation; Asia in US
Columbus "The Art of India" catalog of exhibits; Asia in US Columbus program
schedule; Asia in US "Shaamke Raag Lecture" event brochure; interviewee's
compliment card; Krieg, DeVault, Alexander & Capehart brochure;
interviewee's short biography; interviewee's list of publications; India
Association of Indianapolis
Final Report;
Asia in US Columbus
Final Report
Interviewer
Carlson, Andrew
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Mr. Kalsi discusses his ties to different philanthropic activities,
especially involving Indian cultural events. He talks about his interest in
international law, international business and international politics. He
contrasts life in America with his life in Kenya, and describes the greater
opportunities that are available in American for both him and his children.
Although Mr. Kalsi is an American citizen, he still has strong ties to his
Indian heritage.
Swadesh Kalsi is a member of Krieg, DeVault, Alexander & Capehart Law
Firm and live in Columbus, Indiana. He grew up in Kenya, the son of a
barrister. For his undergraduate degree he went to the London School of
Economics, and stayed on in England to earn a barrister's degree. After
practicing law in Kenya for a short time, he became discouraged and
immigrated to the United States to find other work in 1971. After living in
several different American cities, he finally got a position in the
international law division of Cummins, Incorporated in Columbus, Indiana,
and eventually became of member of Krieg, DeVault, Alexander &
Capehart.
-
Keywords
-
-
Corporation Names
- Asia in the US
- Cummins, Incorporated
- India Association of Indianapolis
- Krieg, DeVault, Alexander & Capehart
-
-
Place Names
- Columbus, Indiana
- Kenya
- London, England
- New York, New York
- Uganda
-
-
Occupation Names
- attorney
-
-
Subjects
- Freedom 50 events
- Hinduism
- immigration
- Indian community associations
- Indian music
- international economy
- international law
- international politics
- legal profession
- naturalization
- parenting philosophy
- philanthropy
- Sikhism
Interviewee
Kulkarni, Kishor M. September 29, 1999
Call Number
99-001
Physical Description
28 pages; 2 cassettes, 1 7/8 ips, 85 minutes; index; interviewee's
business card
Interviewer
Sheehan, Steven
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Dr. Kishor M. Kulkarni was born and raised in Bombay, India and currently
resides in Carmel, India with his wife. Dr. Kulkarni describes his childhood
in India, and his early interest in engineering, following in the footsteps
of his father. He talks about his educational experiences at the India
Institute of Technology, and contrasts the modern facilities there with the
older buildings at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago,
Illinois, which he attended after graduating in India. He speaks of his
wife, who is from the Philippines, and the ways they have tried to introduce
Indian and Filipino culture to their children. Dr. Kulkarni talks about his
political concerns in the United States, contrasting religious fanaticism's
influence on the nation's political policy to India's more liberal views
about religion. He also speaks of the population explosion in India and the
rest of the world. He discusses his leisure time activities including,
reading, travel, playing tennis and philanthropic work.
-
Keywords
-
-
Corporation Names
- Illinois Institute of Technology
- Illinois Institute of Technology Research Institute
- India Institute of Technology
- Maharashta Mandala
- UNICEF
-
-
Occupation Names
- mechanical engineer
-
-
Place Names
- Bombay, India
- Carmel, Indiana
- Chicago, Illinois
- Cleveland, Ohio
- Indianapolis, Indiana
- Philippines
-
-
Subjects
- Christian fundamentalism
- Hindu-Muslim conflict
- Hinduism
- immigration
- Indian community associations
- Indian educational system
- Indian national politics
- international politics
- metal injection molding
- naturalization
- overpopulation
- parenting philosophy
- philanthropy
- poverty
- powder metallurgy
- racial discrimination
- religious fanaticism
- religious fundamentalism
Interviewee
Mehta, Rajah November 10,
1999
Call Number
99-008
Physical Description
25 pages; 1 tape, 1 7/8 ips, 60 minutes; index
Interviewer
Sheehan, Steven
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Dr. Rajah Mehta, an allergist living in Bloomington, Indiana, was born
and raised in India. He discusses his childhood and education, which
took place in several different cities in India. He speaks of the
conflict with his father over his career path, how his father won the
argument, and how he began studying medicine. He speaks of the medical
profession in India, where he worked in a hospital and had a private
practice as a general practitioner. He talks about how his decision to
come to the United States, influenced by his wife, and his decision to
study immunology and specialize in allergy. He speaks of his children,
and the values he is trying to teach them. Although he returns to India
every few years, he identifies himself as more American than Indian and
is comfortable with his American lifestyle.
-
Keywords
-
-
Corporation Names
- Educational Commission of Foreign Medical Graduates
-
-
Occupation Names
- allergist
- general practitioner
-
-
Place Names
- Bloomington, Indiana
- Bombay, India
- Brooklyn, New York
- Karnataka, India
- Surat, India
-
-
Subjects
- immunology
- Indian community associations
- Indian educational system
- Indian medical profession
- medical profession
- multilingualism
- parenting philosophy
Interviewee
Nagarajan, R. Nag October 14,
1999
Call Number
99-005
Physical Description
35 pages; 3 tapes, 1 7/8 ips, 140 minutes; index; three articles
about interviewee and Indian-Americans
Interviewer
Sheehan, Steven
Access Status
Restricted: tapes closed
Scope and Content Note
Mr.
Nagarajan discusses his interest in local and national politics, and
speaks of his involvement with the Democratic Party. He speaks of his
marriage, his children, and the values and traditions he has tried to
pass on to them. Mr. Nagarajan enjoys volunteering, participating in
India Association of Indianapolis events, golfing, and political
activism.
R. Nag Nagarajan, who currently lives in Indianapolis, Indiana, was born
and raised in southern India. He discusses his childhood, his
experiences in the Indian educational system, his observances during the
1947 Partition of India and Pakistan, and the Indian Independence
Movement as a young adult. In 1958 he went to McGill University in
Montreal, Canada, to continue his chemistry education. After more
schooling, Mr. Nagarajan got a position at Eli Lilly and Company and
remained there until his retirement, which was a few years ago.
-
Keywords
-
-
Corporation Names
- Daughters of the American Revolution
- Democratic Party
- Eli Lilly and Company
- Gandhi King Society
- India Association of Indianapolis
- Indian American Golf Association
- Indian Community Center, Indianapolis, Indiana
- Indiana University
- McGill University
-
-
Personal Names
- Day, William
- Gandhi, Mohandes K.
- Kennedy, John Fitzgerald
- Neuss, Norbert
- Shankar, Ravi
-
-
Place Names
- Bangalore, India
- Bombay, India
- Delhi, India
- Indianapolis, Indiana
- Montreal, Canada
- Tamil Nadu, India
-
-
Subjects
- 1941 Atlantic Charter
- 1947 Partition
- ethnic cleansing
-
Gandhi
-
Genesis
- golf
- immigration
- Indian educational system
- Indian Independence Movement
- Indiana University India Studies chair
- local politics
- microbiological research
- naturalization
- parenting philosophy
- philanthropy
- Quit India Movement
- racial discrimination
- racial profiling
- vegetarianism
Interviewee
Pai, Kavitha October 4, 1999
Call Number
99-002
Physical Description
30 pages; 1 tape, 1 7/8 ips, 60 minutes; index
Interviewer
Sheehan, Steven
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Kavitha Pai was born to Indian parents and grew up in Munster, Indiana. She
is currently an undergraduate at Indiana University studying pre-med and
business. Ms. Pai discusses her interest in Indian culture. She talks about
Indian classical dance, her efforts to learn Konkani, her parent's native
language, and Indian culture. She started an Indian student association in
high school for students in her town and surrounding areas. She is active at
Indiana University in both the Indian Student Association and the Asian
American Association. She discusses the challenges as growing up in America
with an Indian family, and she talks about the ways she tries to incorporate
Indian culture in her American lifestyle.
-
Keywords
-
-
Corporation Names
- American Midwest Konkani Association
- Indiana University Asian American Association
- Indiana University Indian Student Association
-
-
Place Names
- Hammond, Indiana
- Magalore, India
- Malaysia
- Munster, Indiana
-
-
Subjects
- Bharatnatiyam dance
- dating customs
- Hinduism
- Indian dance
- Indian stereotypes
- Indian student associations
- Konkani culture
- marriage customs
- racial discrimination
Interviewee
Patel, Vimal November 14, 1999; December 6, 1999
Call Number
99-009
Physical Description
37 pages; 2 tapes, 1 7/8 ips, 110 minutes; index
Interviewer
Sheehan, Steven
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Dr. Vimal Patel, a pathology professor at Indiana University School of
Medicine, was born and raised in Gujarat, India. He speaks of his
childhood and education, and the reasons he decided to come to the
Unites States to further his education. He talks about the initial
difficulties he had when first immigrating, especially learning to
communicate in English and maintaining his vegetarian diet. He speaks of
the importance of the India Association of Indianapolis and Gita Mandala
in his life. He speaks of the ways he has tried to teach his children
about Indian culture and Indian values. Finally, he discusses his
interest in alternative medicine and its place in the medical
profession.
-
Keywords
-
-
Corporation Names
- Gita Mandala
- India Association of Indianapolis
- Indiana University School of Medicine
- National Institutes of Health
-
-
Occupation Names
- pathology professor
-
-
Place Names
- Gujarat, India
- Indianapolis, Indiana
-
-
Subjects
- acculturation
- alternative medicine
- Hinduism
- Indian educational system
- Indian foodways
- Indian Independence Movement
- Indian national politics
- parenting philosophy
- vegetarianism
Interviewee
Popkin, Prema October 23, 1998
Call Number
98-018
Physical Description
26 pages; 2 tapes, 1 7/8 ips, 70 minutes; index
Interviewer
Sheehan, Steven
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Mrs. Popkin discusses the importance of maintaining Indian traditions and
customs in the United States and the activities she participates in,
especially her activities with the Indic Society. She also speaks of her
religious beliefs, her experiences of being an Indian Christian, and
marrying into a Jewish family.
Prema Popkin was born and raised in Uttar Pradesh, Indian and currently
resides with her husband in Bloomington, Indiana. She has a degree in
English literature from India, and also studies in Great Britain, where she
met her future husband. After she returned to India, she taught in her
hometown for a brief period and then at a university in Lucknow, India,
where her future husband was studying through an exchange program. After
they married, Mrs. Popkin moved with her husband to the United States. They
lived for a few years in New York, but eventually her husband got a
professorship at Indiana University, and they have lived in Bloomington ever
since.
-
Keywords
-
-
Corporation Names
- Indiana University
- Indic Society
-
-
Occupation Names
- speech therapist
- teacher
-
-
Place Names
- Almora, India
- Bloomington, Indiana
- England
- Uttar Pradesh, India
-
-
Subjects
- 1947 Partition
- Diwali
- Hindi culture
- Indian Christians
- Indian traditional dress
- joint families
Interviewee
Shah, Nalin October 29,
1999
Call Number
99-007
Physical Description
47 pages; 3 tapes, 1 7/8 ips, 160 minutes; index
Interviewer
Sheehan, Steven
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Dr. Nalin Shah, born in Gujarat, India, currently resides in Greenwood,
Indiana and is an anesthesiologist at St. Francis Hospital in
Indianapolis, Indiana. He discusses his childhood in India and his
decision to study medicine at a young age, stemming from a series of
serious bouts with childhood illnesses. He initially came to the United
States in the 1970s for a residency in Rhode Island. Ultimately, he
moved to Indiana, and decided to remain in America to raise his family.
He discusses his parenting philosophy and the values he has tried to
pass on to his children. He talks about Jainism, his religion, and its
emphasis on karma, and his religious beliefs compare with other
religions. He speaks of his involvement with the India Association of
Indianapolis. Finally he talks about his interests in anesthesiology,
the medical field, and his feeling that the decision to become a doctor
was the most important decision of his life.
-
Keywords
-
-
Corporation Names
- Educational Commission of Foreign Medical Graduates
- India Association of Indianapolis
- St. Francis Hospital, Indianapolis, Indiana
-
-
Occupation Names
- anesthesiologist
-
-
Place Names
- Greenwood, Indiana
- Gujarat, India
- Indianapolis, Indiana
- Rhode Island
-
-
Subjects
- Indian community associations
- Indian educational system
- Indian medical profession
- Jainism
- karma
- marriage customs
- medical school
- nationalism
- parenting philosophy
- personal freedom
- philanthropy
- public speaking
- religious beliefs
- smoking
- spirituality
- vegetarianism
Interviewee
Sikand, Sarabjit "Beenu" October 29, 1998
Call Number
98-020
Physical Description
20 pages; 1 tape, 1 7/8 ips, 45 minutes; index
Interviewer
Nordstrom, Justin
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Mrs. Sikand speaks of the difference between the Indian way of thinking and
American way of thinking, and the cultural changes that have taken place in
India over the last few decades.
Sarabjit "Beenu" Sikand was born in Haryana, India and raised and educated in
Punjab, India. She moved to the United States in the early 1990s to be with
her husband, an American-raised Indian, who had returned to India to marry.
Mrs. Sikand discusses the initial difficulties she had in adjusting to life
in the United States. She stresses the importance of the Indianapolis Indian
community in her life and her wish that her children are raised with an
awareness of their Indian heritage. Mrs. Sikand tries to visit India as
often as possible to keep in touch with friends and family members.
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Keywords
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Corporation Names
- India Association of Indianapolis
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Place Names
- Haryana, India
- Indianapolis, Indiana
- Punjab, India
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Subjects
- 1947 Partition
- acculturation
- Indian community associations
- marriage customs
- naturalization
- parenting philosophy
- Sikhism
Interviewee
Singh, Jai Pal July 31, 1998; August 6, 1998
Call Number
98-013
Physical Description
25 pages; 2 tapes, 1 7/8 ips, 73 minutes; index
Interviewer
Carlson, Andrew
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Jai Pal Singh, born and raised in northern India, has resided in
Indianapolis, Indiana for several years where he is active in the India
Association of Indianapolis and does pharmaceutical research for Eli Lilly
and Company. He discusses his interest in biochemistry which led him to earn
a PhD in the United States, where he ultimately decided to stay and raise
his family. He discusses the importance of maintaining ties to Indian family
members, Indian traditions and Indian values while living in America, and
educating his children about Indian culture.
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Keywords
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Corporation Names
- Eli Lilly and Company
- India Association of Indianapolis
- Punjab University
- University of Wisconsin
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Place Names
- Carmel, Indiana
- Indianapolis, Indiana
- Madison, Wisconsin
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Subjects
- Hinduism
- Indian community associations
- marriage customs
- parenting philosophy
- pharmaceutical research
Interviewee
Singh, Kanwal Prakesh September 8, 1998
Call Number
98-015
Physical Description
57 pages; 3 tapes, 1 7/8 ips, 175 minutes; index; folder containing
samples of interviewee's work, brochures about interviewee's business, and
newspaper articles about interviewee; invitation to dinner from Sikh
Religious Society of Indiana; newsletter from Polis Center with article
about interviewee
Interviewer
Sheehan, Steven
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Mr. Singh discusses his parenting philosophy and the values he has tried to
pass on to his children. He discusses Sikhism, its philosophy, and the ways
he follows Sigh tenants in the United States. He also speaks of his
involvement in the larger Indian community in Indianapolis, mostly in
cultural and artistic events.
Kanwal Prakesh Singh was born in the area that is now Pakistan, and is
currently living in Indianapolis, Indiana. He discusses his experiences as a
Sikh in the 1947 Partition of India and Pakistan, which led to his family's
flight across the border into India, where he witnessed ethnic cleansing of
his people. He speaks of his early interest in architecture, and his degree
from the India Institute of Technology which led to a scholarship to study
architecture and urban design at the University of Michigan. After
graduating, he moved to Indianapolis, Indiana where he became their urban
designer. After a few years, he married an American woman and started his
own business creating pen and ink drawings of historic buildings, often used
to raise money to help fund the preservation and restoration of the
buildings.
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Keywords
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Corporation Names
- India Institute of Technology
- K.P. Singh Designs
- University of Michigan
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Occupation Names
- architect
- artist
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Place Names
- Amritsar, India
- Indianapolis, Indiana
- Lahore, Pakistan
- Pakistan
- Punjab, India
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Subjects
- 1947 Partition
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Adi Granth
- architecture
- citizenship
- ethnic cleansing
- Hindu-Muslim conflict
- historic architecture
- historic preservation
- Indian Independence Movement
- Indianapolis city planning
- naturalization
- parenting philosophy
- racial discrimination
- Sikhism
- urban design
Interviewee
Thiagarajan, Thayammal "Lucy" November 19, 1998
Call Number
98-022
Physical Description
43 pages; 2 tapes, 1 7/8 ips, 95 minutes; index
Interviewer
Sheehan, Steven
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Mrs. Thiagarajan talks about the difficulties of her childhood: her struggle
to attend school, her father's illness, and her resistance to getting
married at a young age. She speaks of her move to America and learning
English, and her experiences in teaching in a Montessori school in
Bloomington. She talks of her two years in Liberia and compares the poverty
in India and Africa. Finally, she speaks of the ways she has tried to
maintain Indian traditions and values in America and the ways she has passed
on Indian culture to her son.
Thayammal "Lucy" Thiagarajan was born and raised in Madras, India. She lived
in a very strict Hindu family and had to struggle with her father to be
allowed to attend school past the age of twelve. She succeeded in getting a
high school diploma and a teaching certificate. For a few years, she and her
husband taught in India. In the late 1960s, she and her family moved to
Bloomington, Indiana so her husband could study for a PhD, and except for a
few exceptional periods, they have remained in Bloomington since.
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Keywords
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Corporation Names
- Indic Society
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Occupation Names
- small business owner
- teacher
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Place Names
- Bloomington, Indiana
- Liberia
- Madras, India
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Subjects
- Hindu festivals
- Hinduism
- Indian educational system
- Indian foodways
- marriage customs
- mental illness
- Montessori schools
- naturalization
- parenting philosophy
- vegetarianism
Interviewee
Vittal, Baily December 4,
1999
Call Number
99-010
Physical Description
35 pages; 2 tapes, 1 7/8 ips, 105 minutes; index
Interviewer
Sheehan, Steven
Access Status
Open
Scope and Content Note
Baily Vittal, an engineer who lives with his wife and son in
Indianapolis, Indiana, was born and raised in Karnataka, India. He
discusses his schooling and his choice to studying engineering. He
speaks of his professional life in India, where he worked in the
aeronautics industry. He compares the Indian communities of Great
Britain with those that form in the United States. He discusses his time
at the University of Cincinnati, and the adjustments he and his family
had to make to life in America. He speaks of his life in Indianapolis,
where he is active in the India Association of Indianapolis and Gita
Mandala. He speaks of the ways he has tried to impart Indian and Hindu
values to his children, and the difficulties of raising them in America
with Indian values.
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Keywords
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Corporation Names
- Allison Engine Company
- Gita Mandala
- India Association of Indianapolis
- University of Cincinnati
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Occupation Names
- aerospace engineer
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Place Names
- Bangalore, India
- Great Britain
- Indianapolis, Indiana
- Karnataka, India
- Varatschpate, India
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Subjects
- aerospace industry
- coffee plantations
- glass ceiling
- Hinduism
- Indian educational system
- Indian student associations
- marriage customs
- naturalization
- parenting philosophy
- racial discrimination
- Rolls Royce
- vegetarianism
- viveka