Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Indian identity in American schools

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Indian identity in American schools

    An article I found interesting . If you can ignore the slight bias of the author , the facts he has given speak for themselves .

    Link


    Controversy
    Indian identity in American schools
    By C. Alex Alexander

    Although I have been in the US since 1962, I seem to have remained unaware of how American schools are imprinting concepts of Indian identity and Hinduism on the minds of American youth including children born to Indian parents. It was probably because I never had children of my own. My recent inquiries of Indian parents about this issue revealed that not many Indian parents are fully cognizant of the extent of misinformation that is being parlayed to young Americans, not just about India but about most non-European civilizations.

    After availing of an early retirement from our professional lives, my wife and I spent a year studying Art History after which we became volunteer docents at a local art museum. In our roles as docents we came in contact with elementary and high school students who visited the museum to augment their knowledge of world history and ancient civilizations. After a year’s experience of interacting with school kids I have become convinced that something needs to be done, especially with regard to the way non-Judeo Christian communities are being portrayed in the text books that our students use and the manner in which their teachers are trained to deal with Asian, African, Latino and Native American traditions.

    India, in my opinion receives the worst treatment of all at the hands of our teachers of world history. China and Japan fare a lot better. My African-American colleagues with whom I often talk about India’s image in the US greet me with their “welcome to the club” slogan. They remind me that Indians “have to fight the battles like they themselves had to struggle with in order to make the white Americans concede at least partly that Africa is more than a mere continent that sent them their slaves”. Those who have resided in the US since the early 1960s may recall the debates that when the US Nobel Laureate William Shockley and his friend, Professor Arthur Jensen began to popularise their (now-discredited) theories of racial inferiority of African-Americans. It took nearly four decades of systematic challenges by the black community to correct the distorted stereotyping of blacks, some of which continue even today in a subtle fashion.

    Likewise, during the last three or four decades, the negative images of India and Hinduism in particular have been promoted by our movies and talk show pundits (Indiana Jones, Oprah Winfrey, 60 Minutes et al). These have contributed to the inability of many of our school teachers to present a balanced portrayal of the Hindu, Jain, Buddhist and Sikh traditions to their students. Hinduism seems to fare the worst at the hands of our school systems. The average American teacher’s knowledge of Hinduism, which is the core component of India’s cultural heritage, is often stilted by the sensational portrayals of that faith by our mass media. Though a few inquiring Indian parents seem to be aware of these problems, I am unaware of organised efforts in most states of our land (except in Virginia and California) undertaken by the Indian community to address this issue. I also realise that the extent of such prejudiced portrayals of India may vary from state to state, the worst being in our Bible belt in the South.

    This issue was recently highlighted at the 5th International Conference of the World Association of Vedic Studies (WAVES) held on July 9-11, 2004 at the Shady Grove Campus of the University of Maryland by a paper presented by Yvette C. Rosser of the University of Texas at Austin and titled “Stereotypes in Schooling: Negative Pressures in the American Educational System on Hindu Identity

    Formation”. That study found that “stereotypes about India and Hinduism when taught as facts in American classrooms may negatively impact students of South Asian origin who are struggling to work out their identities in a multicultural, and predominantly Anglo-Christian environment”. Rosser’s work is based on surveys of both teachers who teach world history in our classrooms and Indian students who are being taught by these teachers.

    The study found that the teachers devoted only seven per cent of their preparation time to Asia of which most of it was consumed by Japan and China. Latin America received six per cent, Middle East four per cent and Africa three per cent. Eighty per cent of their learning time was devoted to European history! The amount of time spent in class instruction of these cultures reflected a similar distribution of effort. The students who were interviewed by Rosser were all of Indian descent. They were often befuddled by the contradictions that resulted from what they learnt about Indian culture and Hinduism through their teachers vs. what they derived from interacting with their Indian parents and Indian friends of non-Hindu faiths.

    This is a serious issue with implications for the formation of both identity and character of not only the Indian youth but also of their non-Indian counterparts with whom they will have to interact socially and live with for the rest of their lives. Aren’t we after all “one nation indivisible with liberty and justice for all”? Our great seal proclaims “e Pluribus Unum”, “out of many, one”! Neither American’s cultural identity nor his/her roots should be demeaned owing to the ignorance of our teachers, especially when we the taxpayers are paying their salaries!

    My own interactions with my adult American friends lead me to conclude that most of them appear to have got their entire education about India and Hinduism either from the television and newspapers, or magazines like the National Geographic and Readers Digest or through visits to museums. This is particularly so with regard to their knowledge of Hinduism.

    Most of them know about India’s three Cs: Caste, Curry and Cows and the three Ps: Polytheism, Poverty and Population! They know little or nothing about the distinctions between polytheism and pantheism. The more “sophisticated” ones know a little about Gandhi, mostly through Richard Attenborough’s movie. They are also the ones who are more likely to ask you about “sati”, “bride-burning” and “the Kashmir” problem. With more than a million practicing Hindus now in the US and with nearly 800 Hindu temples and ashrams here, there is no reason why Hindu temples in each state (a la the African-American churches) cannot take leadership roles in systematically examining the high school textbooks that the children of their worshippers use in schools. Should they find factually incorrect or demeaning characterisations of India and its Hindu, Jain, Buddhist or Sikh religious traditions in these textbooks, they should bring them to the attention of their local school boards with requests to rectify them.

    Not doing so will surely affect the identity and character formation of both Indian and non-Indian youth who are the future citizens of this nation. In order to do all that, there needs to be a united voice of Indians of non-Abrahamic traditions in every community. I believe that the temples of the Hindu, Jain, Sikh and Buddhist faiths are uniquely suited to perform such functions. It is indeed both sad and surprising that Hindu, Jain, Sikh and Buddhist temples in the US have not yet formed at least a web-linked and non-dues paying national council or association or consortium to discuss and resolve problems that affect the identity of future generation of Indians here who want to remain as adherents of their faiths into which they were born. The monotheistic faiths (Judeo-Christian & Islamic) in the US have their own separate linkages that inform each other of important issues facing their respective faith communities. They do so with lightning speed whenever they suspect that their images or reputations are being distorted. I believe that the Hindu temples (due to their large numbers) are uniquely suited to take a lead in the development of such a consortium, council or association to tackle issues concerning representations of their religious traditions in our school systems.

    Not too long ago, there were many articles in the US and Indian media about the denigration of Ganesha, Ramakrishna Paramahans, Shivaji etc by the sophomoric writings of euro-centric American professors associated with US schools of divinity. Complaints about such writings were lodged by both Indian scholars in India as well as scholars from among the NRI communities here in the US and UK. But the latter (critics) were often unfairly caricatured by a few Judeo-Christian as well as Indian “intellectuals” characterising the critics as Hindu fundamentalists or ignoramuses who are unfamiliar with our Bill of Rights, which guarantees freedom of expression.

    It was even more baffling for me to learn that some of these American (Judeo-Christian) professors who routinely defame Hinduism and its deities and heroes through their writings are frequently invited by Hindu groups and even given honoraria and garlanded and feted for their “contributions”. Most Hindu hosts seem to be unaware of the fact that their “distinguished lecturers” who often identify themselves primarily as professors of “Eastern religions” at reputable universities are in actuality serving as principal faculty of their respective schools of divinity. These schools of divinity have ulterior motives in offering degrading interpretations of non-Abrahamic faiths.

    They have no interest what so ever in teaching any student the virtues of India or its predominant Hindu civilization, which has contributed, to the evolution of Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism. Hinduism’s core value of pluralism and its tolerance of all faiths are seldom highlighted, nor discussed as more conducive to the preservation of world peace than our monotheistic Abrahamic faiths can ever hope to be if the latter remain wedded to its exclusivist religious philosophy steeped in their respective beliefs of infallibility.

    You should not be surprised if you had heard from your children that they had not heard anything good about India or its many religious traditions from any of their teachers. I wonder how many of them were told by their teachers that India is the largest democracy in the world with a secular form of government, that it is a country that has never had a military coup, never invaded another country, allowed Christianity to thrive even before it spread to Europe, gave haven to Jews, Christians and Zoroastrians when they fled from the onslaughts of Islam, and gave birth to Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism. They also may not have heard from their teachers that India is the seventh most industrialised country in the world, and that it contributed a great deal to ancient mathematics, astronomy, bronze casting, surgery, and vaccination, Yoga, Ayurveda etc.

    But, your children may have been asked inane questions by their classmates based on a sensational TV or magazine account of some weird practice going on somewhere in India as it happens everywhere, even in our own, viz., the United States of America.

    For example, Rosser reported in her study that one Indian student said that he was asked in a class discussion why Indians always worshipped rats, fed them and allowed them to multiply when it is well-known that they can harbour vectors capable of spreading bubonic plague.

    This occurred after a TV show aired an item concerning veneration of rats in a temple in Rajasthan. I too recall someone asking me whether that practice was typical of Hinduism. My response was that it was no more typical of Hinduism than it is of Christianity if we were to infer that all Christians handled rattlesnakes in their Sunday worship as some congregations in West Virginia or the Boot Heel of Missouri still do in order to test and affirm their own “sinless” lives since their last worship in that church!

    The Judeo-Christian, African-American and Latino parents (Latinos less vigorously than the former two groups) exercise constant vigilance to ensure that the facts about their respective cultures are not degraded or slandered by any teacher. If they do, their representatives on the school boards promptly take them to task. Now, it is the turn of Asian-Indian parent’s here, particularly Hindu, Sikh, Jain and Buddhist parents to find out from their children what they are learning about India and its many religions and their traditions. And, if they find that their schools are not offering a balanced account of India’s history, its achievements and its religious traditions, I do believe that the parents have an obligation to seek remedial action from the administrators of their schools.

    At least for posterity’s sake, they must act. If they do not, they are in my humble opinion, short-changing their own commitment to Sanatana Dharma. They are also missing a golden opportunity to highlight the ancient wisdom of the Hindu traditions as codified in Sanatana Dharma, which celebrates religious pluralism and diversity. I know of no other faith other than Hinduism or an ancient land other than the pre-Mughal and the pre-Colonial Indian subcontinent which permitted the thriving of multiple faiths and demonstrated its hospitality to all those who came to its shores seeking refuge from religious persecution or trading opportunities.

    Even in recent times, India has provided refuge to Tibetans fleeing from persecution in their own homeland. More than two thousand years before our Founding Fathers in this Nation envisaged a country which shall become that “shining city on the Hill” where religious pluralism and diversity shall thrive so that we can remain an example for the rest of the world, the Indian subcontinent was practicing it! India continues to remain as that “shining” land mass of religious tolerance even despite the relentless provocations of the arrogant factions of the monotheistic faiths.

    It is not a well-appreciated fact here in this country that India’s Sanatana Dharma had always espoused such a pluralistic tradition as befitting the peoples who inhabited that subcontinent. Middle East too was a haven for pluralism with its pre-Christian Semitic and African cultures as well as the very early Christian churches of the first four centuries of the Common Era. They were all destroyed consequent to the bastardization of the ancient eastern Judeo-Christian faiths when these essentially “eastern Jewish and Orthodox Eastern Christian faiths” were hijacked nearly 1700 years ago by the Western imperialist powers to convert them into exclusivist creeds and make them become tools in their quests for world domination. Unfortunately, the Islamic rulers embraced the same fervor for co-opting religion in the service of expanding political power. The follies of all such perversions, past and present are now becoming more obvious in recent years with the resurgence of militancy among the ignorant minorities of the Abrahamic faiths who are either willing to maim and kill for proving their exclusivist superiority and nearness to God or belittle and ridicule those who perceive God differently. In that context, the parents of our Indian-American children have a stellar opportunity to show their neighbours of Abrahamic faiths the redeeming values and traditions of Sanatana Dharma and the latter’s intrinsic nearness to the true tenet of the American creed, EPLURIBUS UNUM!

    (Dr. Alexander is a US citizen and has retired from the medical profession. He has held several executive medical positions in the US Department of Affairs, US Department of Defense, US Army Medical Corps, Reserve Components and has held professorial appointments at several medical schools during his 40 years of medical career in the United States.)


    I'd request the posters from the US to tell me what their own education told them about Hinduism .

  • #2
    Re: Indian identity in American schools

    Originally posted by aneeshm
    I'd request the posters from the US to tell me what their own education told them about Hinduism .
    Next to nothing. We probably discussed it for about 15 minutes in my 10th grade World History class.

    EDIT: India was mentioned 3 times in our lessons. I bet that it's pretty standard coverage for a rural, 99% white American high school:

    1. The Indus cultures were discussed during the section of class devoted to early civilizations (along with the Mesopotamians, Egyptians, and Chinese). Mesopotamia and Egypt got by far the most attention in this section.

    1a. India was briefy mentioned during our Alexander the Great discussions

    2. India was discussed during the section on Imperialism, mostly focusing on the struggle between Britain and France for control of the subcontinent, with a little extra devoted to India's role in the British Empire

    3. India's independence movement and Ghandi were discussed during the WW2 - early Cold War section.
    Last edited by Wycoff; February 11, 2006, 12:05.
    I'm about to get aroused from watching the pokemon and that's awesome. - Pekka

    Comment


    • #3
      Hinduism comes early, right after Mysticism, which makes it a great religion

      Comment


      • #4
        Since Europe wasn't asked, Europe won't answer

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Indian identity in American schools

          Originally posted by aneeshm

          I'd request the posters from the US to tell me what their own education told them about Hinduism .
          Well, my teachers certainly never told me that any tribes were Hindu. No wonder why they ended up in reservations

          Comment


          • #6
            Alright, I really did get halfway through the article, but then I looked at how much was left and couldn't be bothered.

            Yeah, our education system is Euro-centric, that's nothing new. The author's impressions of India getting the "worst" treatment is just plain wrong IMHO, because in many public school systems there's nothing at all about Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Korea, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, etc. etc. at least my high school history book had a chapter devoted to India.

            I also don't quite realize why it surprises the author that the focus is on European history in the classroom. Frankly, people teach what they know/what's relevent in American society, and fully concede that American culture has more European roots than Asian/African/South American/etc. (although this is changing moreso every day). Besides, teachers teach what they know, and quite frankly not many knowanything but European history, and with the dearth of teachers in the states anyway, it's not something that's going to be solved any time soon. It all leads to a problem with the American education system in general.
            Who wants DVDs? Good prices! I swear!

            Comment


            • #7
              The author's grouse is that only the negatives of India and Hinduism are presented , and the positives ignored ( and not that European history and American history is west-centric ) .

              Comment


              • #8
                During junior high I had classes in geography and ancient history that dealt only slightly with India. Then again the instruction on European history and geography was equally lacking. I recall unauthorized but unstopped baord game playing in class during one of those years. A few years later that particular teacher died in the middle of class and no one noticed until much later that day.

                In high school we did only US History. Stuff I did learn I learned from Indian students in other classes.

                College was quite different, and India is given as much, if not more weight than other cultures.
                Visit First Cultural Industries
                There are reasons why I believe mankind should live in cities and let nature reclaim all the villages with the exception of a few we keep on display as horrific reminders of rural life.-Starchild
                Meat eating and the dominance and force projected over animals that is acompanies it is a gateway or parallel to other prejudiced beliefs such as classism, misogyny, and even racism. -General Ludd

                Comment


                • #9
                  If you're a man of freedom and political equality, all you need to know about Hinduism is the caste system

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    The Judeo-Christian, African-American and Latino parents
                    Spot the problem with the above groups.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      I would be very interested to know what the European and American history segments in India look like.

                      India was taught when it had relevance to OUR history, or rather when western civilization interacted with Indian civilization or hinduism. As far as High School is concerned that is really very appropriate. Since most people will just become number crunching automatrons throught their liberal arts devoid college experiance, and High School is supposed to give your the basic foundation of education or rather an education relevant to you, there is no need for much exposure to Hindusim or India in general.

                      I don't remember ever being taught anything negative about Hinduism/India. Usually the only thing a high school student would come away with was that the British Empire oppressed you and Ghandi won your independance which I would consider positive.

                      And of course every US high school student gets a soft porn fix of the Karma Sutra when they discover it, I would not call that negative.
                      "The DPRK is still in a state of war with the U.S. It's called a black out." - Che explaining why orbital nightime pictures of NK show few lights. Seriously.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        I thougth they have their own schools out on the reservations
                        CSPA

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Actually surprisingly little about Hinduism itself, but then again I was never the type to pay huge amounts of attention to religion Now this is the UK where this country and India have been very closely linked for centuries and one has vastly influenced the other. I can speak from the UK perspective and the benefits have only been positive...and there is no economic argument either as the Indian population in this country tends to be well-educated, productive and hard-working. And I have several friends who are of Indian descent, so needless to say, as for any culture in the UK, I have nothing negative to say.
                          Speaking of Erith:

                          "It's not twinned with anywhere, but it does have a suicide pact with Dagenham" - Linda Smith

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Likewise, during the last three or four decades, the negative images of India and Hinduism in particular have been promoted by our movies and talk show pundits (Indiana Jones, Oprah Winfrey, 60 Minutes et al).
                            HAHAHAHAHAHAH

                            I know I sit in front of my TV every afternoon and laugh with Oprah at those crazy Hindu bastards while eating a big juicy steak.

                            And you can't really blame Dr. Jones for what happend. For one his name isn Indiana. Second, those dudes were trying to burn him and his hot b*tch in a pit of lava, you have to think anyone would come away a little bitter after that. And third, no matter how much of an anti-Indianite he might be, he killed like a BAJILLION Nazis, at least a Panzergrenader Divisons worth, so I think that balances out and latent racism against Indians that he might harbor.

                            And lets not forget, if it were not for the Temple of Doom we would have to assume Ghandi was the typical Indian from some place over thata way somewhere. Thanks to Dr. Jones millions of Americans learned where India was from that tacky (but cool) red line of the map thingy. If you average out cultist human sacrificing bad guys with Ghandi you get a pretty normal dude I would like to have a beer with.

                            Is 60 minutes still on, well, thats cute.
                            "The DPRK is still in a state of war with the U.S. It's called a black out." - Che explaining why orbital nightime pictures of NK show few lights. Seriously.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Provost Harrison
                              Actually surprisingly little about Hinduism itself, but then again I was never the type to pay huge amounts of attention to religion Now this is the UK where this country and India have been very closely linked for centuries and one has vastly influenced the other. I can speak from the UK perspective and the benefits have only been positive...and there is no economic argument either as the Indian population in this country tends to be well-educated, productive and hard-working. And I have several friends who are of Indian descent, so needless to say, as for any culture in the UK, I have nothing negative to say.
                              And nine times out of ten, when you answer the phone its an Indian.
                              One day Canada will rule the world, and then we'll all be sorry.

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X