Rhitu Chatterjee

Rhitu Chatterjee

Rhitu Chatterjee is a science correspondent for The World.

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Beyond Class Part V: Indians in America – Caste Adrift

Nilabhra (right), dressed in the classic saffron robes after getting his head shaved, watches the priest put oil in the fire during the later half of Upanayan. Fire, a Hindu God, is part of most Hindu rituals. (Photo: Rhitu Chatterjee)

Nilabhra (right), dressed in the classic saffron robes after getting his head shaved, watches the priest put oil in the fire during the later half of Upanayan. Fire, a Hindu God, is part of most Hindu rituals. (Photo: Rhitu Chatterjee)

See a slideshow of Indians in the US maintaining their traditions.

Like many Indians here in the US, I come from a Brahmin family. But unlike many Indians I know, my caste never meant much to me or my family back in India.

Brahmin, by the way is the priestly caste. For centuries, Brahmins were religious and spiritual figures. They were also the educators, thinkers and philosophers in Indian society.

But long before I was born, my family abandoned religion and with it, caste.

For two generations now, we haven’t followed any Brahmin rituals, and most marriages have happily crossed caste barriers.

Here in the US, I’ve thought even less about caste than I did back home.

I assumed this was true for most Indians living here, because this ancient social system could hardly have any relevance in a young country like the US.

So when I learned about an organization for Brahmins here, I was intrigued.

The group is called the Brahman Samaj of North America. Its president is Om Sharma, a scientist with Johnson & Johnson.

When I visit him at his home in Skillman New Jersey, he’s starting an hour-long ritual of worshipping a range of Hindu gods. Their images fill one of the walls in a room on the second floor. The room smells of incense and various offerings placed before the gods. Sharma sits on the floor, chanting prayers and making offerings. Every now and then, he rings a tiny bell as he chants.

This is a ritual that scriptures require Brahmins to perform every day.


Sharma grew up in a religious Brahmin family in the western Indian state of Rajasthan. But as he grew up, he let that lapse until about two decades ago when he moved to the United States with his wife and son.

“I noticed a lot of us Brahmans don’t carry our Hindu values,” he says. “We do not know a lot about our scriptures. So that’s why I became interested, and for the last several years, I’ve been doing this religiously, in the sense I do every day.”

Religiously in all senses. Sharma also studies Hindu scriptures.

He says it helps him connect to his roots and fulfill his duties as a Brahmin, as a teacher of Hindu values.

“This is a Brahman’s job. It is his or her responsibility to study our scriptures and spread that message.”

Sharma thinks it is especially important for him to teach the next generation of Indian-Americans about scriptures, and Hindu values.

“When our children come and ask us why we do this or what is the difference between a Brahman, or Hindu versus Christian, unless we have that knowledge, we cannot give them anything,” he explains. “So personally I feel that we should be able to give our children that treasure which we have got by being born in a different land, different culture, different philosophy.”

Now, I understand an immigrant’s need to connect to his or her roots.

Here in the US I cling to my culture too. I wear Indian clothes as often as I can. I listen to Indian music more frequently than I did back in India. I also celebrate festivals at home whenever possible, and seek out celebrations by expatriates.

But when it comes to the caste system, I still view it as discriminatory and outdated.

Surely nostalgia doesn’t justify perpetuating it?

I ask Sharma if having an organization for Brahmins isn’t excluding Indians of other castes. After all, all Hindus regardless of their caste share a cultural and religious background.

“Brahman Samaj of North America is not a caste-based organization,” he answers. “So for example, we have a number of members if we go by last name, or caste system, they are Agarwal, Saxena or other castes.”

That means if you belong to any other non-Brahmin caste you can join the group.

Sharma tells me, that’s progress. He says he’s had to push through a more liberal policy over the objections by conservative members, who wanted to keep it strictly Brahmin.

I couldn’t help thinking that this is a quintessentially expatriate group.

Its members had enjoyed a certain status back in India. Here in the US their caste didn’t matter anymore.

Still, most members belong to an older generation, and they’ve had trouble attracting new recruits.

I decided to talk to some younger Brahmins who aren’t part of Sharma’s organization.

Nilanjan Sarangi moved to the US with his wife and son about four years ago.

I met up with him at a Hindu temple, in Baldwin, New York.

He was there with family and friends to celebrate his thirteen year-old son’s Upanayan, or Sacred Thread Ceremony.

It’s a coming-of-age ceremony held only for Brahmin and other upper caste boys.

Now, I’d never attended one of these ceremonies before. My family didn’t bother to hold them for my brother or cousins. And I’d secretly imagined that the ceremony brainwashed impressionable young boys into thinking within the narrow walls of their caste.

But I felt comforted by the smells and sounds inside the temple.

They felt familiar, just like festivals and weddings back home.

And as the priests guided the family through the ceremony, I learned that the message was about how to conduct oneself well in the world, by valuing respect, humility and knowledge. Knowledge is a key part of the Brahmin identity.

The boy’s father Nilanjan Sarangi, sat beside his son, chanting mantras and performing the same rituals that his father had once performed with him.

To Sarangi, this was about carrying on a centuries-old tradition, not about establishing a social status for himself in his adopted country.

He tells me he would never consider joining a Brahmin organization.

“I don’t want to wear my Brahmin identity on my lapel. It is a very personal and very individual thing to me.”

But belonging to a caste charged with specific roles in society does have meaning for him.

“If you go back to the Hindu religion, the Brahmins were not only religious people, they were also the scientists,” he says. “To know that I’m connected to that group of people, gives a lot of pride.”

But what about his son, the thirteen year-old Nilabhra Sarangi who is growing up in suburban America?

“I try to understand what my Dad says and by what he says, and what we are, which is Brahmon (Brahmin) is one of the categories of people who’re very intelligent” he says. “And most of them are teachers, doctors, today now. So I really feel proud.”

I wondered if his pride will make this teenager, far from India more caste-conscious than he would otherwise be. And what about his friends, here at the ceremony?

I asked the mother of one of them. Her name is Gauri Ghosh. Her family belongs to a different caste. And her son, Aritra and Nilanjan Sarangi are best friends. She says, caste means little to these kids.

“For us we know that oh, your last name is this, so you’re a Brahmin or not. But for them, it doesn’t really matter, because they don’t even know.”

The question is whether they’ll ever know as they grow up here in a culture where caste is irrelevant.

I’ve spoken with several other Brahmins in the US And caste is an important part of their identity. For most it has even played a role in their career choices.

This has made me reflect on my own upbringing. Was it, after all, a little Brahmin-like?

Sure my father disapproved of the caste system, but he also disapproved of his kids going into careers in business. Instead he guided my brother and me towards classic Brahmin fields, education, medicine, science.

And so, here I am, working as a journalist in the U.S, making my parents proud for picking a career that just happens to be Brahmin-like.

Now, I’ll never join a caste-based organization or even put my kids through any ceremony.

But, I wonder if I’ll teach them values that overlap with Brahmin values. And if so, would that be bad?

So long as it doesn’t make my children look down on others. And so long as it doesn’t hinder others’ chances from moving up the social ladder.


Anand Giridharadas is a columnist for the New York Times and the author of India Calling: An Intimate Portrait of a Nation’s Remaking. He was born in Cleveland to Indian immigrant parents. His parents came from different castes, and raised him to ignore the proscriptions of the caste system. Here, he talks with The World’s Marco Werman about how caste came into being and how India is gradually shaking free of it.



Beyond Class: Societies in Flux


Part I: A Life’s Path Determined at Age Eleven
Part II: Tahrir Square: Revolution – the Struggle and Sacrifice for Middle Class
Part III: Class in the Shadow of Ukraine’s Orange Revolution
Part IV: India: Searching for Your Caste Online
Part V: Indians in America: Caste Adrift
Part VI: Class in Rural China: What Has Changed Since Mao Zedong Visited
Part VII: Britain’s Long Love Affair with Class, and Its Brief Fling with Classlessness
Full Series: Beyond Class

Discussion

18 comments for “Beyond Class Part V: Indians in America – Caste Adrift”

  • Jyotiba

    At
    the beginning of the program, Rhitu Chatterjee claimed that she and her family
    have renounced their caste as well as religion. 
    Among Indians, once own caste is so deeply ingrained as if it is the 24th
    chromosome. Indians keep on making pathetic efforts to tell the world that they
    belong to the Brahmin (upper) caste. Rhitu Chatterjee is no different. She too seized
    the very opportunity she got to talk about her Brahmin heritage by repeating at
    least five times that she was a Brahmin. That goes to show how hard it is to
    cast away the caste.

    • Sem_K

      There’s nothing wrong with saying you belong to the Brahmin caste as long as you act as a Brahmin i.e. you are learned in the scriptures and you conduct yourself accordingly.  What is wrong is that in the age or ‘Kali Yuga’ any and everyone is claiming Brahminisn as a birthright even when they eat meat, indulge in alcohol and live arrogant materialistic lives.

  • Shankar Chatterjee

    Rhitu is considered as one of the brahmins because of the title ‘chatterjee’ ,  in the state of West Bengal, one cannot change title as one likes, it gets fixed at the time of Madhyamik /School Final Exam, but I have seen it can be done in other states…[It is quite helpful to change Brahminic title in India, to get job in SC/ST quota].
     As the title says, her father must be another chatterjee, but neither her father nor his uncle had ‘ the essential rebirth (dijwa!) thru UPANAYAN, as far as I know..
    sir

  • pshelat

    Sir,
    Upnayan sanskar is a ritual for initiating a boy in to the spiritual life. As per vedas, all hindus (except the shudras) have the right for upnayan. As per shloka # 11, of PURUSH SHUKTA the entire sociey is considered as a man. Brahmans are the head and mouth, Kshatriyas are the arms of the society, Vaishyas are the belly and the Shudras are the feet of the society. All parts of the body are equally important to the society. If any part of the body is not functioning well, the man will be disabled. Similarly, the society will also become disabled, if all four do not function well and in unison. Thus all are equal in the eyes of the God.
    It is true that Brahmans have always taken a leaders role in Indian society. It is good to take pride in your own class. Lord Krishna says in Shreemad Bhagvad Geeta – chapter 4, shloka 13, that He has created the four classes of people according to their qualities and different functions that they are supposed to perform.
    As a Brahman, I think I am a better person. If somebody does not like his own caste, it is upto that person. 
    Degrading and blaming Brahmans for all misfortunes and backwordness of India has become a cheap way to get popularity in India.  Let us not fall into that fashion. I am proud to be a Hindu and to be a Brahman.
    Pravin Shelat.
    pravin_shelat@yahoo.com

    • Shahu

       Which mouth did brahmans come from Mr Shelat? the Anterior or posterior? Going by your comments looks like it’s the latter.

      • pshelat

        Dear Shahu;
        Brahmsns do not come from the mouth, as such there is no question of Anterior or posterior. I have refered to PURUSHSUKTA, (it is a very well known sukta from Vedas) which imagines the entire society as one person. Brahmans are consiedred the head and mouth of the society. Similarly other VARNAS  are considered as arms, bellies and the feet of the society. All VARNAS are equally important to the society. Therefore I believe that PURUSHSUKTA is a most important unifying force for the entire Hindu society. I respect everyone of the Hindu society.
        I am a Brahman and I have my self respect in remeining a Brahman. Lord Krishna has also preached to stay with your own DHARMA to achieve salvation. I think this makes it clear. GOD bless all hindus.
        Pravin Shelat.

        • Sem_K

          You think you are a better person?  You ought to use your thoughts more wisely than to pronounce superiority.  Do you know the meaning of discrimination?

          The Bhagwad Gita states that caste is NOT a birthright!  It galls me when people have their sons go through the sacred thread ceremony or janeo and that child grows up to be a meat eater, drinker with no knowledge of the scriptures.  A Brahmin is one who is educated and knowledgable of the scriptures and leads a holy life and being a Brahmin is not a birthright!

        • Sem_K

          You THINK you are better?  You ought to use your thoughts more wisely because it is apparent you are not very bright when it comes to what discrimination is.
           
          The Bhagwad Gita states that caste is NOT a birthright!  It galls me when people have their sons go through the sacred thread ceremony or janeo and that child grows up to be a meat eater, drinker with no knowledge of the scriptures.  A Brahmin is one who is educated and knowledgable of the scriptures and leads a holy life and is not a birthright!

          • pshelat

            Sir;
            Thanks for your comments. I do not claim to be a great scholar.
            If you consider yourself better or even the best; I do not have any objection. As I have mentioned; accordingly “PURUSHSUKTA” all varnas fo Hindu society are equally important. I respect every Hindu including yourself.
            I will be highly thankful if you quote the verse supporting your statement that “The Bhagwad Gita states that caste is NOT a birthright!” Thanks again.
            Pravin Shelat

          • stormchaser1983

             Dear Pravin,
            It is alright to be proud of yourself. But you state that shudras are not eligible to perform the upnaya ceremony. This is not good…on what basis can you deny a human being their rights? If he wants to become a brahmin, you cannot stop him …brahmin philosophy is one of the mind and does not involve segregaation. Caste system cannot be rigid, it should be fluid and has to be rethought with changing civilizations and times, with roots intact. However, god bless you for your devotion. We hindus must come together and be one family and not keep diving ourselves….jai hind

    • stormchaser1983

       Hinduism has been spoiled over the centuries. Let us go back to the
      vedas and upinishads and their true intent. We are all people, all are
      equal, and our sole goal is to try and figure out who we are and why we
      are here on this earth. In that sense, hinduism is incredibly tolerant
      religion; all paths are the same, as long as they all lead to god. All
      people are equal; casteism is bad, everyone should get  a fair shot at
      education and upward mobility in every sense. While hindu philosophy is
      one of the most liberal and unique, intelligent philosophies, some practicing hindus
      dont reflect this….case in point,pravin, is your blatant disregard to the right of another person on the basis of an outdated mode of thinking. Manu scripture served its purpose , we have to move on now, and be bold and courageous enough to rethink the world with our roots intact. If you stick to your clearly immoral philosophies, you will be against everything hinduism preaches and everything krishna advocates!
      -A proud brahmin who does not think he is better than you, though you seem deluded.

  • radster360

    Rithu, Thanks! I do appreciate your commentary. I am a Brahmin and I am proud to be one. I have married into different cast, and my son went through The Sacred Thread ceremony. Sure, being in US, we have not followed all the rituals and beliefs and we try to continue to maintain certain values and I do wish it continues to go down my generations. I will have to disagree with Mr. Giridharadas on his suggestion and stereo typing Brahmins and the caste. The picture he is painting is of some rural part of India. 

  • Jyotibai

     

    There is
    nothing to be proud about one’s so called upper caste. One contributes nothing
    to be born in a particular caste. It is a chance occurrence. No human being is born
    superior.  In fact, there is nothing to be proud of a system, which is
    blatantly discriminatory. 

    Your very
    thought that you are a better person because you are a Brahmin, negates the
    statement that you are a better person.

    The caste
    system is a very backward culture. Indians not only embrace but also tout their
    upper caste while living in a progressive country, which has fought two civil
    wars against discrimination.  It is a
    disgrace!

  • PRI_Listener

    This is an excellent and balanced piece. Rhitu Chatterjee touches on
    the very complex issue of caste, making it clear that her family brought
    her up to question the system—which she did. Stating that she’s Bhramin doesn’t
    take away from that fact. Good job!

    This is an excellent and balanced piece. Rhitu Chatterjee touches on
    the very complex issue of caste, making it clear that her family brought
    her up to abandon her caste—which she did. Stating that she’s Bhramin doesn’t
    take away from the fact that she questions the system. Good job!

    • mathue sanlim

       really, are you  in space?

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/BNVAWEJDSTYCCYD2FX3BNDIZAQ vasu

    The Caste System is being denigrated by all Hindus even though its origins are in The Vedas or “Shrutis” as well as in all our “Smritis”. Indeed it is poorly understood by one & all. If we have faith in our scriptures & history of mankind it should be handled with great respect for it reflects our ancient heritage & civilization. Misuse & abuse of a social order is the Rule rather than an exception. Abuses that occured in The Caste System have been more or less eliminated & most of the atrocities & wrongs have been corrected. But the heritage,traditions & practices that are good in it must be followed & propagated for our posterity. Each Caste has its own unique system of traditions which are indeed our proud heritage that we want its propagation for generations to come. There is no reason why we should discard the good along with the bad. Cleansing & catharsis of all that is bad is mandatory in all civilizations & those who insist on following the bad that is generated in any religious faith are indeed pigs who relish in their own filth. The Caste System is a gift of God & the god in it must be adhered to & the filth in it must be discarded. Udayshanker Kasinadhuni

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/BNVAWEJDSTYCCYD2FX3BNDIZAQ vasu

    The Caste System is being denigrated by all Hindus even though its origins are in The Vedas or “Shrutis” as well as in all our “Smritis”. Indeed it is poorly understood by one & all. If we have faith in our scriptures & history of mankind it should be handled with great respect for it reflects our ancient heritage & civilization. Misuse & abuse of a social order is the Rule rather than an exception. Abuses that occured in The Caste System have been more or less eliminated & most of the atrocities & wrongs have been corrected. But the heritage,traditions & practices that are good in it must be followed & propagated for our posterity. Each Caste has its own unique system of traditions which are indeed our proud heritage that we want its propagation for generations to come. There is no reason why we should discard the good along with the bad. Cleansing & catharsis of all that is bad is mandatory in all civilizations & those who insist on following the bad that is generated in any religious faith are indeed pigs who relish in their own filth. The Caste System is a gift of God & the god in it must be adhered to & the filth in it must be discarded. Udayshanker Kasinadhuni

  • mathue sanlim

    typical indians—-ergh