Someone I know recently went to Vietnam; on a sight-seeing visit to the Da Nang bridge he came across a large group of Indian tourists, waving the Indian flag and yelling (for no apparent reason) "Bharat Mata ki Jai", with the bemused local Vietnamese looking on unapprovingly- an unnecessary display of aggressive nationalism in a foreign country which can teach us a thing or two about what constitutes genuine nationalism. And herein lies one of the reasons why the huge Indian diaspora, especially in the Anglophone world of WENA (Western Europe and North America), is suddenly facing a lot of hostility, if not downright anti-immigration racism and shouts of GO BACK!
In Ireland, France, the UK, USA, Canada, Australia, even the usually gentle New Zealand, Indians (citizens, residents, visitors) are being subjected to abuse, sloganeering, slurs and even violence including being murdered without any ostensible reason. Trump, of course, has gone even further and is deporting them back here in their hundreds, usually in chains and handcuffs, something the MEA cannot see because of its worsening cataract. What explains this sudden change in attitude to a community hitherto well regarded, successful, low-key, unintrusive and law abiding? Why are Indians now acquiring an almost pariah status in their adopted countries?
Writers like Shashi Tharoor and Vir Sanghvi have addressed the issue in their pieces, ascribing this hostility to envy of the diaspora's economic success, the perception that they are taking away jobs from natives, their low visibility and reluctance to integrate into society there, their failure to evolve into a political force, their inability to influence policy or to comment on crucial issues concerning India.. All these reasons are valid, but do not explain why this antagonism has suddenly erupted over the last few years, after decades of peaceful co-existence with, and acceptance by, the WENA citizens and governments. The nearest someone has come to placing his finger on the real reason, I feel, is my batchmate and ex-TMC MP, Jawhar Sircar in an article in THE WIRE dated October 9, 2025. His assessment, in brief, is that the real, and disturbing, reasons lie in the politicisation and Hindutva-isation of the diaspora since the BJP came to power in 2014. This is a penetrating thesis and a closer look shows that there is a lot of substance in it. The Vietnam anecdote points to it.
Since 2014 the WENA diaspora has identified itself too closely with Mr. Modi and his abrasive brand of politics. Not identified with India, it may be noted, because they have maintained complete silence (as Shashi Tharoor has pointed out) on matters that bedevil relations between their parent and adopted countries- tariffs, immigration, visas, deportations, racism. They have instead become Mr. Modi's cheerleaders of the Howdy Modi! type, as if there has never been a Prime Minister before him, nor will be after him. This embarrassing and sacerdotal fawning, tolerated silently for some time, is now taking a beating with the decline in the Prime Minister's global image and ratings.
Mr. Modi's "statesman" and Vishwaguru claim is now unravelling fast with his dismal human rights record, the country's "electoral autocracy" rating, its poor rankings on free speech, press freedom, equality, environment, federalism, judicial and institutional independence; our opportunistic and unprincipled policies on Palestine and the Ukraine war, the support for and partnership with Israel, all have put him firmly in the extreme right-wing camp along with Netanyahu, Orban and Trump, not recommended company if one wants to be respected by the global citizenry and community (as opposed to governments). Our diaspora's blind Modi worship is now coming back to bite it and attracting wide-spread disappoval globally by association.
There is a latent irony here too. Our Indian diaspora, especially in the USA, has been vociferous and indecently demonstrative in its support for Mr. Modi's brand of politics- uber nationalism, persecution of minorities, riding roughshod over the concept of federalism and power-sharing, arbitrary decision making, misuse of power and police, use of the visa and the OCI card as a weapon to target dissidents (remember Tavleen Singh's son Aatish Taseer and Professor Francesca Orsini ?). Well guess what? The same qualities and tactics define Trump and are being used by him against Indians in the USA: it doesn't matter whether they are tourists, naturalized citizens, legal or illegal immigrants, students, Green card holders- his contempt for them encompasses all without any discrimination. The chickens are coming home to roost with the likes of Tommy Robinson (UK), Geert Wilders (Netherlands), Charlie Kirk and of course, Trump. As one Youtuber recently asked our countrymen abroad: "How does it feel being treated like a M***** is in India?" In a way our diaspora is being hoist on its own petard, and it doesn't make a pretty sight!
And this is not all. Our countrymen abroad have gone even further in their support for the Hindu samrat- they have embraced his divisive and malevolent brand of Hindutva with a vengeance, Islamophobia and all. They make a public exhibition of it on any occasion- Hindu festivals, Independence Day, Modi's visits- raising it almost to the status of Hindu militancy, a perception reinforced by the "hot pursuit" policy of Mr. Doval in Canada, USA and even Australia. This "in your face" type of aggressive religious proselytising has not gone down well with their adopted countries where religious beliefs are not paraded aggressively on the streets, and religion itself occupies a pew in the last row of social commitments. In fact, as I write this, reports are now appearing of the diaspora's over the top Diwali celebrations in the UK, New Jersey and Australian towns- sound and air pollution, littering and threat of fires by the crackers. The police had to be called out in some cases. In a shocking display of religious zealotry an obscure Hindu outfit called Stop Hindu Genocide staged a public demonstration last week in Times Square, New York, banners and all, condemning the Chief Justice of India and branding him as an anti-Hindu bigot! This crass and vulgar show was organised to protest against an alleged obiter dicta comment {since denied) made by him in a recent case regarding a Hindu deity. For good measure they also castigated other Supreme Court judges, including the future Chief Justice designate Justice Surya Kant for their "anti-Hindu" judgments! This may be acceptable behaviour in Delhi but the citizens and governments of those countries obviously take a different view of it.
I will be the first to concede that not all members of our diaspora behave in this bigoted, disgraceful and inconsiderate manner but it takes just one rotten apple to spoil the basket. And the studied silence of the saner lot, their reluctance to call out these shameless elements among them puts the whole diaspora under the same cloak. To conclude. Indians abroad are collectively destroying the image of our country assiduously built by those who preceded them; they have to stop atoning for the guilt of abandoning their own country by adopting and supporting everything that is bad in India, including bad politics and religious extremism. They are now getting a taste of their own medicine. It's time to discard this medicine- and the doctor who prescribed them.
It is almost as if some elements of the Indian diaspora are playing to the large and disapproving foreign gallery to announce brazenly that "we have arrived" by such crass demonstrations... Thank God there are enough Indian head honchos and political successes abroad to provide that all Indians can't be painted with the same brush... But these elements cause avoidable embarrassment that comes home to roost impacting peaceful lives of the decent ones in dangerous ways.
ReplyDeleteOverseas desis also believe their own propaganda: Desh is X-largest/highest/fastest-growing/ etc. etc. This pumps them up and emboldens them to *demand* treatment in line with their new, higher station in life and in the hierarchy of nations. Anything which contradicts the propaganda is immediately labelled "bias", particularly as most are lo-information (quality newspapers, other sources, etc. have become nose-bleed expensive in the US).
ReplyDeleteAs a longtime citizen of the US I feel the point highlighted in the blog is one of the many factors but neither the primary nor the driving factor contributing to the current trend of unfavorable perception toward those with Indian ancestry, for many undercurrents have been present all along only to become far more evident as the Indian immigrant population continues to grow and become more prominent.
ReplyDeleteSome examples - the abuse of H1-B visa system both by the Indian tech companies supplying thousands of applicants & giant US tech companies, many led by Indian- Americans facilitating these pipelines ; fraudulent practices by university
applicants; misuse of visa provisions offered under “family reunification” to facilitate entry of dozens of “family” members; utilizing, at times heavily, social, financial-aid and healthcare systems funded by local taxpayers to which these immigrants have hardly or never contributed; public display of strong emotional & cultural allegiance & identity primarily with India rather than the country they now call their home, earn a living & raise their families ….This separation becomes quite apparent in several instances such as singing national anthem in public. Indeed, a large proportion of immigrants, even after decades, remain unfamiliar with the exact wording of the entire US national anthem and yet sing the Indian anthem with a gusto, or at cricket matches where Indian immigrants often wave Indian flags and cheer primarily for the India team ( “ India Jitega!”) rather the local team ; clustering within their own circle, resisting broader social & cultural assimilation; continuing old customs, even in public, that are perceived as strange or alien, not infrequently with a defiant in your face attitude of - Why should I change? - Such behavior doesn’t go unnoticed and reinforces perceptions of “ foreign-ness”. Loud social behavior, poor civic habits only bolster these perceptions further.
In short, this growing shift in public sentiment toward Indian immigrants is driven by multiple, reinforcing factors. Those who feel unfairly targeted might do well to look inward as well.
A story doing the rounds the last few days is the engagement of a PR agency in US to lobby for the RSS there. So whatever was done till now by the Indian dispora amateurally towards politization and Hindutvai-itation,(as Jawhar Sircar puts it,) will be professionally done by the agency
ReplyDeleteIs it just a coincidence that the two bloggers I closely follow, Avay Shukla and Jawhar Sircar ,
are batch mates of IAS ?.I am most grateful to the latter for writing the Preface to my Memoir in 2023
Avay to correct .Amateurishly and not amaterally?
ReplyDelete