Karma and grace: religious difference in millennial Sri Lanka: by Neena Mahadev, New York, Columbia University Press, 2023, 336 pp., £30.00 (paperback), ISBN 978-0-231-20529-0
In: Contemporary South Asia, Band 32, Heft 3, S. 452-453
ISSN: 1469-364X
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In: Contemporary South Asia, Band 32, Heft 3, S. 452-453
ISSN: 1469-364X
Indian Americans have managed to become one of the most successful minority communities in the United States. With the rise of politicians such as Kamala Harris, Nikki Haley, and Bobby Jindal, Indian Americans have also reached the upper echelons of U.S. political life. Yet half a century ago, a very different picture emerges. Coming to the U.S. just three years after the 1917 Immigration Act which effectively barred Asian immigration, Dalip Singh Saund progressed from student to citizen to the U.S.'s first Asian Congressman over a period of thirty-six years. With his meteoric rise coming at a time when attitudes toward Indians were predominantly negative, this manuscript explores the role of Saund's Indian heritage in his journey to Congress and explains that Saund's good works and commitment to U.S. values rather than his Indian background was responsible for his journey to Congress.
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On April 26, 1964, the People's Republic of Zanzibar merged with the Republic of Tanganyika to form the Tanzanian Union. Yet the circumstances surrounding the formation of this Union and the nature of the Union itself raise several unanswered questions. Indeed, some Zanzibaris fear that their island archipelago has been effectively "taken over" by Tanganyika through the guise of the Union government of the Tanzanian mainland. This manuscript explains how Zanzibari fears over the archipelago's usurpation have no basis since the current and evolving nature of Zanzibar's autonomy and legal rights have enabled the islands to become a strong player in the determination of the Tanzanian Union.
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